HomeAsiaNepal panel to probe property, assets of politicians and officials

Nepal panel to probe property, assets of politicians and officials

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By Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU, ‌April 16 (Reuters) - Nepal's new government, led by ​rapper-turned politician Balendra Shah, has set up a panel to investigate the ⁠property and assets of past and present politicians and officials, a move aimed at controlling corruption in the Himalayan nation.

Shah, ​35, became prime minister after his Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) scored a ‌sweeping victory in the March 5 parliamentary election – the country's first vote after the anti-graft ‘Gen Z” protests last September.

During his three-year ⁠stint as mayor of Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital city, ⁠Shah gained popularity for his fight against corruption and reformist credentials.

Sasmit Pokhrel, a cabinet spokesperson, said the five-member panel would be headed by Rajendra Kumar Bhandari, a retired Supreme Court ‌judge.

“An impartial investigation will be carried out on the basis ⁠of evidence based on legal standards … ‌Its report and recommendations will be ​implemented by concerned agencies of the government,” Pokhrel told reporters after a cabinet meeting late on Wednesday without mentioning the ‌time frame given to the panel to ​complete work.

The probe is ⁠expected to cover hundreds of politicians and officials ‌who held public offices after ⁠the popular movement that led to the abolition of the 239-year-old monarchy in 2008, analysts said.

The three-year-old RSP had made corruption ​control one of its ‌major promises during the election and scored a comfortable victory over ⁠the parties that had ​dominated politics in the country for decadessuffered.

(Reporting by Gopal ​Sharma; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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