logo
top nav left img
  • About Us
  • Send Us News
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Info
  • Feedback
top nav right img

-
Jilted teen commits suicide
Govt collects revenue of Rs 97.33 billion in five months
President should understand his responsibility: Sushil
Bastola flown to New Delhi's super-specialty hospital
APF squad deployed in Chitwan to fend off rouge elephant
Apex court stays Jha's appointment as NTA chief
Two die of asphyxiation in Lalitpur
'Tainted Pak oil regulator may have fled to Nepal'
Prez Yadav urges Khanal to facilitate inter-party talks
NC cadre found dead in Rukum

eXTReMe Tracker
Rejection of ordinances by President undemocratic and unconstitutional: PM's political advisor
Saturday, 18 August 2012 15:49 Read this : 619 times
  • Share this
    • Twitter
    • Myspace
    • Mister Wong
    • Digg
    • Del.icio.us
    • Jumptags
    • StumbleUpon
    • Slashdot
    • Furl
    • Yahoo
    • Technorati
    • Newsvine
    • Blinkbits
    • Ma.Gnolia
    • Smarking
    • Googlize this
    • Blinklist
    • Facebook
    • Wikio
  • Export PDF
  • Print
  • E-mail
smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai's political advisor Devendra Poudel Saturday said that rejection of two election ordinances by President Ram Baran Yadav was "undemocratic and unconstitutional".

"Turning down the ordinances presented is anything but democratic ... neither it is constitutional," Poudel said at a programme in the capital. He argued that the environment for election was being spoiled because of the President.

Poudel also said that the government would again forward the same ordinances to the President's Office as per "international law" and without any changes. He, however, did not explain which international law would favour the government's on this matter.

"The President does not have choice other than to approve the ordinances," said he, "How can electoral laws be introduced without the ordinance?"

Poudel was speaking a day after the President's office stated that it saw no relevance of issuing the ordinance as the Election Commission had already told the government that conducting the Constituent Assembly polls on 22 November was impossible in view of lack of political consensus and related laws.

Meanwhile, the PM's advisor also made it clear that the Prime Minister would not step down "just because the parties want him to do so".

"The PM will not pave the way until there is political consensus along with an alternative to the current government," said he. nepalnews.com

 

Related Article

  • Parties remain divided on essence of civilian supremacy
  • PM apprises Prez of Maoist demands
  • Maoists term govt policy document 'hotchpotch', NC dissatisfied
  • Koirala, Deuba to run for NC president
  • EC to decide on MJF legitimacy row as rival factions fail to reach understanding

Latest News Headlines

  • Jilted teen commits suicide
  • Protests against gangrape continue in Indian capital
  • Govt collects revenue of Rs 97.33 billion in five months
  • President should understand his responsibility: Sushil
  • Bastola flown to New Delhi's super-specialty hospital
  • APF squad deployed in Chitwan to fend off rouge elephant
  • Apex court stays Jha's appointment as NTA chief
  • Two die of asphyxiation in Lalitpur
  • 'Tainted Pak oil regulator may have fled to Nepal'
  • Prez Yadav urges Khanal to facilitate inter-party talks
  • NC cadre found dead in Rukum
  • Devkota prize to five litterateurs
  • Dahal Bangkok-bound, unity govt talks likely to be hit
  • Business body demands permission to invest abroad
  • UCPN (Maoist) demands action against perpetrators of violence against women
  • Leather Goods & Footwear Expo concludes
  • Pakistan car bomb explosion leaves 19 dead
  • Clinton hospitalised
  • Obama vows to push new gun-control legislation in 2013
  • Two workers crushed to death in hydel project


2012 © Mercantile Communications Pvt. Ltd.