RS. 10,000 FOR PERSONS WHO REACH 100 YEARS OF AGE
Kathmandu, 18 July: Persons who have reached 100 years of age in the capital this year will each get Rs. 10,000 from Kathmandu Municipal Corporation.
There are an estimated 12 persons whohave reached age of 100 in the city.
The corporation took the decision Tuesday while announcing s Rs.2 billion
annual budget for the fiscal year 2012/ for the city described by a
government body as one of two most badly cities in the county.
Neighbouring Bhaktapur was the best.
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MEDIA GOOGLE
“I am ready to lead the government if the Nepali Congress (NC) fails to take stewardship of a new government..
"If Nepali Congress cannot lead the government, UML will propose a prime ministerial candidate. Some comrades have proposed my name in this regard and I am
thankful to them.”
(UML leader KP Sharma Oli, The Kathmandu Post, 18 July.)
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ILLEGAL MIGRANTS RETURN FROM SAUDI ARABIA
Kathmandu 18 Nepali migrant workers residing illegally in Saudi Arabia are returning home in increasing numbers. Records from the Nepali embassy in Saudi Arabia show that passports and travel documents are being issued to around 20 workers
Everyday, Roshan Sedai writes in The Kathmandu Post.
The recent ease of access to travel documents and the provision of deportation for those residing in detention centres seem to have encouraged the homecoming.
According to the embassy, it provided legal documents to around 6,000 workers in the last ten months alone. Similarly, around 150 to 700 workers are admitting themselves to detention centers in Saudi Arabia everyday in hopes of returning home. Although the procedure is difficult, admission into the detention centre is the only way for illegal workers to leave Saudi Arabia, the only nation to require an exit visa.
Although official data shows an estimated 80,000 Nepalis working illegally in Saudi Arabia, unofficial records claim the number is as high as 100,000. Illegal workers comprise those who left their jobs, those who overstayed without renewing their visas and those who were working illegally on tourist visas.
With neither pre-departure orientation nor knowledge of the customs and traditions of the destination country, migrant workers are often exposed to high risk of death and exploitation. It is difficult to even trace the dead and transport their corpses back home.
With neither pre-departure orientation nor knowledge of the customs and traditions of the destination country, migrant workers are often exposed to high risk of death and exploitation. It is difficult to even trace the dead and transport their corpses back home.
With the frenetic pace of departures, the embassy officials estimate that the majority of illegal workers will be cleared in a couple of years. Officials claim the departure of illegal workers will lessen the frequency of death, illnesses, wage disputes and exploitation.
"The illegal worker is our main problem. Lacking legal status, they face problems in getting safe work, good wages and security," said Nepali Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Udaya Raj Pandey.
Pandey told the Post that there has been a decline in the number of workers becoming illegal in recent months as the Nepali embassy has been reaching out worker bases to raise awareness about the hazards of working and residing illegally.
"The embassy has been traveling across Saudi Arabia in its campaign to raise awareness. We have been providing orientation to workers so that they will not stay here illegally,' said Pandey.
The Nepali mission has also appealed to the workers to contact their office in case of any problems, said the officials. The mission now receives a number of worker visits or phone calls regarding problems related to their work, wages, safety and security.
"The embassy has been helping workers resolve their problems. Hopefully, others with similar problems will be encouraged to settle their problem through the embassy rather than leaving their jobs and becoming illegal,'' said Pandey.
Latest records show that around 3,200 migrant worker deaths in Saudi Arabia since the establishment of the embassy in 1978. Majority of the deaths have been of illegal workers.
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JANATATIS TO CONTINUE WITH THEIR AGENDA
Kathmandu, 18 July: A meeting of Janajati Caucus of the dissolved Constituent Assembly has decided to continue its activities concerning issues of ethnic
Groups, The Kathmandu Post reports.
The meeting of former lawmakers affiliated with various political parties on Tuesday agreed to give continuity to the Caucus in a transformed manner in the face of CA dissolution. Concluding that the issues and agenda of Janajatis could be overshadowed in absence of the CA, the meeting agreed to raise their demand more boldly. To this end, the Janajati leaders decided to intensify their talks with every quarter sympathetic to their cause.
They have been demanding that state restructuring be based on ethnic identity.
CPN-UML leader Prithvi Subba Gurung said the present situation has eclipsed the issues and achievements in the ethnic agenda made so far. “There is danger that our demands might be overshadowed or sidelined. The meeting discussed about the future steps to keep our demand alive,” said Gurung.
Nepali Congress former lawmaker Indra Bahadur Gurung said they would continue their activities for ethnicity-based state restructuring unless the parties forge consensus on it.
Some leaders said they have drafted a future strategy for the Caucus to press issues like CA, election, and agenda of Janajatis.
The meeting concluded that there is a need of consensus among ethnic lawmakers to take clear stand on resolving the current political deadlock. Some leaders emphasised on the resurrection of CA, others spoke in favour of ele
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