Tag: Nepal

  • SC hearing writ against dissolution of Land Commission today

    SC hearing writ against dissolution of Land Commission today

    KATHMANDU:  The Supreme Court (SC) is hearing the writ petition lodged against the dissolution of Land Commission today.

    The writ petition was filed on Sunday by legal practitioner Mahesh Bhattarai on behalf of Chairperson of the dissolved Commission making Office of the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers and Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba as defendants.

    The writ petition has sought the SC’s order not to implement the cabinet decision taken on August 3, arguing that the decision has pushed the constitutional rights of the landless, squatters and Dalits towards uncertainty.

    Four different writ petitions have already been filed over this issue.

  • Government to support disaster survivors: Maoist Chair Prachanda

    Government to support disaster survivors: Maoist Chair Prachanda

    MANANG: CPN (Maoist Centre) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ has said the government would fully support the landslide and flood-affected people.

    While inspecting the natural disaster-hit areas in the hilly district on Saturday, the former Prime Minister Prachanda shared that the incumbent coalition government was with the disaster survivors. He also said Manang and Sindhupalchowk were the worst-affected districts by the floods and landslides, therefore a practical solution would be sought after proper geological survey.

    He further committed to managing food and shelter for the survivors. The inspection team led by Prachanda comprised Minister for Energy and Irrigation, Pampha Bhushal, and other high level officials.

    The team also inspected Pisang, Chame and Naso Rural Municipalities. Floods in different parts of the district had submerged over 100 houses and causing huge damage a month back. CPN (Maoist Centre) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’. (File photo)

  • First meeting of reinstated Parliament to begin today

    First meeting of reinstated Parliament to begin today

    KATHMANDU: The first meeting of the reinstated House of Representatives (HoR) is beginning at 3 pm Sunday as per the Supreme Court’s (SC) verdict last Monday.

    The SC verdict had on July 12 overturned Prime Minister KP Oli’s decision to dissolve the House of Representatives.

    A five-member Constitutional Bench led by Chief Justice Cholendra Shumsher Rana had ordered to reinstate the Parliament by annulling the government’s decision to dissolve it.

    The meeting of the reinstated House begins at a time when the CPN-UML party is embroiled in intra-party wrangling.

    The SC had also ordered to appoint Nepali Congress President Sher Bahadur Deuba as the Prime Minister in line with Article 76 (5) of the Constitution.

    President Bidya Dev Bhandari had dissolved the HoR for the second time upon the recommendation of the Council of Ministers on May 22.

    Following the dissolution of the HoR, NC President Deuba had filed a writ petition with the signatures of 146 lawmakers at the Supreme Court.

    Earlier on December 20 last year, President Bidya Bhandari had dissolved the HoR on the recommendation of Prime Minister Oli.

    The apex court had then annulled the government’s decision to dissolve the HoR on February 23 for the first time.

  • Govt to purchase 4 million Covid-19 vaccines from China on non-disclosure condition

    Govt to purchase 4 million Covid-19 vaccines from China on non-disclosure condition

    Kathmandu: The government has decided to purchase four million doses of Covid-19 vaccines from the Sinopharm company of China as soon as possible.

    A cabinet meeting held on Monday decided to approve the Health Ministry’s request for the purchase, informs a minister.

    Earlier, the Chinese company had demanded that the purchase be made on a non-disclosure condition–that is the buyer cannot disclose the price elsewhere. Owing to the demand, the Department of Health Services had been unable to forward the process. But, now, without any other alternative, the government has given into the demand, the minister says.

    Existing laws do not allow the non-disclosure agreement. Therefore, the government is working on how this could be sorted out.

    “The prime minister has told the Covid-19 Crisis Management Centre meeting on Wednesday that the first lot of the vaccines will arrive within June,” the minister informs.

    Meanwhile, Oli says efforts are underway to purchase vaccines from other countries also.

  • PM Oli directs to remove legal obstacles to save lives of citizens

    PM Oli directs to remove legal obstacles to save lives of citizens

    KATHMANDU: The Covid-19 Crisis Management Centre (CCMC) has directed the Ministry of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs to carry out homework for the formulation of few more laws since new laws were necessary to fight against the Covid-19 pandemic.

    At a special meeting of the CCMC on Sunday, Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli, directed the ministry and bodies concerned to make necessary preparations since the clauses of the Infectious Disease Act 2020 were not enough to control this pandemic. The meeting took the decision to move ahead by removing exiting legal obstacles for the immediate arrangement of vaccine and oxygen.

    After the meeting, Foreign Affairs Minister Pradeep Kumar Gyawali shared that the meeting also directed the bodies concerned to work with more enthusiasm for the immediate supply of health supplies, including oxygen and vaccines.

    Saying that the government has made efforts to end the situation of people losing lives for want of oxygen, Minister Gyawali said, “The past two weeks were very difficult for us. It is been believed that such a situation will come down gradually.” The Foreign Minister added that the meeting decided to encourage entrepreneurs to run oxygen industries with full capacity across the nation as the country has been facing shortage of oxygen gas in this hour of pandemic as well as to take diplomatic initiatives and request to bring more liquid oxygen from India.

    Stating that some oxygen cylinders were brought from China and India and some others are being processed, he opined that the government has taken the belief that the problem of oxygen crisis would be removed within few days. The government has analyzed that the figure of the infection rate has reached a peak point, it has been informed.

    On the occasion, PM Oli directed the concerned agencies to do the needful so that people should not lose their lives due to a lack of money and other problems. “Do whatever you need to do to save people’s lives by carrying out work fast and promptly. People’s lives should be saved.”

    The meeting discussed the issue of declaring a health emergency in the country. A study on the matter is underway, said Minister Gyawali. To deal with the crisis effectively, he stressed the need for running hospitals and various health institutions under the Ministry of Health and Population and basic hospitals run by provincial and local levels in an integrated manner.

  • These ‘basic medicines for Covid-19’ shouldn’t be taken without doctor’s advice

    These ‘basic medicines for Covid-19’ shouldn’t be taken without doctor’s advice

    KATHMANDU: As the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic surges across Nepal with an alarming rise in infections and deaths, a huge amount of misinformation about the contagion is circulating on the internet.

    Over the past few days, social media users have been sharing a picture containing blisters of various pills and capsules along with a handwritten list of medicines with a caption that they are some ‘basic medicines for Covid-19’.

    The handwritten ‘Covid tablets’ list, which is circulating on Facebook and messaging apps such as WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger among others, contains the names of various medicines and recommended daily dosages.

    According to Ramesh Lamichhane, the owner of Samyukta Pharmacy at Manamaiju in Kathmandu, many people have been visiting his pharmacy with the list in order to buy the medicines.

    “Within a span of 3-4 days, about 6-7 people came to me with an identical list of medicines. At first I though some doctor might have prescribed them, but I learnt about its origins later when one of my relatives sent me a picture of the same list saying he found it on Facebook and asked me if the list was reliable,” he said.

    Lamichhane told South Asia Check that after learning about the reality of the list, he has stopped dispensing the medicines to those who come with the list.

    The list includes 7 types of medicines:

    Medicine

    Among these, Zincovit, Limcee and Shelcal are vitamin and mineral supplements while Doxy and Azithral are antibiotics. Similarly, Dolo is a paracetamol and Ivermectin is a medicine for roundworm.

    Although vitamin and mineral supplements may be useful for patients with Covid-19, their effectiveness in such patients still remains unproven.

    An article published by the Harvard Medical School advises using vitamin and mineral supplements as per the prescription and suggestion of a physician.

    The supplements will only help those Covid-19 patients who are infected with vitamin C, D and zinc deficiencies, according to an article in the ScienceNews. “Although complementary medicine is generally safe, it should be used according to the doctor’s advice to avoid infection, said ScienceNews.

    Read this also: A supposed home remedy for boosting blood oxygen levels is unfounded

    The list also includes two antibiotics. According to Healthline, an American health website, “researchers believe antibiotics can do more harm than good if taken incorrectly. They can cause bacteria to become increasingly resistant to treatment, can damage immune cells and can damage the ability of white blood cells to fight infections.”

    The US-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), warns against unnecessary use of antibiotics saying this can make a person sicker or induce various side effects. It recommends using only the prescribed antibiotics and against using the antibiotics prescribed for others.

    “These drugs can have very bad effects if taken without doctor’s advice,” Dr Arun Upreti, a resident doctor at Kathmandu-based Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, told South Asia Check.

    “On the other hand, if everyone starts taking these medicines arbitrarily then this could cause a shortage in the market and genuine patients could suffer.

    According to Dr Upreti, although it is normal to give these medicines to hospitalized Covid-19 patients under the supervision of doctors, others should not take these medicines without consulting doctors. Source: Khabarhub

     

  • Directs stakeholders for setting up isolation facility at Geta Medical College

    Directs stakeholders for setting up isolation facility at Geta Medical College

    KAILALI: Minister for Industry, Commerce and Supplies Lekhraj Bhatta has directed the officials and stakeholders to forward necessary preparations for making an isolation facility at Kailali-based Geta Medical College.

    After an onsite visit of the college on Monday, Minister Bhatta asked the bodies to ensure necessary facilities like electricity, drinking water and health equipment in the college building for the arrangement of isolation facility.

    Chairperson of the District COVID-19 Crisis Management Centre (DCCMC) and Chief District Officer of Kailali Khagendra Rijal shared plans to make 2000-bed isolation facility along the holding centre at the Geta Hospital and work in this regard would start immediately.

    He added that arrangements would be made to carry out treatment of coronavirus-infected people within a week. The activities would be forwarded in collaboration with Dhangadhi Sub-Metropolitan City and Godawari Municipality in Kailali.

  • PM Oli claims ‘extraordinary performance’, blames Speaker Sapkota for MCC delay

    PM Oli claims ‘extraordinary performance’, blames Speaker Sapkota for MCC delay

    Kathmandu: Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli’s address to the nation on the occasion of the New Year 2078 BS was full of political agenda.

    His speech, broadcast live on the state-owned Nepal Television on Wednesday morning, mainly had two major points. He said the government’s performance in the past year was extraordinary despite several challenges and then blamed House of Representatives Speaker Agni Prasad Sapkota for the delay in endorsing the controversial Millennium Challenge Corporation grant agreement signed with the US government in 2017.

    The prime minister said the government made roads at the rate of five km per day that year whereas 12 houses were made every day in the country.

    Oli claimed works done by his government made people hopeful about the future but complained other forces tried to reverse that forcefully.

    Then, he presented the MCC grant as a major tool of national development and expressed dissatisfaction that it has not been tabled in the House yet for its endorsement. He, nonetheless, did not mention the name of Speaker Sapkota.

    “We have tabled that in parliament and are demanding the House put it to vote for a decision,” he said, “Noone has a right to not present it for a decision once the government forwards it.”

     

  • Nepali Congress leader Nabindra Raj Joshi no more !

    Nepali Congress leader Nabindra Raj Joshi no more !

    Kathmandu: A central leader of the main opposition party, Nepali Congress, Nabindra Raj Joshi, died on Friday night. He was 57.

    After surviving a brain haemorrhage on February 26, Joshi was undergoing treatment at Norvic Hospital of Kathmandu. For the past several days, he was on a ventilator, unconscious.

    During treatment, he breathed his last at 8:24 last night, informs the hospital in a press statement, adding his heart had stopped functioning since Friday morning.

    Joshi was a two-time lawmaker representing Kathmandu’s constituency number 8 to the House of Representatives. He was the Minister for Industry during the premiership of Pushpa Kamal Dahal (2016-2017).

    As a minister, Joshi is credited for reviving the Nepal Aushadhi Limited, a government-run drug manufacturer of the country.

  • PM Oli warns HoR dissolution could repeat

    PM Oli warns HoR dissolution could repeat

    KATHMANDU: Prime Minister KP Oli, justifying his move of dissolving the House of Representatives (HoR), warned the HoR could be dissolved again if a precarious situation arrives where the government and Parliament do not function effectively.

    Addressing an all-party meeting at Shital Niwas Tuesday, PM Oli remarked going for fresh elections was the obvious course of action if the political stalemate continued.

    “Article 76 and 85 have provisions for Parliament dissolution. If the government and Parliament do not run smoothly, the House could be dismissed again. One should not raise their eyebrows if so happens,” the PM told the gathering of party leaders Tuesday.

    The PM also expressed dissatisfaction over the allegation of regression against his House dissolution move.

    Likewise, parliamentary party leaders raised questions over the role of the president in the HoR dissolution at the meeting. Replying to such references, President Bhandari stated that she had truthfully abided by the constitution.

    President Bhandari said political cooperation and consensus should be continued for effective implementation of the statute and for strengthening democracy in the country. She also stressed dialogue, cooperation and unity were unique features of Nepali politics.

    The meeting concluded with the president apprising the leaders about her two-day official visit to Bangladesh on March 22.

    The meeting, which was supposed to narrow down the differences among the political parties, failed to yield a positive outcome.