Communist leader Oli chosen as new Nepal PM

Nepal’s newly-appointed Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Oli, center, is surrounded by journalists at the Constituent Assembly in Katmandu, Nepal, Sunday.

Nepal’s newly-appointed Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Oli, center, is surrounded by journalists at the Constituent Assembly in Katmandu, Nepal, Sunday.


Nepal’s Parliament Sunday chose communist leader KP Sharma Oli as prime minister, tasked with unifying the quake-hit country after a new constitution triggered deadly protests, a border blockade and a nationwide fuel shortage.

Oli, of the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist Leninist), defeated by 338 votes to 249 former premier Sushil Koirala, who stepped down from the top job as required by the constitution adopted on September 20.

“I announce that respected member KP Sharma Oli has been elected to the post of Nepal’s prime minister,” Speaker Subash Chandra Nembang told Parliament to loud cheers and applause as lawmakers raced to congratulate him.

Oli is tasked with quelling protests over the new constitution and ending the blockade, which has led to national fuel rationing, as well as pushing ahead with reconstruction after the earthquake in April killed thousands. He is known as a moderate within his party despite its communist leanings, and has vowed to work with other parties to develop the impoverished country.

“My request is that all the parties must work together and move forward in consensus,” Oli told lawmakers in an address before the vote.

“There are groups that are dissatisfied with the constitution, we have to address their demands,” said Oli.

“Our country has been devastated by the earthquake. I will accelerate the reconstruction process,” the 63-year-old also said.

The current government is accused of stalling on rebuilding after the quake killed nearly 8,900 people and left more than half a million homeless.

The constitution is aimed at bolstering the Himalayan country’s transformation to a peaceful democracy after decades of political instability and a civil war.

The main political parties were spurred into agreeing on the charter, after years of bickering, following the earthquake.

But the constitution, the first to be drawn up by elected representatives, triggered a blockade by protesters at a vital border checkpoint, cutting off fuel supplies from India and sparking a nationwide shortage.

Protesters from Nepal’s southern plains are incensed about the charter, which will divide the country into several federal provinces.


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