Home – Page 182 – South Asia Time

Home

More out than in, Harry and Meghan to give up their royal titles

London– Britain’s Prince Harry and his wife Meghan have agreed to give up their royal titles and stop receiving public funds as part of a settlement with the Queen that lets them spend more private time in Canada.

The announcement from Buckingham Palace on Saturday follows more than a week of intense private talks aimed at managing the fallout of the couple’s shock decision to give up front-line royal duties, AFP news agency reported.

“Following many months of conversations and more recent discussions, I am pleased that together we have found a constructive and supportive way forward for my grandson and his family,” Queen Elizabeth II said in a statement.

“I recognise the challenges they have experienced as a result of intense scrutiny over the last two years and support their wish for a more independent life.”

“As agreed in this new arrangement, they understand that they are required to step back from Royal duties, including official military appointments. They will no longer receive public funds for Royal duties,” the statement said.

The settlement added that the two will also repay £2.4 million ($3.1 million) of taxpayer’s money spent on renovating their Frogmore Cottage home near Windsor Castle.

The new arrangement comes into effect in spring this year, a BBC news report said quoting the palace. The statement comes after the Queen held talks with the couple on Monday about their future, following their announcement that they wanted to “step back” as senior royals.

The Queen said following “many months of conversations and more recent discussions” she was “pleased that together we have found a constructive and supportive way forward for my grandson and his family”.

“Harry, Meghan and Archie will always be much-loved members of my family,” the statement continued.

She thanked them for their “dedicated work”, adding that she was “particularly proud of how Meghan has so quickly become one of the family.”

 

‘Global Trademark’

Harry and Meghan are seeking to register the “Sussex Royal” brand as a global trademark for their future enterprises, reports said.

The couple is dedicated to environmental causes and is looking to develop their charitable foundation as part of a “progressive” new role.

The queen’s announcement is her second on the royal crisis — dubbed Megxit in reference to to Britain’s protracted Brexit saga — ahead of Harry and Meghan’s effective resignation on January 8.

“We have chosen to make a transition this year in starting to carve out a progressive new role within this institution,” the couple said at the time.

“We now plan to balance our time between the United Kingdom and North America.”

Meghan then jetted back to Canada and is now their with their son Archie.

Their announcement caught the royal family off guard and created a media sensation in both Britain and the wider world.

The world’s shortest man, Khagendra Thapa Magar, has died

London—Khagendra Thapa Magar, the world’s shortest man who could walk, has died.  27-year-old Khagendra Thapa Magar, who was 2ft 2in tall, died in western Nepali city of Pokhara, reports said.

“Khagendra was admitted at the Manipal Teaching hospital in Pokhara for treatment of pneumonia and heart related ailments on Thursday but passed away on Friday,” Min Bahadur Rana, President of the Khagendra Thapa Magar Foundation told www.nepallive.com– a Kathmandu-based news portal.

Born on 14 October 1992, Thapa was officially measured at Fewa City Hospital in Pohkara, Nepal, on his 18th birthday in 2010. ⁣

London-based Guinness World Records (GWR) has paid tributes to Mr Thapa.

GWR recognises two categories for people of short stature – mobile and non-mobile – and Mr Magar’s height made him the shortest living mobile man on the planet.

Khagendra was born in Baglung district of Nepal, the eldest son of Roop Bahadur and Dhan Maya. His father recalled, “He was so tiny when he was born that he could fit in the palm of your hand, and it was very hard to bathe him because he was so small.”

He first came to the attention of Guinness World Records in early 2010, when he was measured by Records Manager Marco Frigatti on the GWR Italian TV show Lo Show dei Record and confirmed to be the shortest teenager (male) living.

He made his first appearance in the GWR 2011 book, alongside Jyoti Amge, the shortest teenager (female) living.

On reaching 18 years and qualifying for the adult record, Khagendra took the title from Edward “Niño” Hernandez of Colombia, a reggaeton DJ who stands 70.21 cm (2 ft 3.46 in).

Khagendra quickly caught the public’s imagination, and in 2011, he was appointed as a Nepalese Goodwill Ambassador for Tourism.

Guinness World Records last caught up with Khagendra in December 2018 to document a day in his life, including time spent at his family’s shop, leisure activities such as playing guitar and travelling around his home town on a motorbike with his brother.

Craig Glenday, GWR Editor-in-Chief, who first met Khagendra during his visit to Italy in 2010, said: “We’re terribly sad to hear the news from Nepal that Khagendra is no longer with us. His bright smile was so infectious that he melted the hearts of anyone who met him. As many people of short stature experience, life can be challenging when you weigh just 6 kg and you don’t fit into world built for the average person. But Khagendra certainly didn’t let his small size stop him from getting the most out of life. It’s been an honour to know him and his family, and a privilege to share his story with the world.”

Nepal’s economy to grow by 6 per cent : IMF

Kathmandu — The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has projected Nepal’s economy would grow by around 6 per cent in the current fiscal year 2019/20.
The estimate is low by 2.5 per cent from the 8.5 per cent projection made by the government.
“Economic growth is expected to remain healthy but moderate to around 6 per cent in FY 19/20 amid slower growth in India, sluggish remittances, and weaker agricultural production. However, there has been a welcome narrowing of the current account deficit, stabilisation of gross official reserves, and slower credit growth,” said Laura Jaramillo, Deputy Division Chief of Asia and Pacific Department at the IMF.
Speaking at a press conference organised at the Nepal Rastra Bank to share the conclusion of the consultation, she said that there were signs of moderation in the current fiscal year. The IMF mission also expected 6 per cent inflation driven mainly by food inflation, the Rising Nepal reported.
Jaramillo is leading an IMF team to Nepal to hold discussions for the 2020 Article IV consultation. The team held discussion with Minister of Finance Dr. Yuba Raj Khatiwada, Nepal Rastra Bank Governor Dr. Chiranjibi Nepal and other high-level government officials, as well as representatives from the private sector and development partners from January 5 to 17.
To See full report click  here 

Nepal targets Malta for tourism promotion

London –  Ambassador of Nepal to the UK and Malta, Dr.Durga Bahadur Subedi, has inaugurated the Visit Nepal Year 2020 campaign in Malta amidst a special ceremony.

Local Mayor, Councillors, NRN leaders and members of the Nepali community in Malta attended the ceremony organised at Valetta on January 15. He said he had come to invite citizens of Malta—a country of seasides—to visit the country of mountains and Himalayas. He also urged members of the local Nepali community to send their Maltese friends to Nepal.

Advisor to the NRNA International Coordination Council (ICC), Som Sapkota, said Malta had a population of less than 500,000 but over 2.6 million tourists visited the country in 2018. “We should learn from Malta and run a targeted campagin to bring in quality tourists from all over the world,” he added.

Nepal has launched the VNY campaign with a target to bring in two million tourists in the year 2020.

During his visit, Ambassador Subedi also called on Speaker of the Maltese parliament, Anġlu Farrugia, and other officials.

Malta-Nepal Friendship Society formed

In the meantime, Malta-Nepal Friendship Society has been formed amid a special ceremony  in Valletta on Friday.

Ambassador Dr Subedi is the Patron of the Society while Mayor of Msida Municipality of Valletta, Ms.Margaret Baldachino, is the President. Similarly, Dr.Victor Bujeya, Tomas Mikaluskas, Simon Alden and Som Sapkota have been nominated as Vice Presidents. Dr.Joesph Calleja is the General Secretary of the Society while Er. Marco Cremona has been nominated as Secretary and Spokesperson of the Society. Dr. Viviena Premazzi is the Treasurer. Members of the Society include Cllr Maurice Agius, Cllr Alfred Farrugja, Cllr Judy Sciberras, Cllr Akexander Zammit, Dr.Nicholas Charles, Dr.Benjamin Micallef, Jonathan Bonnict, Roland Wage, Nicolas Caligari, Steve Mercica, Oleg Jakoleev, Suris Klavils, Raju Aryal and Chet Bahadur K.C.

Photo : Nepal Embassy, UK

Ambassador Dr.Subedi. expressed hope that the newly formed Malta-Nepal Friendship Society will work as the bridge between Nepal and Malta. He urged the  newly formed Society to support the Visit Nepal 2020 Campaign of the Government of Nepal in Malta and to highlight Nepal as a safe, secure, peaceful, beautiful and best value tourist destination.

Three Nepalese women died in Abu Dhabi bus crash

Abu Dhabi— Sixteen Nepalese residents were among the injured in a traffic collision in Abu Dhabi that left six people dead on Thursday morning, a top Nepalese official has said.

Of the dead five were women, one from Nepal and one from Sri Lanka, while the bus driver was a Pakistani male. The nationalities of the other three victims was not confirmed till yesterday.

According to a video released on social media by Abu Dhabi Police, a white sedan nearly stopped on the rightmost lane, forcing two lorries to abruptly slow down. A bus that was unable to slow down then rammed into the second lorry, and it is believed that the victims were passengers on the bus.

The source said a few of the victims had already been discharged after being treated for minor injuries. Information on where the Nepalese victims were employed, and their ages, is still unavailable.

A police statement released on the incident reported six deaths and 19 injuries.

According to a statement from  Nepal embassy UAE three Nepalese women were among the 6 to lost their lives in the accident. Among the dead three Nepalese women were Krishna Murari Adhikari from Jhapa , Bhawana Kunwar from Pyuthan, Amisha Moktan Tamang from Bara district of Nepal.
The body of these three people will be sent to Nepal after competing formal procedure, the statement  from the embassy says. 

 

Chinese Man Infected With Mysterious Strain Of Corona Virus Quarantined In Nepal

ANI, Kathmandu —A Chinese man has been quarantined in Kathmandu with a mystery strain of corona virus just days after his return from Wuhan, authorities said on Thursday.

Sukraraj Tropical Hospital’s Director Dr Basudev Pandey confirmed that a male from the Chinese province of Wuhan is kept under observation and various tests are being carried out to determine whether he has been infected.

“The suspect has not shown any symptom so far. The only thing is he returned from China,” Dr Pandey confirmed to ANI over the phone.

Doctors have warned that the virus responsible for the outbreak of pneumonia in Wuhan could also enter Nepal.

The pneumonia is believed to be caused by a new strain of corona virus and has killed one person. Forty-one people were diagnosed with pneumonia believed to have been caused by the new virus, according to the Kathmandu Post.

The World Health Organisation has alerted Nepal about the prevention of transmission of the virus. However, the country lacks proper health centres and laboratories for treatment and diagnosis of such highly infectious diseases.

“The possibility of infection is high among the Nepali population because of migration. People coming from China and those going to China from Nepal risk contracting and spreading the disease,” said Dr Baburam Marasini, former director of Epidemiology and Disease Control Division.

“If anyone suffers from such infection then he or she should be transported in such a way so as to prevent the disease from spreading. But we even lack proper ambulance service to transport such patients. They should be transported in double cab ambulance, which we don’t have,” he was quoted as saying.

Australia’s Wildfire and Climate emergency

By : Ramhari Poudyal

The crave for material development has led industrialized nations to overturn natural laws, casing Climate change to turn into a frightening tragedy, showing rebellion in every corner of the world. Whether it’s the dreaded wild fires in the Amazon jungle, the burning of forests in California, the recent bushfires in Australia, and the floods in Europe, Britain, Italy, Greece, are all examples of inclement monsoon rains, massive hit webs, extreme snowstorms, droughts, tsunamis, thunderstorms of many names, flooding glaciers,

The heartbreaking news of the horrific effects of the sea fish and aquatic creatures, such as the plastic in the stomach of both whales and wild deer’s, are now being covered in mainstream media and social networks. One of the reasons we neglect the people and these extreme measures is down to an unspoken rule of our unconscious silence and disregard. Nature is trying to warn us by these natural disasters in the hope it will scare our generation to change and beg for redemption.

Dr Joëlle Gergis is an award-winning climate scientist and writer based at the Australian National University writes the article in Britain leading magazine the Guardian entitled “We are seeing the very worst of our scientific predictions come to pass in these bushfires.”

 The world’s first global conference on climate change adaptation was held in Australia on the Gold Coast in 2010. This conference was run by the former National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (NCARF), which lost its state funding in June 2018. It was a visionary initiative to attempt to help the highly susceptible nation in the developed world prepare for climate change. Despite this immensely important task, the effort is now vastly scaled-down and operating through Griffith University by a handful of dedicated researchers. How anyone thought that cutting funding to the only dedicated national climate change adaptation program in the country was a good idea is entirely beyond me.

In Australia, fires have destroyed an area of land almost twice the size of Belgium. To date, 23 people have sadly lost their lives due to the wildfires raging across the country since September, with dozens more missing. 1,500 homes have been lost in the fires.

Killer fires are continuing to ravage Australia with people fleeing New South Wales where a week-long state of emergency is in force. On January 2 it was declared that the state of New South Wales confirmed a week-long state of emergency as high temperatures and strong winds are set for the following few days, driving the deadly blazes. On January 3 as around 1,000 people in Mallacoota, Victoria, who were sheltering on beaches, were ferried to the town of Western Port. Creating a plume of smoke more full than Europe and killing almost half a billion animals with scientists could have been wiped out. The flames are creating their own dangerous weather systems forming ‘Fire clouds’ that spark lighting and ignite new blazes there’s little respite on the horizon. 430C temperature and fierce winds are forced to stoke the fires this weekend, and there are three more months of summer left. In December, Australia had its two hottest day ever, hitting 41.90C on average while 2019 was the country’s driest and hottest year on record 1.5 0C above the long-term average.

Climate change caused by GHG emissions is making extreme weather more frequent and intense. Australia is among the world’s most significant exports of coal, and the UN says Australia is not on track to meet Paris Agreement goal to cut emissions by 26% along with half the G20 countries.

In more devastating news, it was revealed 30 per cent of koala habitat had been destroyed, and experts warned the marsupials could become extinct. On the same day, two volunteer fire-fighters were tragically killed after a tree fell on their vehicle.On December 19, five hero fire-fighters were injured when their tanker was overrun by fire. On December 11, the Rural Fire Service confirmed that 724 homes, 49 facilities and 1582 outbuildings had been damaged in NSW. Failing to adequately plan for the known threat of climate change in a country like Australia should now be thought to be an act of treason.

This summer has been a harsh reminder that no matter how much we want to avoid addressing the dilemma of climate change, it simply can no longer be overlooked.  As this summer has shown, it is now part of every Australian’s lived experience. Dr Joëlle Gergis explained.

Now is the time for our political leaders to make a choice about which side of history they want to be on. There is much work to be done, and we are fast running out of time.

Role of UK

Her Majesty, The Queen Elizabeth, has sent a message of condolence to the Governor General of Australia, Governor of New South Wales, Governor of Queensland, and Governor of Victoria and to all Australians: “I have been deeply saddened to hear of the continued bushfires and their devastating impact across many parts of Australia.

My thanks go out to the emergency services, and those who put their own lives in danger to help communities in need. Prince Philip and I send our thoughts and prayers to all Australians at this challenging time.”

This natural calamity is also a political crisis. The fires are a clear signal of the global issues of climate change, which can make ecological conditions more appropriate to the eruption and escalation of wildfires. Climate change has been a divisive topic in Australia for years, a wedge issue that has decided elections. In the past, Prime Minister Scott Morrison has downplayed the significance of tackling climate change and has offered full-throated support for coal mining. The fires have created the biggest test of that position, and of Morrison’s leadership since his conservatives unexpectedly won a general election in May.

Already, the wreckage has fueled calls for Morrison — who once brandished a lump of coal in parliament to underline his support for mining — to take more rigorous action on climate change. Australia’s share of global CO2 emissions from domestic use of fossil fuels is about 1.4 %, according to Climate Analytics, but the country is one of the most significant emitters per capita. Australia’s deadliest wildfire disaster was in February 2009, when 173 people were killed.

Role of Nepal

There is a significant disparity between the country’s carbon emissions that underdeveloped states such as Nepal, whose carbon emissions are negligible, are at a much higher risk of ever-worsening problems, created by carbon emissions.

Although global greenhouse gas emissions (0.6%) have a minor role, Nepal is one of the world’s weakest terrain at risk of climate change, fourth in the global index of global natural disaster probability, 8th in earthquake and 8th in flood.

Nepal is situated between two colossal neighbours, who consume half of the world’s energy and emits the carbon dioxide in the same way.  The world’s carbon footprint emitted by China is 9.9% while India’s is 8.5%. There influence has been imprinted on the beautiful lives of our people and their home, the high mountains. Part of the mess that dominating counties cause with their greed is what small underdeveloped countries, like Nepal, have to deal with.

What more can countries like Nepal do to deal with extreme weather, such kind of emergency and reduce emissions?  

(Poudyal is a PhD scholar at Swansea University, UK and researching on renewable energy, energy conservation and energy efficiency improvement.)

Child ‘love marriages’ in Nepal damaging the future of many youths

AFP —Asha Charti Karki (C), who got married at age 16, mentors young girls on the importance of education in a bid to tackle the growing numbers of teenagers who are marrying young by choice

SURKHET (NEPAL) – Teenager Asha Charti Karki told her parents she was going out to study, but instead she ran off to wed her boyfriend — one of a growing number of Nepali teenagers who are marrying young by choice.

“There were rumours about us in the village and I had fights at home. I felt I had no choice but to run away,” Karki told AFP at her home in the western district of Surkhet.

Nepal has one of the world’s highest rates of child marriage even though the practice was banned five decades ago and the legal marrying age is 20.

Some 50 percent of Nepali women aged between 25 to 49 were married by their 18th birthday, according the Himalayan nation’s 2016 Demographic Health Survey.

Marriages in the conservative country were traditionally were arranged by parents, with many forcing their children to marry for cultural reasons or out of poverty.

Such marriages are declining but child rights activists warn an increasing number of underage couples are eloping for “love marriage” — a term used to describe unions by choice.

A 2014 survey by Girls Not Brides Nepal, which is part of a global network set up to end child marriage, found that one-third of such unions were initiated by young couples, and that the trend was increasing.

“This practice is posing a challenge for us and for the government. We can tell the parents but it is hard to convince young boys and girls when they marry by choice,” Anand Tamang of Girls Not Brides Nepal told AFP.

– ‘Betraying my future’ –

Tamang said voluntary child marriages, like forced unions, still pose the same risks, including dropping out of school, domestic violence and health problems.

Girls in particular lose the support of their families when they elope, he added.

Karki was among those who quit school early after getting married, as she struggled to cope with household chores and family responsibilities.

Soon after, she found out she was pregnant.

“I was only 16, too young to understand what I was getting into,” she said, cradling her two-year-old daughter.

“I had lied to my parents and run away, but I was actually betraying myself and my future.”

Her early pregnancy left her with uterine prolapse, a painful condition which sees the uterus or womb descend and protrude out of the vagina.

“It is difficult. I often see my friends and wonder where I would be if I had not married,” she added.

While the Nepali government has implemented a national strategy to end child marriages — punishable by jail terms and a fine — by 2030, it acknowledges the programme can only be successful if the roots of the problem are tackled.

– ‘It was a mistake’ –

Some girls elope to avoid a potential forced marriage, or to escape poverty or chores at home.

With teen romances seen as socially unacceptable in much of rural Nepal, young couples feel they have to run away and get married to legitimise their relationships. Others feel pushed to marry if they fall pregnant.

Meanwhile, underage love marriages are rarely reported to authorities, with families only seeking legal recourse if they disapprove of unions such as inter-caste marriages.

“(The) main (thing) is education. It is important that they understand that being sexually active does not equate to marriage,” Krishna Prasad Bhusal of the Ministry of Women, Children and Senior Citizens told AFP.

Karki hopes she can help other girls by sharing her experiences with them as part of a programme called Sisters for Sisters’ Education run by British charity VSO Nepal.

“I tell them that they should not have to marry and teach others like me that they should learn from my mistakes now,” she said.

In her role as “big sister”, Karki persuaded 17-year-old Aradhana Nepal to leave her abusive marriage and return to school.

Nepal was only 13 when she eloped with a boy she barely knew. There had been gossip about them and she didn’t know what else to do to protect her reputation.

It was only after they married that she discovered he was a violent drug addict. She endured beatings for months before she escaped.

She recalled: “It was a mistake. Leaving that marriage saved my life.”

Former ambassador of Nepal to the U.K., Murari Raj Sharma, passes away

London — Former ambassador of Nepal to the  United Kingdom,  Murari Raj Sharma, passed away on Tuesday in Putney , London at the age of 68 due to cardiac heart attack, family sources said.

He was living  in London since he was called back when he was serving as Nepal’s ambassador to the United Kingdom in 2008.

Sharma, who served as  foreign secretary and former Nepalese Representative to the United Nations, started his career from the Ministry of Finance. He later moved to foreign ministry as a joint secretary.

Sharma was also accredited to Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba and Venezuela. Winner of several prizes, including the prestigious Mainali Short Story Prize of Nepal, he had co-authored the book entitled Reinventing the United Nations and is also the author of Murari Adhikari’s Short Stories.

In 2006, he chaired a high level task force that reviewed Nepal’s foreign policy in the new political context and presented the report with several far-reaching recommendations to the Government of Nepal; the recommendations are being gradually implemented.

As ambassador to the United Nations, Sharma held many important positions of the United Nations, he was Chairman of the Fifth (Administrative and Budgetary) Committee of the General Assembly, Vice President of the General Assembly and of the Economic and Social Council.

As Chairman, he was responsible to conduct the intergovernmental negotiations on the budget, structure, and human resources of the United Nations, something he did very successfully and on time, a rarity at the world body. In his capacity as Vice President of the General Assembly, he presided over the Assembly’s function to congratulate the then UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan upon his receiving the Nobel Prize, and many other important activities including the launching of the Year of Mountains. As Vice President of ECOSOC, Sharma was responsible for the Coordination Segment,and he performed his responsibility very successfully, New Spotlight newsmagazine writes.

Sharma also led, and participated in, Nepal’s delegation to important international conferences. Notable among the delegations he led were the Almaty Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries and the follow-up conferences on HIV/AIDS, Children and Social Development, he also participated in such world conferences as on Human Rights in Vienna, on Population in Cairo, on Social Development in Copenhagen, on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, on Women in Beijing, and on Least Developed Countries in Rabat.

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle: why half in, half out just isn’t an option for royals

By:

Professor of British Politics and Government & Director of the Constitution Unit, UCL

&   Honorary Senior Research Associate, Constitution Unit, UCL

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s decision to step back from royal duties has been described as a crisis for the monarchy, but they are the ones who are most likely to suffer the damage.

Members of the royal family are in a conflicted position. They lead lives of great privilege, but they also lack fundamental freedoms. They aren’t free to choose a career, they cannot speak freely and they have limited freedom to privacy and family life, which the rest of us take for granted.

Harry and Meghan are not alone in finding that frustrating, Prince Laurent of Belgium is another who is visibly unhappy in the role.

The harsh reality is that younger sons are spares who are ultimately dispensable from a hereditary monarchy: it is only those in direct line of succession who count. As spares they are subject to the same personal restrictions as the immediate heirs, without either the prospect of succession or the freedom to develop truly independent careers of their own.

Other European monarchies (encouraged by parsimonious governments and legislatures) have learned to keep the core team as small as possible. It can be just four people – in Norway and Spain it is the king and queen, the heir and their spouse. In 2019, the King of Sweden removed five grandchildren from the royal family, under parliamentary pressure to reduce its size and its cost.

The UK has a larger population – over ten times the size of Norway – and it could therefore be contended that it makes sense for its royal family to be larger to carry out necessary duties. A bigger team is also required given the realms: the queen is head of state of 15 countries other than the UK, and Prince Charles and his sons make regular visits to countries such as Australia, Canada and New Zealand. In total, 15 members of the British royal family conducted almost 4,000 royal engagements in 2019 alone.

Cutting the spares

Prince Charles is said to want a smaller, streamlined monarchy, perhaps just the core team of the queen, Charles and Camilla, William and Kate: but with a smaller team they could accept fewer royal patronages and fulfil far fewer engagements. It is not clear how far Prince Charles has thought through such consequences any more than Harry and Meghan have thought through the consequences for others of what they want.

The media has portrayed this as a crisis for the monarchy, and it is indeed a family crisis, but the monarchy as an institution will suffer no serious or lasting damage. Opinion polls consistently show between 70 and 80% support for preserving the monarchy – popularity ratings politicians would die for.

The damage is more likely to be suffered by Harry and Meghan, who may have misjudged the extent to which their celebrity is independent of their royal status. Their plans to carve out “a progressive new role”, and to “work to become financially independent” have been widely criticised as unrealistic.

Initial polling shows some public sympathy for their aims but strong objection to their continuing to receive public money. Royal officials have been tasked to find a compromise, but it is hard to see how they can be half in, and half out of the royal family and reside regularly abroad.

Can you ever really leave?

There are two levels of difficulty. The first is sharing the load. All members of the royal family who carry out public duties do so on behalf of the queen, and must be willing to undertake their fair share of the duties assigned to them. The second is the risk that becoming financially independent will involve exploiting their royal titles and royal connections for commercial gain. Other members of the family who accept the constraints will understandably feel aggrieved if Harry and Meghan are allowed to pick and choose.

The Sussexes nevertheless deserve our sympathy. In a comparative study of the European monarchies, due to be published in our upcoming book The Role of Monarchy in Modern Democracy, we argue that it should be possible for minor royals to opt out of the gilded cage if they find the restrictions too great. But opting out would need to be total: giving up not just their public duties but their public funding, their royal titles, their security – trying as far as possible to become private people.

It would not be easy to undergo such a complete change of lifestyle. And it may not prove possible: the public might still consider them to be a royal couple, and the media might continue to portray them as such – keeping them in the spotlight, whether they want to be or not.

From: The Conversation

Who is Mr. Kwatra, the new ambassador of India to Nepal?

London —India has appointed  Vinay Mohan Kwatra as its new ambassador to Nepal.

Kwarta, currently India’s ambassador to France, will succeed Manjeev Singh Puri, whose term ended in December-end, sources have said.

He has already served as a joint secretary at the office of the Prime Minister of India. He has also headed the Policy Planning and Research Division of the Ministry of External Affairs of India.

Kwarta is expected to arrive in Kathmandu in February.

 

Who is the  new envoy of India to Nepal ?
According to the official website of Indian embassy Paris , H.E. Mr. Vinay Mohan Kwatra is a member of the Indian Foreign Service with an experience of nearly 30 years in a range of assignments.

After joining the Indian Foreign Service in 1988, he served as Third Secretary and then Second Secretary in the Permanent Mission of India in Geneva until 1993, where apart from learning the French language, he handled work relating to the UN specialized agencies, as also the Human Rights Commission.  During this period, he also obtained a diploma in International Relations from the Graduate School of International Studies in Geneva.

Between 1993 and 2003, he served as Desk Officer at Headquarters dealing with United Nations, and subsequently in the Diplomatic Missions in South Africa and Uzbekistan.  Between 2003 and 2006, he served as Counsellor and later as the Deputy Chief of Mission in the Embassy of India, Beijing, China.  From 2006 to 2010, he represented India at the SAARC Secretariat in Nepal as head of the Trade, Economy and Finance Bureau.

From May 2010 till July 2013, he served as Minister (Commerce) in the Embassy of India, Washington.

Between July 2013 and October 2015, Mr. Kwatra headed the Policy Planning & Research Division of the Ministry of External Affairs and later served as the head of Americas Division in the Foreign Ministry where he dealt with India’s relations with the United States and Canada.

From October 2015 till August 2017, Mr. Kwatra served as Joint Secretary in the office of the Prime Minister of India.

He is married to Pooja, who has done her Master’s Degree in Business Administration and M. Phil. in Finance.  They have two sons, aged 25 and 19 years.

People are to be banned from using credit cards for gambling

London — The Gambling Commission has announced a ban on allowing consumers in Great Britain to use credit cards to gamble, BBC reported.

The ban, which comes into effect on 14 April, follows the Commission’s review of online gambling and the Government’s Review of Gaming Machines and Social Responsibility Measures. A public consultation was carried out between August and November 2019.

24 million adults in Great Britain gamble, with 10.5 million of those gambling online. UK Finance estimate that 800,000 consumers use credit cards to gamble.

Separate research undertaken by the Commission shows that 22% of online gamblers using credit cards to gamble are classed as problem gamblers – with even more at some risk of harm.

The ban, which will apply to all online and offline gambling products with the exception of non-remote lotteries, will provide a significant layer of additional protection to vulnerable people.

Under the new regulations, all online gambling operators will have to participate in the Gamstop self-exclusion scheme and offer it to all customers from 31 March.

People who sign up for Gamstop are prevented from using British gambling websites and apps for a chosen period of time

USAID Highlights Nepalese Girl’s Experience Addressing Gender-Based Violence, Human Trafficking In Country

USAID/Medium: A Safer World for Girls
Pamala Horugavye, senior development outreach and communication specialist for USAID’s Mission in Nepal, discusses the experience of Laxmi Koirala of Surkhet, Western Nepal, and her involvement with USAID’s Stop Girl Trafficking Program in her blog at the platform of Medium.

Laxmi and other educators continue to work to halt gender-based violence and human trafficking in the country even though USAID’s three-year Stop Girl’s Trafficking Program ended in July 2019 (1/10).

According to the 2019 U.S. Department of State’s Annual Trafficking in Persons report, Nepal is a source, transit point, and destination country for exploiting men, women, and children, subjecting them to forced labor and sex trafficking. Nepali women and girls from her area — particularly those from impoverished and illiterate households, low castes, and/or marginalized indigenous groups — increasingly fall victim to these heinous crimes.

To halt these human rights violations, USAID’s Stop Girl Trafficking Program worked closely with girls and women, family guardians, and civil society to address girl trafficking through education, awareness, community engagement and counselling.

Stop Girl Trafficking, implemented by the Rural Health and Education Service Trust, connected with Laxmi through school-based outreach when she was 14. While Laxmi came from a vulnerable family, she was also a bright student with a passion for helping others; so she was selected to work as a teacher trainee.

Nepal to bar NGOs from running programmes to harm neighbours, India and China

PTI, Kathmandu  — Nepal is drafting a new policy to “discowurage” international NGOs from undertaking programmes with potential to hamper the country’s relations with its giant neighbours, India and China, officials said today.

While cross-border terrorism and criminal activities continue to be the major causes of concern for India, China has in the past complained about the Tibetans’ movement via Nepal.

Based on Nepal’s foreign policy of keeping balanced relations, the projects that are opposed by either country will not be implemented, according to the draft of the strategy policy which is being prepared by the Social Welfare Council, The Kathmandu Post reported.

“Nepal is a land-locked country and has two large countries with large populations in the north and south,” according to the draft.

The policy will discourage organisations from running programmes that can hamper Nepal’s relations with the neighbouring countries, it said.

Council officials said the policy is still in the draft stage and some of its provisions are expected to be addressed

by a new law on the registration of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs).

Durga Prasad Bhattarai, an information officer at the council, said the proposed policy is aimed at addressing the concerns of the neighbouring countries regarding the

activities of NGOs, particularly in the bordering regions.

“The objective of the proposed policy is to reassert that Nepal government is concerned about the strategic mobilisation of international non-governmental organisations, particularly in the bordering regions, in the name of building madrasas and monasteries,” Bhattarai was quoted by the Post.

According to the council, madrasas in the regions bordering India are receiving funds from countries like Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

Nepal’s transitional justice process stalled for years

London— Nepal’s transitional justice process, which has been stalled for years, looks all set to take a step forward, as authorities plan to begin nationwide consultations with victims and stakeholders.

Nepal formed two commissions in 2015 to address transitional justice, but activists say it has been beset with delays and political interference, Aljazeera writes.

The government move to amend the TJA in 2014 to give amnesty to people accused of grave human rights violations has faced criticism from victims and rights groups, who demand an amendment to the TJA to match international standards. The Supreme Court declared the amendments unconstitutional in 2015.

More than 16,000 people were killed and about 1,400 disappeared during the civil war fought between the Maoists and the Nepalese army. The war ended in 2006 when the Maoists and the government signed the Comprehensive Peace Agreement.

More than 13 years later, little progress has been made into the cases, said the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch (HRW) and TRIAL International in December.

The former Maoist party has since merged with the moderate Communist Party of Nepal (CPN-UML) to form the Nepal Communist Party, which currently rules the country of nearly 30 million.

On Monday morning, before the consultation, CVCP protested at Maitighar Mandala in the capital Kathmandu, claiming the consultation was too short, was just for show, and was not transparent. They claimed it was not intended to benefit the victims.

Victims’ groups had also asked that the Act be amended before officials are appointed to the two commissions.

The two commissions together have received about 65,000 complaints, but were unable to investigate all the claims and report their finding within their initial term of two years.

Their terms were extended several times, before expiring early last year. Now the government seems ready to jumpstart the transitional justice process.

“We have received about 60 applications for positions in the two commissions, and we have studied them. We are ready to make our recommendations by the end of the week,” said Sharmila Karki, a spokesperson of the committee tasked with recommending officials to the two commissions.

“We do not know when the government will appoint them or how the process will go forward after that.”

Ram Bhandari, the president of National Alliance of Conflict Victims, says the government should not rush with the appointment to the transitional bodies without amending the TJA as it grants amnesty to perpetrators.

Nepal gains access to seven Chinese ports to undertake its trade and commerce activities

London —  Nepal has gained access to seven Chinese ports to undertake its trade and commerce activities.

Nepal got the facility to utilise four sea and three land ports of China as per the Transit and Transport Protocol that was signed at the joint-secretary level meeting between Nepal and China in September 7, 2017, The Rising Nepal writes.

The agreement enabled Nepal to use four Chinese sea ports- in Tianjin, Lianyungang, Shenzhen, and Zhanjiang, and three land ports- Lanzhou, Lhasa and Shigatse for carrying out third country trade.
The agreement on Transit and Transportation Protocol came into implementation from January 1, 2020, according to the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies.

Apart from the ports, Nepal and China have agreed to use additional borders for carrying out trade and transit activities. Nepal can use altogether six border entry points- Kimathanka, Nechung (Korala), Rasuwa, Kodari and Yari. Nepali vehicles can reach up to Shigatse after taking permission to ferry goods.

Earlier, protocol on transit and transportation was signed between Nepal and China during the Prime Minister’s KP Sharma Oli’s visit to China in March 2016.

China is the biggest trading partner of Nepal after India. Nepal’s trade with India stood at 60 per cent at present while it was almost 68 per cent a couple of years ago.

As per the latest foreign trade statistics of the Department of Customs, Nepal exported goods worth only Rs. 863 million to China while imported goods worth Rs. 102.47 billion from it during the review period.

Nepal imported goods worth Rs. 349.63 billion from India while it exported goods only worth Rs. 32.56 billion to India during the first five months of the current fiscal year.

Meanwhile, Nepal has provided the list of 150 exportable products of Nepal to the Chinese government.