Nepal’s parliament was dissolved and former main judge Sushil Karki complained today as a temporary prime minister of the country (September 12).
According to the report, no ministers have been listed in the 73 -year -old Karki’s temporary cabinet. He does the first woman to hold the office of the Prime Minister in Nepal.
Sushila Karki was chosen to lead the interim government after meeting between President Ram Chandra Paudel, the highest military brass Nepal and representatives of Gen Z, added PTI.
Who is Sushil Karki? Former Chief Judge Head of Temporary Nepal Govt
Karki is widely respected for her term of office as the first Judge Nepal – now she has also created history as the first woman Nepal.
Karki was born on June 7, 1952 in Biratnagar and has a strong academic foundation in political science and law. She began to practice the right in 1979, became the leader of the advocate in 2007 and since 2009 she worked as a judge of the Supreme Court.
Karki worked as a chief judge from July 2016 to June 2017 and, according to the report, published milestone judgments on temporary justice and electoral disputes. Nepal’s Gen-Z movement supported it for its neutrality and credibility.
Anil Kumar Sinha, former justice of the Supreme Court who worked with KARKI, spoke to AFP, said, “It is a trusted election that leads a temporary government. Its integrity has never been in doubt, and it is not someone who can be intimidated or easily influenced. It is bold and not pressure.”
New Nepal PM: What are the challenges?
He faces an immediate call for renewal of law and the order in Nepal The following days of uncertainty after former Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli suddenly resigned at the beginning of this week during protests, he added.
Karki spoke to the Nepalese media and said that young demonstrators told her that “they believe in me” to lead a “short time for elections”, AFP reported.
Nepal was swung by violent protests, which began on September 8 in large cities, including the capital Kathmandu, Pokhara, Birgunj and Butwal. The shifting began after the government intervened on social media platforms that quoted concerns about tax revenue and cyber security.
(With the entry from agencies)
(Tagstotranslate) Nepalese parliament