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Nepal Maoists 'shun government' | Nepal Maoists 'shun government' |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Nepal's former Maoist rebels have abandoned efforts to form the country's next government, reports say. | Nepal's former Maoist rebels have abandoned efforts to form the country's next government, reports say. |
Their decision follows their failure on Monday to get the candidate they were supporting elected as first president of the new republic. | Their decision follows their failure on Monday to get the candidate they were supporting elected as first president of the new republic. |
The Maoists were expected to lead the new government as they won most seats in April's elections to a new constituent assembly. | The Maoists were expected to lead the new government as they won most seats in April's elections to a new constituent assembly. |
But they say they are being blocked by an alliance of rival parties. | But they say they are being blocked by an alliance of rival parties. |
Differing ideologies | |
"We have felt that amid the latest environment in the face of alliance of the three parties, we cannot be forming the government," Post Bahadur Bogati, a senior Maoist leader, was quoted as telling the Nepal FM radio station. | "We have felt that amid the latest environment in the face of alliance of the three parties, we cannot be forming the government," Post Bahadur Bogati, a senior Maoist leader, was quoted as telling the Nepal FM radio station. |
Ram Baran Yadav (left) was not supported by the Maoists | |
Correspondents say that a decision by the Maoists, who won one third of the assembly seats, to go into opposition will plunge Nepal into yet more political instability. | Correspondents say that a decision by the Maoists, who won one third of the assembly seats, to go into opposition will plunge Nepal into yet more political instability. |
The BBC's Sushil Sharma in Kathmandu says that there is now concern that the country may be governed by a shaky alliance of parties with differing ideologies while the Maoists - with their capacity to bring supporters onto the streets - will be watching form the outside. | |
On Monday, the Maoists' presidential candidate, Ramraja Prasad Singh, lost a run-off in the constituent assembly to Nepali Congress party candidate Ram Baran Yadav by 282 votes to 308. | |
The vote to decide the presidency was the first major decision by the assembly since lawmakers decided to abolish the 239-year-old monarchy and declare a republic, part of a peace process that ended a decade-long civil war with Maoist insurgents. | |
The increasingly unpopular monarchy was abolished in May, after a vote in the Maoist-led assembly. | |
Before then King Gyanendra had appointed a series of prime ministers before sacking the government and assuming complete control in February 2005. | |
Weeks of demonstrations by hundreds of thousands of people secured the end of direct palace rule in April 2006. | |
In the same year the Maoists, who had been fighting for a communist republic, declared an end to their insurgency. | |
Thousands of people from the government and rebel sides died during the decade-long conflict. | |
By December 2006, seven parties, including the former Maoist rebels and the government party, agreed to abolish the monarchy. |