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    HomeAsiaFactbox-Nepal's long history of political instability

    Factbox-Nepal’s long history of political instability

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    KATHMANDU, March 2 (Reuters) - Nepal is set ‌to vote on Thursday in a pivotal general election that comes months after ​historic protests led to the resignation of the government.

    The landlocked Himalayan nation has been riven by political instability for decades, with 32 ⁠governments taking office since 1990 and none of them completing a five-year-term.

    Here is a brief history of the volatility of Nepali politics:

    CONSTITUTIONAL MONARCHY

    Nepal was ruled by monarchs from various dynasties, until 1951 when a parliamentary democracy ​was established.

    A decade later, King Mahendra suspended the constitution and banned political parties. His son, King Birendra, retained full control of the ‌country till 1990, when the absolute monarchy was reduced to a constitutional one.

    In elections in 1991 and 1999, the centrist Nepali Congress - the country's oldest political party - won a clear majority required to form the government, but did ⁠not last its full term either time because of internal and inter-party squabbling.

    A period of ⁠political flux followed. King Birendra and eight other royals were killed in a 2001 palace massacre by his son, Crown Prince Dipendra, who later turned the gun on himself, according to an official inquiry.

    Tired of fickle politicians and the threat of a growing Maoist insurgency in the hinterland, King Birendra's successor Gyanendra took power himself in ‌2005, only to be overthrown a year later following street protests against his action.

    A national unity government headed ⁠by the Nepali Congress took power in 2006 and lasted two years.

    POST-MONARCHY REPUBLIC

    In ‌2008, a special assembly dominated by former Maoist rebels, who joined ​mainstream politics under a peace deal, voted to abolish the 239-year-old monarchy.

    The Communist Party of Nepal faction controlled by the former rebels then took power, but the shift to a republic failed to create political stability.

    There ‌have been 15 changes in government since, as power circulated between the former ​Maoist rebels' party, the moderate Communist Party ⁠of Nepal (Unified Marxist Leninist) and the Nepali Congress.

    In 2015, a new constitution came into force, ‌after two constituent assemblies worked on the document for over ⁠seven years. This, too, was unable to produce durable administrations. 

    The fractured politics led to widespread public apathy, reinforcing a popular perception that Nepal's corrupt political class cared little for the plight of ordinary citizens - among the poorest ​in the world. 

    Last September, a simmering ‌online anti-corruption movement exploded into youth-led street protests that forced out the government led by Prime Minister K.P. Sharma ⁠Oli of the Communist Party of Nepal (UML).

    Former Chief Justice ​Sushila Karki then took over as interim leader tasked to oversee this week's general election.

    (Compiled by Gopal ​Sharma, Editing by Devjyot Ghoshal and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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