भिडियो हेर्न तलको बक्स भित्र क्लिक गर्नुहोस
Nepal’s prime minister, K. P. Sharma Oli, resigned on Sunday, bringing an abrupt end to a nine-month-old government that struggled with the task of post-earthquake reconstruction and at times took a defiant stance against its large neighbor India.
Mr. Oli resigned moments before the country’s Parliament was expected to pass a no-confidence motion. After defending himself against sharp criticism from opposition parties, he said he would step down “to pave the way to elect a new prime minister in a changed context.”
Mr. Oli’s government was Nepal’s eighth in the last 10 years, and its end ushered in a new round of political turmoil.
Two large political groups pushing for Mr. Oli’s removal, the Nepali Congress party and the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Center), complained that he had failed to resolve disputes over the country’s new Constitution, to jump-start the stalled reconstruction process or to resolve cases dating back to the government’s decade-long conflict with Maoist rebels, which ended in 2006.
Mr. Oli’s supporters, however, attributed his downfall to geopolitics.
Mr. Oli made it a priority to build Nepal’s ties with China, rather than with India, signing trade and energy supply treaties in Beijing in March. Gopal Khanal, one of his foreign policy advisers, said the two countries were poised to announce new rail links during a visit to Nepal this year by President Xi Jinping of China.
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