Geography
A landlocked country the size of Arkansas, lying
between India and the Tibetan Autonomous Region of
China, Nepal contains Mount Everest (29,035 ft; 8,850
m), the tallest mountain in the world. Along its
southern border, Nepal has a strip of level land that is
partly forested, partly cultivated. North of that is the
slope of the main section of the Himalayan range,
including Everest and many other peaks higher than 8,000
m.
Government
In Nov. 1990, King Birendra promulgated a new
constitution and introduced a multiparty parliamentary
democracy in Nepal. Under pressure amid massive
pro-democracy protests in April 2006, King Gyanendra
gave up direct rule and reinstated Parliament, which
then quickly moved to diminish the his powers. In
December 2007, Parliament voted to abolish the monarchy
and become a federal democratic republic. The transition
to a republic was completed in May 2008, when the
Constituent Assemby voted to dissolve the monarchy.
History
The first civilizations in Nepal, which flourished
around the 6th century B.C.,
were confined to the fertile Kathmandu Valley where the
present-day capital of the same name is located. It was
in this region that Prince Siddhartha Gautama was born
c. 563 B.C. Gautama achieved
enlightenment as Buddha and spawned Buddhist belief.
Nepali rulers' early patronage of Buddhism largely
gave way to Hinduism, reflecting the increased influence
of India, around the 12th century. Though the successive
dynasties of the Gopalas, the Kiratis, and the Licchavis
expanded their rule, it was not until the reign of the
Malla kings from 1200–1769 that Nepal assumed the
approximate dimensions of the modern state.
The kingdom of Nepal was unified in 1768 by King
Prithvi Narayan Shah, who had fled India following the
Moghul conquests of the subcontinent. Under Shah and his
successors Nepal's borders expanded as far west as
Kashmir and as far east as Sikkim (now part of India). A
commercial treaty was signed with Britain in 1792 and
again in 1816 after more than a year of hostilities with
the British East India Company.
In 1923, Britain recognized the absolute independence
of Nepal. Between 1846 and 1951, the country was ruled
by the Rana family, which always held the office of
prime minister. In 1951, however, the king took over all
power and proclaimed a constitutional monarchy. Mahendra
Bir Bikram Shah became king in 1955. After Mahendra died
of a heart attack in 1972, Prince Birendra, at 26,
succeeded to the throne.
In 1990, a pro-democracy movement forced King
Birendra to lift the ban on political parties. The first
free election in three decades provided a victory for
the liberal Nepali Congress Party in 1991, although the
Communists made a strong showing. A small but growing
Maoist guerrilla movement, seeking to overthrow the
constitutional monarchy and install a Communist
government, began operating in the countryside in 1996.
On June 1, 2001, King Birendra was shot and killed by
his son, Crown Prince Dipendra. Angered by his family's
disapproval of his choice of a bride, he also killed his
mother and several other members of the royal family
before shooting himself. Prince Gyanendra, the younger
brother of King Birendra, was then crowned king.
King Gyanendra dismissed the government in October
2002, calling it corrupt and ineffective. He declared a
state of emergency in November and ordered the army to
crack down on the Maoist guerrillas. The rebels
intensified their campaign, and the government responded
with equal intensity, killing hundreds of Maoists, the
largest toll since the insurgency began in 1996. In Aug.
2003, the Maoist rebels withdrew from peace talks with
the government and ended a cease-fire that had been
signed in Jan. 2003. The following August, the rebels
blockaded Kathmandu for a week, cutting off shipments of
food and fuel to the capital.
King Gyanendra fired the entire government in Feb.
2005 and assumed direct power. Many of the country's
politicians were placed under house arrest, and severe
restriction on civil liberties were instituted. In Sept.
2005, the Maoist rebels declared a unilateral
cease-fire, which ended in Jan. 2006. In April, massive
pro-democracy protests organized by seven opposition
parties and supported by the Maoists took place. They
rejected King Gyanendra's offer to hand over executive
power to a prime minister, saying he failed to address
their main demands: the restoration of parliament and a
referendum to redraft the constitution. Days later, as
pressure mounted and the protests intensified, King
Gyanendra agreed to reinstate parliament. The new
parliament quickly moved to diminish the king's powers
and selected Girija Prasad Koirala as prime minister. In
May, it voted unanimously to declare Nepal a secular
nation and strip the king of his authority over the
military.
The Maoist rebels and the government signed a
landmark peace agreement in November 2006, ending the
guerrilla’s 10-year insurgency that claimed some 12,000
people. In March 2007, the Maoists achieved another
milestone when they joined the interim government. Just
months later, in September 2007, however, the Maoists
quit the interim government, claiming that not enough
progress had been made in abolishing the monarchy and
forming a republic. They agreed to rejoin the interim
government in December, when Parliament voted to abolish
the monarchy and become a federal democratic republic.
In April 2008, millions of voters turned out to elect
a 601-seat Constituent Assembly that will write a new
constitution. The Maoist rebels, who recently signed a
peace agreement with the government that ended the
guerrilla’s 10-year insurgency, won 120 out of 240
directly elected seats. In May, the assembly voted to
dissolve the 239-year-old monarchy, thus completing the
transition to a republic. King Gyanendra vacated
Narayanhiti Palace in June and began life as a commoner.
Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala resigned in
June, after two years in office. In July, the Maoists
said they would not participate in the government when
their candidate for president, Ramraja Prasad Singh, was
defeated. Other parties in the Constituent Assembly
united to elect Ram Baran Yadav as president. The move
seemed to jeopardize the peace process. |