Nepal’s rival parties have signed an agreement drawing up the country’s internal borders in a breakthrough that paves the way for a new national constitution, the country’s prime minister said yesterday.
Spurred by April’s devastating quake, Nepal’s parties struck a historic deal in June to divide the country into eight provinces, but left the crucial task of delineating state borders to a federal commission.
The new agreement, signed after midnight on Saturday, came after days of negotiation and resolves a major issue that has blocked progress on the charter since 2008. As a result, the commission will no longer be required to set state boundaries.
Photo: EPA
“A constitution with federalism and demarcation has been ensured,” Nepali Prime Minister Sushil Koirala wrote in a post on Twitter.
“I call on everyone to not be stuck on minor disagreements and work to build and develop the country,” Koirala said. Nepali Minister of Information and Communications Minendra Rijal told reporters that “the agreement was reached last night and it has moved the constitution writing process a step forward.”
The deal comes after a series of public consultations held across the Himalayan nation last month.
In some cases, the consultations were marred by violence, especially in the southern plains, which are home to the Madhesi community, who expressed anger about a lack of detail on where and how new internal borders will be drawn.
“We have tried to understand the public stance and strike a balance on conflicting feedback responses,” Rijal said.
Opposition parties have long pushed for new provinces to be created along lines that could favor historically marginalized communities like the Madhesi. Other parties have attacked this model, calling it a threat to national unity.
As a result of the negotiations, the number of provinces was reduced to six and, under the new agreement, every province in the landlocked country is to share a border with regional power India, allaying concerns about individual states’ access to markets.
The deal also changes a controversial provision that required both parents to be Nepali in order for their child to receive citizenship, sparking outrage among rights’ activists who said the legislation would disproportionately affect single mothers. The agreement now allows parents to pass on citizenship to their children if either the mother or father is Nepali.
Lawmakers began work on a new national constitution in 2008 following a decade-long Maoist insurgency that left an estimated 16,000 people dead and brought down the monarchy.
However, bickering political parties were unable to reach agreement and the resulting uncertainty left Nepal — one of the world’s poorest countries — in a state of political limbo.
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