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Nepal Communist Chief Khanal Elected PM

Kathmandu, Feb 3: Nepal Communist Party President Jhalanath Khanal was today elected the prime minister of the country, ending the seven-month deadlock over the formation of a new government after Maoist supremo Prachanda quit the

PTI PTI Updated on: February 04, 2011 22:26 IST
nepal communist chief khanal elected pm
nepal communist chief khanal elected pm

Kathmandu, Feb 3: Nepal Communist Party President Jhalanath Khanal was today elected the prime minister of the country, ending the seven-month deadlock over the formation of a new government after Maoist supremo Prachanda quit the race in his favour in a last minute deal.


60-year-old Khanal, leader of the Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist-Leninist), secured 368 of the 557 votes cast in the 601-member Parliament, the speaker announced.

Khanal's party, which is the third largest party in the parliament and leads the caretaker coalition, got support from the main Opposition Maoist Party.

Earlier, in a surprise move, CPN-Maoist withdrew Prachanda from the Prime Ministerial race and decided to support Khanal.

Nepal's parliament voted for a new prime minister under revised election rules designed to break a deadlock that had left the country without a government since the June 30 resignation of Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal under intense Maoists pressure.

Under the new rules, no lawmaker was to be allowed to abstain from voting in the House. The UCPN-Maoist has 238 seats and the CPN-UML has 108 seats in the Constituent Assembly, which acts as the country's interim Parliament.

The second largest Nepali Congress, which put up R.C Poudyal as its candidate again, received 122 votes. The party has 114 members in the House. Bijaya Gachhadar, the president of Madhesi Peoples Rights Forum -Democratic, who was the third candidate got 67 votes.

President Ram Baran Yadav had last week directed Parliament to begin a fresh process for the election of Prime Minister on the basis of majority vote as political parties had failed to hammer out a deal to form a consensus government.

Earlier Poudyal had failed to garner a majority in 16 rounds of voting, forcing him to quit the race.

The political crisis has been hugely damaging for Nepal, which is still reeling from its decade of civil war that ended in 2006. The standoff has delayed the drafting of a new constitution and conclusion of the peace process.

Earlier, in  a surprise move, Nepal Maoists' withdrew its supremo Prachanda from the Prime Ministerial race  and decided to support the Communist candidate Jhala Nath Khanal, brightening his chance to command a majority in Parliament.

A last minute decision by the main Opposition CPN-Maoist to withdraw in support of Khanal  ended  the over seven months deadlock. PTI
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