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Fire Madhav Nepal

Issue 21, May 23, 2010

By KTM Metro Reporter

May 23, 2010: Nepalese political analysts have come to the conclusion that Prime Minister Madhav Nepal has been in fact a traitor. He has unravel his mind to Norwegian Minister for Environment and International Development Erik Solheim in the meeting with him on Friday, May 21, 2010 saying he is not for the Constituent Assembly writing a new constitution. Legislators supporting him would be traitors if they don’t take out their support for him even knowing he is not for the Constituent Assembly writing a new constitution.

More than 15,000 Nepalis have died for making the Constituent Assembly a reality. Now, Mr. Madhav Nepal wants to make it a failure. In fact, he has been working on that since he has become the member of the Constituent Assembly, and has been actively engaged in not making the Constituent Assembly possible to write a new constitution. So he has been dragging the peace process and the writing of a new constitution putting most of the blames for such things on others.

Madhav Nepal has mismanaged the state fund and he has made a lot of money for himself and his relatives and friends using the Prime Ministerial fund. He has spent huge money on his own foreign trips and his ministers’ foreign trips. Some of the ministers have even used the foreign trips intended for their secretaries.

Madhav Nepal has abused his authority several times and did not follow the rule of law. For example, he needed to follow the Public Procurement Act for awarding a contract for printing machine-readable passports (MRPs) but he used the decision of the cabinet for awarding the contract to the company at the cost several times higher than the price quoted by international bidders.

Madhav Nepal has increased the price of sugar from Rs 50 per kilogram to Rs 90 per kilogram for making money for him and the mill owners at the time of crushing sugarcanes and producing sugar as the government has the monopoly on buying and selling sugar. After the completion of the purchases of sugar from the mill owners, Mr. Nepal has decreased the price of sugar to Rs 65 per kilogram.

Political analysts say that enough is enough; Mr. Nepal needs to quit the Constituent Assembly and the position of the Prime Minister voluntarily. If he does not then we need to kick him out of the office of the Constituent Assembly and of the Prime Minister, as he has been there not to write a new constitution but simply to grab anything available at the first time without following the rule of law.

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