Nepal Minister Ghising Resigns After 115 Days Amid Political Pressure

Nepali Minister Kul Man Ghising has resigned from the cabinet after serving 115 days, citing pressure from Prime Minister Sushila Karki on ministers involved in party politics to quit. Ghising, a popular figure credited with ending prolonged load shedding, is expected to join the Rastriya Swatantra Party as a senior vice-president. His resignation follows criticism of ministers in the interim government engaging in partisan activities. Ghising is also likely to contest the upcoming parliamentary elections scheduled for March.

Key Points: Nepal Minister Kul Man Ghising Resigns from Cabinet

  • Minister resigns after 115 days
  • Pressure from PM on partisan ministers
  • Expected to join Rastriya Swatantra Party
  • Credited with ending load shedding in Nepal
3 min read

Nepal: Minister Ghising resigns after 115 days

Energy Minister Kul Man Ghising resigns amid PM's pressure on partisan ministers. He is set to join Rastriya Swatantra Party ahead of elections.

"allegations of his involvement in party politics had contributed to his decision to step down - Kul Man Ghising"

Kathmandu, Jan 7

Nepali Cabinet Minister Kul Man Ghising on Wednesday resigned from his post amid pressure from Prime Minister Sushila Karki on ministers aligned with political parties to quit their ministerial positions.

Ghising, who served as Minister for Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation, Physical Infrastructure and Transport, and Urban Development, submitted his resignation to Prime Minister Karki after serving 115 days in office. He was appointed minister on September 15 last year.

Ghising is believed to be behind the formation of the Ujyalo Nepal Party, which later merged with the Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP), on December 29.

Under the understanding reached between the two sides, Ghising is expected to become a senior vice-president of the RSP, which was the fourth-largest political party in the dissolved House of Representatives.

He is also expected to contest the parliamentary elections scheduled for March 5 this year.

After submitting his resignation, Ghising hinted that allegations of his involvement in party politics had contributed to his decision to step down.

As criticism mounted over ministers openly engaging in partisan activities despite being part of a supposedly apolitical government, Prime Minister Karki reportedly instructed ministers involved in party politics to leave the government during a Cabinet meeting on Monday.

The interim government, formed on September 12 following the Gen Z movement in early September, is widely viewed as neutral, impartial, and free from political baggage.

At a press meet organised after his resignation, Ghising claimed that he is not a member of any political party, stating that the agreement between the Ujyalo Nepal Party and the RSP has not yet been formally implemented.

He also recalled that, in Nepal's history, prime ministers and ministers of interim and election governments have contested elections while remaining in office.

Ghising, who is credited with ending up to 18 hours of load shedding during his tenure as managing director of the Nepal Electricity Authority, is among the highly popular public figures in the Himalayan country.

In an effort to strengthen alternative political forces, the RSP had brought together popular figures such as Ghising and Kathmandu Metropolitan City Mayor Balen Shah under its fold.

The RSP is led by former media personality Rabi Lamichhane, who faced allegations of fraud in cooperative institutions, and was recently released from prison as per the court order.

During his tenure overseeing several development-focused ministries, Ghising terminated hundreds of infrastructure-related contracts with construction companies for stalling projects for years.

He also said he made efforts to reform the country's energy, water resources, and irrigation sectors, advance infrastructure development, and improve the living standards of the people.

Following his resignation, Prime Minister Karki thanked Ghising for providing "capable" leadership of three important ministries for three and a half months.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
He served for just 115 days but terminated hundreds of stalled contracts? That's the kind of decisive action we need in our own infrastructure projects here. Sometimes a technocrat is more effective than a career politician.
V
Vikram M
The whole situation seems a bit messy. On one hand he says he's not in a party, on the other he's set to become a senior VP of RSP. The interim government must remain truly impartial for a fair election. Hope this doesn't create instability.
P
Priya S
As an Indian, it's heartening to see a focus on development and infrastructure in Nepal. Stable and prosperous neighbours are good for the entire region. Ghising's work in the energy sector is commendable. 👍
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Rohit P
The RSP leader just out of jail on fraud charges and now they are bringing in popular figures? Sounds familiar... 🙄 Hope the people of Nepal choose wisely in the elections. Good governance should be the priority.
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Nikhil C
Respect to PM Karki for putting her foot down. Ministers in a caretaker government have no business doing party politics. This is a good precedent. We could learn from this to keep our own election-time conduct clean.

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