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Nepal king urges people to vote
Nepal's King Gyanendra urged his "beloved countrymen" yesterday to vote in a historic election almost certain to lead to the abolition of the monarchy.
- An activist of the Madheshi People's Rights Forum jumps over a burning tyre during a strike in Janakpur in the Terai region of Nepal.
- Image Credit: Reuters
Kathmandu: Nepal's King Gyanendra urged his "beloved countrymen" yesterday to vote in a historic election almost certain to lead to the abolition of the monarchy.
"It has always been our desire ... to build a prosperous and peaceful nation through a democratic polity in keeping with the verdict of the sovereign people," he said in a statement.
"We call upon all adult citizens to exercise their democratic right in a free and fair environment."
The irony is that when this dirt-poor Himalayan nation stages its first election in nine years on today, hardly anyone will be sticking up for the king. Nor are Nepalis being given much of a chance to do so.
Maoist guerrillas fought a decade-long civil war to end the 240-year-old monarchy, but had promised a popular vote to elect an assembly that would decide the monarchy's future.
However, in the end the decision to abolish it was taken behind closed doors last year by the country's main political parties. The elected assembly will now just rubber stamp that decision.
In a recent interview with Japan's Yomiuri newspaper, Gyanendra said that decision did not reflect the majority view, and Nepalis had the right to decide on the monarchy's future. "This isn't democracy," he was reported as saying. Just how free and fair the poll will be is also open to question.
The United Nations, monitoring the elections and peace process, accuses the Maoists of intimidating voters and preventing campaigning in some of their former strongholds. Other parties, it says, have also used state machinery to influence voters.
Eight Maoist cadres were killed when police fired on two separate crowds in western Nepal on Tuesday and Wednesday, although police say they acted in self-defence.
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