The May 2010 deadline for a permanent national constitution came and went with the resignation of the then Prime Minister. Currently, the Constituent Assembly is going through the process of choosing a new leader on the way to writing a permanent constitution. The Constituent Assembly is made of up the Communist Party of Nepal (Communist), Nepali Congress, Communist Party of Nepal (UML), and many other smaller parties.
Thursday, August 26, 2010
A Brief History of Nepal
In 1951, the Nepalese monarch ended the century-old system of rule by hereditary premiers and instituted a cabinet system of government. Reforms in 1990 established a multiparty democracy within the framework of a constitutional monarchy. An insurgency led by Maoist extremists broke out in 1996. The ensuing ten-year civil war between insurgents and government forces witnessed the dissolution of the cabinet and parliament and assumption of absolute power by the king. Several weeks of mass protests in April 2006 were followed by several months of peace negotiations between the Maoists and government officials, and culminated in a November 2006 peace accord and the promulgation of an interim constitution. Following a nation-wide election in April 2008, the newly formed Constituent Assembly declared Nepal a federal democratic republic and abolished the monarchy at its first meeting the following month. The Constituent Assembly elected the country's first president in July. The Maoists, who received a plurality of votes in the Constituent Assembly election, formed a coalition government in August 2008, but resigned in May 2009 after the president overruled a decision to fire the chief of the army staff (CIA Factbook, 2010).
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