
Nepal’s major parties demanded that he would restore the parliament he dismissed according to the deadly anti -corruption protests.
In the statement, eight political parties, including the Nepal Council, CPN -UML and MAOIST Center, said that President Lam Chandra Powel acted as unconstitutional.
Pudel dismissed the House of Representatives in accordance with the recommendation of Prime Minister Sushila Karki, a newly appointed Prime Minister, on Friday. It was also a major demand for the movement of protests.
More than 50 people died of a riot police in a mass protest this week due to the prohibition of social media platforms. Karki was appointed after reaching a transaction with a protest leader.
The statement of Saturday, calling for the reinstatement of the parliament, was signed by the main whip of eight political parties.
They argued that the president’s action was unconstitutional and opposed to the precedent set by the Nepalese judiciary.
The dissolution of the parliament was the main demand of the student leaders of the so -called “ZZ” protection.
However, eight political parties say that the demands of protesters, including the new elections announced on March 5, next year, should be resolved through institutions voted by the people.
Later, on Saturday, President Pudel urged to show restraint in all aspects and to carry out elections.
In the statement, he said that a peaceful resolution is being achieved in “very difficult and scary situations.”
The president said, “The Constitution is alive, the parliamentary system is alive and the federal democratic republic still exists.
Karki, the first woman who led the 73 -year -old Supreme Court and the poor Himalayan state, vowed at a simple event in Catmandu.
She is expected to appoint a pastor as a cabinet within a few days.
She is widely known to have a clean image, and the Provisional Government’s leadership is supported by the student leaders of the “Gen Z” movement.
However, her cabinet will face various challenges, including restoring laws and order, reconstruction and attacks of parliamentary buildings and attacks. Others in Nepal, who are afraid of young democracy in Nepal and the constitutional order, can derail.
Another key task is to bring people who are responsible for violence to justice.
Nepal is gradually returning to the top after the worst anxiety in decades.
The soldiers of Nepal, who were arranged to patrol Kathmandu’s distance, returned to their base after Karki sweared.
The protest was triggered by the government’s decision last week by the decision to ban 26 social media platforms, including whatsapp, Instagram, and Facebook, but soon expanded to implement Nepal’s political elites and much deeper dissatisfaction.
A few weeks before the ban, the “NEPO KID” campaign, which illuminates the luxurious lifestyles of politicians and attracts corruption, began in social media.
And while the social media ban was released on Monday night, the protests gained unstoppable propulsion at that stage.









