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This Article is From May 27, 2012

Nepal faces midnight deadline on new constitution

Nepal faces midnight deadline on new constitution
Kathmandu: Nepal's leaders held urgent talks on Sunday to avoid a political crisis, with just hours remaining before a midnight deadline to agree a new post-war constitution or face the dissolution of parliament.

The Constituent Assembly was elected in 2008 after a decade of civil war, with a mandate to write a new national constitution and oversee the peace process that began when the conflict ended in 2006.

But the major parties have been unable to agree on the country's federal structure and, after several deadline extensions, the 601-member assembly faces being disbanded to make way for fresh elections.

"If you go by the talks so far, the Constituent Assembly is headed for dissolution," said Arjun Narsingh KC, leader of the Nepali Congress, one of the nation's four main parties.

"We are not for the dissolution because this is the only elected body in Nepal."

More than 6,000 police were deployed around the assembly compound and across Kathmandu as talks began early on Sunday.

The new constitution is intended to create a new secular, democratic republic following the abolition of Nepal's centuries-old Hindu monarchy after the Maoist rebels gave up arms and won the 2008 elections.

It is also meant to bring stability to the impoverished Himalayan nation and unite its more than 100 ethnic minorities in a nation traumatised by the death of 16,000 people in the civil war.

Despite four extensions of the assembly's mandate, it has been unable to complete the far-reaching document, and the Supreme Court has ruled that any further extensions would be illegal.

The four biggest parties in the national unity government -- the Maoists, the Unified Marxist-Leninist, the Nepali Congress and the United Democratic Madhesi Front -- remain at odds on the creation of federal states.
Analysts predict three possible outcomes of Sunday's talks, with the most likely being no agreement and the dissolution of parliament.

The other scenarios are agreement on a new constitution, or a compromise which passes a constitution with the contentious issues left out to be settled after the deadline.

It is unclear what would happen if there is no agreement.

Constituent Assembly chairman Subas Nembang has warned of a "political void", with a caretaker government and president having no mandate, and no chamber in place to pass laws and rubber-stamp decisions.

The widespread hope in Nepal that followed the end of the civil war and the abolition of the unpopular monarchy has been replaced by a growing sense of anger and frustration.

Political instability has stifled economic growth, forcing many people to seek work overseas, and thousands of Nepalese have taken to the streets in recent weeks to protest at the lack of progress in their country.

"No nation has drafted a constitution without turbulence. As we draw closer to writing the constitution, the atmosphere is getting charged," political analyst Anand Jha wrote in the Republica English language daily.

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