Nepal’s second phase of election opens
Polling opened on
Thursday in 45 districts of Nepal for the last phase of the historic
provincial and parliamentary elections that many hope will bring the
much-needed political stability to the Himalayan nation.
More than 12.2 million voters are eligible to exercise their
voting rights in the second phase of the polls.
The voting is taking place for 128 constituencies of
Parliament’s House of Representatives and 256 seats of Provincial Assemblies in
45 districts.
In total 4,482 candidates, including Prime Minister Sher
Bahadur Deuba, will be trying their fate in the final phase.
For the House of Representatives, 1,663 candidates are
contesting and 2,819 candidates are trying for the Provincial Assemblies.
As many as 15,344 polling centres have been set out for the
polling that started early today amid tight security and will continue till 5
pm.
Vote counting is expected to start later today.
The first phase of the polls in the land-locked country was
successfully held in 32 districts on November 26.
Around 200,000 security personnel, including the Army, have
been deployed for the polls in an attempt to step up security in the wake of
explosions at various parts of the country ahead of the elections.
This is for the first time that elections for Parliament and
Provincial Assemblies are being conducted under the new Constitution
promulgated in September 2015.
The elections will elect 128 Members of Parliament and 256
Members of the Provincial Assemblies.
The House of Representatives consists of 275 members. Of
them, 165 are elected directly under the First-Past-the-Post system while the
remaining 110 come through Proportional Representation system.
The elections are being seen as the final step in Nepal’s
transition to a federal democracy following a decade-long civil war till 2006
that claimed more than 16,000 lives.
While many hope Nepal’s first state elections will hasten
regional development, others fear they will spark a fresh wave of violence.
In 2015, when Nepal adopted a new Constitution that split it
into seven states, dozens of people were killed in ethnic clashes over
territory and rights.
Following the adoption of the new Constitution in 2015, the
ethnic Madhesi group, mostly of Indian-origin, protested for months, saying
they were not getting enough territory in one of the states and were also
facing discrimination.
The polls are a major step toward implementing the new
Constitution.
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