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  • Nepal, UK launch nursing recruitment pilot programme

    Nepal, UK launch nursing recruitment pilot programme

    The Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security of Nepal and the UK Department of Health and Social Care on Thursday launched a nursing recruitment pilot that will enable the recruitment of Nepali nurses to the UK National Health Service.

    During the pilot, the UK will recruit up to 100 nursing professionals into the NHS through a competitive recruitment process, the British Embassy in Kathmandu and the Labour Ministry said in a joint statement.

    The recruitment is a pilot initiative using a government-to-government process in which the Department of Foreign Employment and the Hampshire Hospitals Foundation Trust of the UK shall undertake the recruitment process.

    The recruitment is a pilot initiative using a government-to-government process in which the Department of Foreign Employment and the Hampshire Hospitals Foundation Trust of the UK shall undertake the recruitment process.

    As per the Memorandum of Understanding between both the governments, no employer, recruitment or placement agency or any entity shall engage in the recruitment process.

    “The pilot is a continuation of the government of Nepal’s commitment towards a fair, dignified, and orderly migration process. Recruited Nepali nurses will be accorded the same rights, privileges, protections, and dignity as all healthcare professionals working in the UK,” reads the statement.

    “The process is an ethical and managed recruitment process, based on the mutual needs of both countries. Both governments will learn from the pilot phase and take further action on whether to continue recruitment in the future.”

    Interested applicants can access https://ferms.dofe.gov.np to begin the application process.

    In August last year, Nepal and the United Kingdom signed a bilateral agreement on health partnership, opening the door for Nepali nurses to work in the island nation.

  • Provincial Labor Advisory Council will be formed in Far West

    Provincial Labor Advisory Council will be formed in Far West

    Dhangadhi: A Provincial Labor Advisory Council will be formed in Far Western Province as well. According to the provisions of the Labor Act 2074, the said committee is going to be formed at the provincial level under the Central Advisory Council.

    In accordance with the facilities provided by the Labor Act 2074 given by the Constitution, the Provincial Labor Advisory Council will be formed with the chairman of the Minister of the Ministry of Social Development, the member secretary of the Ministry of Social Development and the secretary of the Ministry of Social Development. Hari Paudel, Assistant Director of Nepal Confederation of Commerce and Industry informed that there is a system to keep one/one member from other ministries related to labor and to nominate necessary members from among the remaining officials of Federation of Commerce and Industry of Nepal.

    In the same way, the Provincial Labor Advisory Council will discuss and put the decisions made through discussion before the government for the solution of the problems of labor, workers and industry, or even put the workers, employers and the government together to discuss and discuss their ideas and play a special role in solving their problems. Poudel said that in addition to being able to form a committee, there is also a provision to reconstitute the said committee every two years.

    On the same topic, on Wednesday, the organization of the International Labor Organization, the Central Committee of the Federation of Nepal Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the joint coordination of the Federation of Nepal Chamber of Commerce and Industry Sudurpaschim Province, a tripartite dialogue program for the establishment and implementation of a social dialogue mechanism at the Sudurpaschim Province level, also discussed the efforts and achievements to promote social dialogue. was done It was chaired by the vice president of Sudurpaschim Province Confederation of Industry and Commerce, while the chief guest was the secretary of the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Law. Narayan Regmi was there.

  • Year Of Intense Wildfires In Nepal May Help Scientists Predict Future Blazes

    Year Of Intense Wildfires In Nepal May Help Scientists Predict Future Blazes

    KATHMANDU :  In the forested foothills and plateaus below the world’s highest mountains, the spring of 2021 delivered a harsh and hot vision of the future under continued climate warming — a fire season that was 10 times worse than the average of the previous 20 years.

    One of the most densely forested countries in South Asia, Nepal has always been afflicted by wildfires, but researchers from Nepal, Taiwan, Germany and the United States have found that substantial precipitation deficits and warmer-than-normal temperatures preceded huge conflagrations across Nepal. And while the team’s analysis suggests these conditions will become more common in coming decades, the scientists are also hopeful that a relatively simple statistical model they have devised will make it easier for local and national leaders in Nepal to see these blazes coming, and intervene in time to spare lives, homes, crops and forests.

    “One of the beautiful and effective things that my home country has done in the past few decades to save our forests is to put the stewardship of these lands into the hands of local citizens, and this has resulted in rapid reforestation,” said the study’s lead author, Binod Pokharel, a climate scientist at Tribhuvan University in Nepal and Utah State University in the United States. “The downside of this approach, though, is that there is no centralized forest management agency in Nepal, so firefighting is also left to locals, and they don’t have the resources they need to fight this growing problem.”

    Pokharel was confident, however, that if local leaders had an easy way to know when fires would be most likely, they could mobilize their communities more effectively to prevent and mitigate the blazes. To that end, he worked with two research scientists from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Michael Wehner and Alan Rhodes, to examine the historical and future-projected accuracy of different precipitation indices to offer an early warning for likely wildfires.

    In doing so, the team devised an easy-to-use precipitation index — a running average of actual precipitation amounts in the fall and early winter compared to the long-term mean for the same months — that offers a robust signal of enhanced fire risk in the spring. Their methods were recently described ina paper published in the journal Climatic Change.

    “Of course, we’ve always known that drought makes fire more likely in general, but this process allows us to quantify that risk better and with more lead time,” said co-author Shankar Sharma, who is also a researcher at Tribhuvan University. “If the precipitation index for November and December indicates high likelihood of fire, communities can begin the mobilization and preparation process for early spring.”

    Such forecasts will likely be important if Nepal continues its successful efforts to reforest its lands. In the early 1990s, the forested areas of the country’s once verdant countryside were down to about 25% of the total landmass. Under the community-driven forest management policies of the past 30 years, however, the forests have grown back and now cover about half the nation.

    “One troubling aspect we saw in our analysis is that the areas of the country that have been ablaze are some of the areas that have enjoyed the greatest rates of growth over the past few decades,” said Matthew LaPlante, a co-author of the study who is an associate professor of journalism at Utah State University and a Ph.D. student in that university’s climate science program. “This association needs a lot more analysis, but what it potentially tells us is that in a world that has warmed and dried, we may not be able to simply regrow forests in places they once were.”

    Co-author Wan-Yu Liu, a professor who specializes in forest policy and economics at Taiwan’s National Chung Hsing University, said that the association between forest regrowth and fire will be further examined in coming years because similar studies are lacking. “There are many implications for people in other parts of the world where reforestation is happening,” she said.

    “This study reveals that climate change has already increased the likelihood of drought in Nepal exacerbating forest fires and the impacts on human health,” said Wehner of Berkeley Lab. “Multidisciplinary collaborations like this between Utah State University, Berkeley Lab scientists, and our scientific colleagues in developing nations are vital to understanding the risks of climate change and the urgency of working toward solutions.”

    Simon Wang, another co-author and climate scientist at Utah State University, said that while global and regional climates are inexorably changing, “our knowledge of these changes is expanding quickly, and the more we know, the more we can prepare, adapt, innovate, and work together in local, national, and global communities to solve our shared challenges.”

  • Chhath festival concludes

    Chhath festival concludes

    Dhangadhi : Chhath festival concluded with the worshiping of the sun god on Monday.

    It is believed that Chhath Puja is in practice since Vedic ages.

    Many stories around Chhath Puja are narrated and shared among people. It is said that Karna, who was the son of the Sun, performed this puja. Karna was the king of Anga Desh, which is believed to be present day Bhagalpur in Bihar.

    It is also said that Draupadi had also observed this fast in order to beat the obstacles and hurdles that had come in hers and Pandavas’ life.

    It is also said that Sita was blessed with Luv and Kush after she did the Chhath Puja.

  • The 114th birth anniversary of Mahakavi  Laxmi Prasad Devkota

    The 114th birth anniversary of Mahakavi Laxmi Prasad Devkota

    KATHMANDU: The 114th birth anniversary of Mahakavi (great poet laureate) of Nepali literature, Laxmi Prasad Devkota, is being marked by organizing various programs in the country and abroad today.

    Devkota is one of the most influential and acclaimed poets of Nepali literature.

    Poet laureate Devkota, born on Kartik 27, 1966 BS, on the auspicious day of Laxmi Puja of the Tihar festival has contributed a lot to modern Nepali literature with several masterpieces.

    He also contributed to internationalizing the Nepali language and literature. Shakuntala, Sulochana, Maharanapartap and some others are his famous literary creations.

    Similarly, Devkota’s Munamadan is the most popular piece in Nepali literature.

    Poet Devkota played a vital role to make the Nepali language mandatory in the school curriculum when he served as the Education Minister.

    Poet laureate Devkota also contributed a lot to establishing then Royal Nepal Academy.

    He passed away on Bhadra 29, 2016 BS.

  • 10th National Games to be held in Karnali

    10th National Games to be held in Karnali

    The Ninth National Games held in Gandaki Province has been concluded last night at the presence of thousands of people at Pokhara Stadium.

    At the concluding ceremony of the Ninth National Games, Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba handed over the flag of the 10th National Games to Social Development Minister of Karnali Province Yagya Bahadur BC.

    The 10th National Games will be held in Karnali Province after two years. The Karnali Province has got the responsibility to organize the 10th National Games from November 17-24, 2024.

    The concluding ceremony was marked amid a grand fanfare along with cultural programmes, processions, marches and others, which was attended by thousands of people at Pokhara Stadium.

    Played in eight different districts of Gandaki Province, a total of 36 games were played in the 9th National Games that started on October 14.  (RSS)

  • Disability Friendly Sexual and Reproductive Health Guideline Orientation in Dhangadhi

    Disability Friendly Sexual and Reproductive Health Guideline Orientation in Dhangadhi

    Dhangadhi : Disability-friendly sexual and reproductive health guidelines have been oriented in Dhangadhi, the temporary capital of Sudurpaschim Province. The event was organized by Netra Heen Yuva Sangh on Thursday.

    After the Family Division gave the blind youth association the responsibility of creating a guide on safe maternal, sexual and reproductive health, the youth prepared the guide in collaboration with the Family Division and collected more suggestions on the guide, to correct any errors or to include some new issues in the guide, and to include disabilities in the guide. Arjun Rawal, Kailali district president and central member of Netrahin Yuva Sangh Nepal, organized the orientation program to inform the people about the guidelines.

    Similarly, Rupa Rai, who has been advocating for disabled people for a long time, has demanded that it is better to bring or create a guideline and follow it to the letter.

    In the same way, another participating speaker, Nanda Raj Bhatt, secretary of the Nepal Disability Federation, Sudurpaschim Province, pointed out the missing points, the production, management and distribution of auxiliary materials for disabled people, the coordination of the organizations that are working on the issue of disabled people, and the governmental side must coordinate in the initial stage. Provincial level hospitals Seti urged to include subjects such as mandatory interpreters in provincial hospitals to be implemented in the guidelines.

    Similarly, Bhim Bahadur Shah, the former president of the Nepal Disabled Federation, Sudurpaschim Province, while narrating his experience of advocating on the issue of disability since the 20th year, said that no matter what office he goes to, the only answer he gets is that it is not disabled friendly because the physical structures are old. Shah has claimed that the issues included by the government, which has taken five years to make the guidelines, will not be implemented, saying that they will, will and must be done. He expressed his doubt that the implementation and creation of the said guidelines will be successful, saying that this is not out of anger, but from clear experience since the 20th year.

    Similarly, Pushparaj Joshi, who works in the Family Welfare Division, how can disabled people be addressed to ensure their constitutional rights and what are the disability friendly health institutions. What are the respectful words used to call or identify people with disabilities? He said that a directory has been prepared covering various topics and on top of that, it has been directed to collect suggestions and add missing things. Joshi said that since the program also suggested that there should be information centers in hospitals instead of help desks and better implementation, those topics will also be included in the guidelines.

    The presentation on disability friendly sexual and reproductive health guidelines was made by Pushparaj Joshi of the Family Department, and more than 70 people including disabled people including the central president of the Blind Youth Association and the city chief of Dhangadhi sub-metropolitan city Gopal Hamal were present in the program.

  • Disaster in Darchula: loss of property, more than a dozen people suspected to be missing

    Disaster in Darchula: loss of property, more than a dozen people suspected to be missing

    Darchula: In Darchula, people’s property has been damaged due to floods, landslides and lightning. Disasters have occurred in various places of the district due to the rains that have been happening since Friday night.

    Three people lost their lives due to flash floods and landslides in Darchula district:

    Mohan Singh Parki of Dallekh died after being struck by lightning last night in Naugad Rural Municipality Rural Municipality-2 of the district. 30-year-old Kimti Thagunna died in a landslide in Naugad Rural Municipality-1 Salla. Moti Thagunna, daughter of Pansingh Thagunna of the same place, also died.

    Rescue of three:

    Pansingh Thagunna’s father and Phaguni Thagunna’s mother, who were trapped in a landslide in Naugad Rural Municipality, have been rescued alive. Local Bira Thagunna was rescued with broken limbs.

    More than a dozen are suspected to be missing:
    A number of people are suspected to be missing due to the landslide in Naugad. So far, 11 people have gone missing in Bangabagad area of Darchula headquarters Khalanga.

    Similarly, a school, 11 houses, two bridges and some vehicles were swept away by the flood in Bangabgad area of Khalanga, according to the police stationed there.

    Who is in the rescue work?
    Nepal Army, Nepal Police and Armed Police teams along with local people have been deployed at the scene of the incident for rescue work.

    Similarly, it is said that due to the incessant rain, the water level in the Mahakali river has risen to the top of the concrete embankment. It has been requested to be cautious in the areas around the Mahakali river.

  • The meeting of ‘Enhancement of stability in education’ project was completed in Jai Prithvi

    The meeting of ‘Enhancement of stability in education’ project was completed in Jai Prithvi

    Bajhang: The municipal level project advisory committee review meeting has been completed under the project of increasing stability in education implemented in the village of Bajhang and Jaiprithvi municipality. The meeting was concluded in Jai Prithvi Municipality of the district under the chairmanship of City Chief Chetraj Bajal.

    Uma Bhatt, education development officer working in Bajhang district of Reed Nepal, informed that the program is being implemented in 11 schools under the project of improving stability in education under Jai Prithvi Municipality and four secondary schools in Diyanot Rural Municipality.

    Similarly, the Education Development Officer Bhatt said that this project has supported the children’s education by emphasizing quality education while presenting the work sheet of achievements including the review of all the activities done by this project so far.

    Likewise, the ‘Enhancement of Stability in Education’ project run by Reed Nepal with the financial support of the Australian Government (DFAT) has helped the reading of secondary school children in the region and to make it more effective, said Bhim Bogti, the executive head of Reed Nepal.

    Likewise, Chetraj Bajal, the municipal head of the municipality, promised that the project has provided good support in education and the municipality will always be ready to implement it more effectively.

    In addition to this, an 11-member advisory committee was formed under the coordination of Deputy Mayor Ratan Bahadur Singh for the municipal level project advisory committee in Jai Prithvi municipality.

    The mayor, deputy mayor, chief administrative officer, head of education, principal of all seven secondary schools, CEO of Read Nepal and education development officers working in Bajhang district were present in the review meeting.

     

  • People prefer development rather than leaders: Prachanda

    People prefer development rather than leaders: Prachanda

    KATHMANDU: CPN-Maoist Center Chairman and former Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ has remarked that more than the political party and fame of the leader the people are looking for development agenda of late.

    Speaking at the foundation stone laying program of Nepal Electricity Authority’s distribution system in Bharatpur on Saturday, the Maoist Center Chairman said that development is the prime concern of the people now.

    “Nowadays, the people’s concern is development more than the parties, leaders and individuals,” he said, adding “The progress made in the sector of education, health, employment etc are the people’s concern. They should be addressed.”

    Prachanda said that in all political ups and downs his sole concern is the nation building and addressing the people’s agenda through development and prosperity.