2021 in Nepal
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Events in the year 2021 in Nepal.
Incumbents[]
- President : Bidhya Devi Bhandari
- Vice President : Nanda Kishor Pun
- Prime Minister : Sher Bahadur Deuba(incumbent)
KP Sharma Oli (till July 13)
- Chief Justice : Cholendra Shumsher Rana
- Speaker of House of Representatives : Agni Sapkota
- Chairman of National Assembly : Ganesh Prasad Timilsina
Events[]
January[]
- January 1 - The President calls for winter session of parliament to begin. Only the National Assembly meets as the House of Representatives was dissolved on 20 December 2020.[1]
- January 10 - The President ends the winter session of parliament. The National Assembly was in session for only 10 days.[2]
- January 16 - The first winter ascent of K2 by 10 Nepalis.[3]
February[]
- February 23 - The Supreme Court reinstates the dissolved House of Representatives.[4]
March[]
- March 7 - The Supreme Court annuls the decision of the Election Commission to grant the name Nepal Communist Party (NCP) to the party created by the merger of Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) and Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre) and positions them to their pre merger status.[5]
April[]
- April 14 - Nepali New Year, Bikram Sambat 2078 begins.
- April 24 - The replica of Bhimsen Tower is inaugurated. The original tower was destroyed in the April 2015 Nepal earthquake[6]
May[]
- May 9 - Prithvi Subba Gurung, Chief Minister of Gandaki Province resigns ahead of a no confidence vote scheduled for May 10.[7]
- May 10 - Prime Minister Oli fails to obtain vote of confidence in parliament. He obtains only 93 votes in favor while a faction within his own party boycotts the vote.[8]
- May 13 - K.P. Oli is appointed Prime Minister by the President per the provision of Article 76(3) of the Constitution. Opposition parties did not claim majority leading to his appointment as the leader of the largest party in parliament.[9]
June[]
- June 4 and June 10 - PM KP Sharma Oli expands and reshuffles cabinet resulting with 14 members from CPN(UML) and 11 from Mahantha Thakur faction of PSP-N.
- June 5 - Nepali Congress joins the government of Karnali Province.
- June 9 - Nepali Congress joins the government of Province No. 2.
- June 11 - Krishna Chandra Nepali Pokharel of Nepali Congress is sworn in as the second chief-minister of Gandaki.
- June 22 - Supreme Court issues an interim order annulling the cabinet expansion of June 4 and June 10 by Prime Minister Oli. The order relieves 20 ministers of their positions with the cabinet now composed of only four ministers.[10]
July[]
- July 12 - Supreme Court reinstates the dissolved House of Representatives and issues an order to appoint Sher Bahadur Deuba as Prime Minister per provision of Article 76 Sub-article 5 of the Constitution.[11]
- July 13 - Sher Bahadur Deuba from NC takes oath of office as the 43th Prime Minister .[12]
- July 27- Prithvi Man Gurung and Amik Sherchan appointed governor of Gandaki and Lumbini province respectively.
August[]
- August 12- Kul Prasad KC became Chief-minister of Lumbini province after agreement between Nepali Congress and CPN(Maoist Centre).
- August 17- Hari Shankar Mishra appointed Governor of province no. 2.
- August 18-Three major events
- AshtaLaxmi Shakya became first women chief minister of Nepal. She is now heading Bagmati provincial government.
- Two national parties broke on same day. The largest party in parliament, CPN(UML) broke to form CPN (Unified Socialist) led by former Prime-minister Madhav Kumar Nepal.
- PSP-N split to form Loktantrik Samajbadi Party Nepal led by Mahantha Thakur. Now, there are 6 national parties in Nepal.
November[]
- November 11- 2021 Nepal census begins.
- November 14- A massive avalanche occurred in Mount Manapathi in Mustang district.
Deaths[]
- January 14 — Dinesh Chandra Yadav
- March 26 – Nabindra Raj Joshi
- May 5 – Prem Dhoj Pradhan
- May 24 — Banira Giri
- May 19 — Khadgajeet Baral
- June 1 – Ujwal Thapa
- July 21 — Uttam Nepali
References[]
- ^ Dahal, Ashok (1 January 2021). "संसद् अधिवेशन: प्रतिनिधि सभा नभए पनि राष्ट्रिय सभाले गर्न सक्छ यी छ काम". BBC Nepali (in Nepali). Retrieved 3 January 2021.
- ^ Bajgain, Raghunath. "सरकार अल्पमतमा परेपछि राष्ट्रिय सभाको अधिवेशन अन्त्य". Onlinekhabar (in Nepali). Retrieved 11 January 2021.
- ^ Arnette, Alan. "Winter K2 Update: FIRST WINTER K2 SUMMIT!!!!". Retrieved 16 January 2021.
- ^ "प्रतिनिधिसभा विघटन बदर गर्ने सर्वोच्चको फैसला, १३ दिनभित्र संसद अधिवेशन बोलाउन आदेश". Naya Patrika. Retrieved 2021-02-23.
- ^ "Supreme Court awards Nepal Communist Party to Rishiram Kattel". kathmandupost.com. Retrieved 2021-03-07.
- ^ "Nepal opens replica Dharahara Tower in Kathmandu". BBC News. 2021-04-24. Retrieved 2021-05-09.
- ^ "गण्डकीका मुख्यमन्त्री पृथ्वीसुब्बा गुरुङले दिए राजीनामा". Online Khabar. Retrieved 2021-05-09.
- ^ Pradhan, Tika R. "Nepal Prime Minister Oli fails trust vote in Parliament". kathmandupost.com. Retrieved 2021-05-11.
- ^ "केपी ओली प्रधानमन्त्री नियुक्त, शपथ शुक्रबार". Online Khabar. Retrieved 2021-05-14.
- ^ "Supreme Court quashes appointment of 20 ministers". kathmandupost.com. Retrieved 2021-06-22.
- ^ Online, T. H. T. (2021-07-12). "Supreme Court reinstates House, issues verdict in favour of Deuba's claim". The Himalayan Times. Retrieved 2021-07-14.
- ^ "देउवा प्रधानमन्त्री नियुक्त, सपथको तयारी". Setopati. Retrieved 2021-07-13.
Categories:
- 2021 in Nepal
- 2020s in Nepal
- Years of the 21st century in Nepal
- 2021 in Asia
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