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Nepal's New Charter Strips King of Power
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The Nepali House of Representatives was dissolved after the interim constitution was passed Monday in Kathmandu.

The new 303-seat parliament, with 83 former rebel members, was sworn in and convened for the first time Monday, almost nine months after the Maoists and the government reached a ceasefire deal.

Parliament's unanimous vote in favor of the constitution was hailed by a minister in the alliance that has governed since King Gyanendra abandoned direct rule in April 2006.

"The interim constitution will be in favor of the people of Nepal and has mentioned that executive power ultimately rests with the people," said Narendra Bikram Nemwang, the law minister, speaking for elderly Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala, who was not present at Monday's session.

The constitution is seen as a highly progressive one for Nepal. Among the leftist delegates slated to join the new parliament are members of marginalized groups such as lower castes never before represented in Hindu-majority Nepal's parliament.
 
The leftists were to join the cabinet within a couple of weeks, after negotiations on which posts they were to hold.

The rebels launched a deadly "people's war" in 1996 aiming to install a leftist republic in the impoverished Himalayan nation. The conflict claimed at least 12,500 lives and destroyed Nepal's already fragile economy.

The new temporary constitution includes provisions formally stripping Gyanendra of his status as head of state, including control of the army, with all executive powers passing to Koirala.

The new parliament will has announced elections, expected to be held in June 2007, to a body that will draft a new permanent constitution and tackle the controversial issue of the monarchy's fate.

"The house has made historic decisions which will be written in golden letters in Nepali history," leader of the Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist Leninist, Nepal) Madhav Kumar told a television station from parliament Monday.

The vice-president of the Nepali Congress Party, Nepal's largest, told parliamentarians the new constitution and parliament would turn a page in Nepali history.

"The promulgation of the interim constitution will be a revolutionary step in establishing a new Nepal. Now, Nepal will witness lasting peace and security," said Sushil Koirala.

The leftist rebels and seven parties in government struck a loose alliance in November 2005, after King Gyanendra seized direct control of the state earlier that year.

The king restored parliament in April last year, after weeks of mass protests forced him to end direct rule.

(China Daily via agencies January 16, 2007)

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