Panama hosted a crucial Climate Week. Can Kathmandu follow suit?

As I am writing this piece, if someone wants to follow the latest developments on climate negotiations governance, Nepal is

Disconnected: Youth, AI, and Nepal’s parliamentary void

The debates in Nepal’s parliament feel like they’re stuck in a time warp. The language, the concerns, the political theater

When the earth shook, the service remained steady: Leading through ruins

On April 25, 2015, Nepal was struck by a devastating 7.8-magnitude earthquake — the worst disaster to hit the country

The legend of Singha Sartha Aju

Singha Sartha Aju, also known as Simhasartha Bahu, is a revered figure in Nepali folklore, particularly among the Newar community

Everything you need to know about Nagaloka and serpent kings in prehistoric Kathmandu Valley

In Hindu and Buddhist mythology, the Kathmandu Valley was once home to a vast lake known as Nagadaha, the home

Rights bodies object to current process of selecting officials in transitional justice bodies

As many ten human rights and justice sectors organizations issued a statement on Tuesday calling on the government to ensure fair and transparent selection process.

Kathmandu: As many as ten organizations working in human rights and justice sectors have expressed reservation with the selection process that is currently underway to appoint officials, including chief commissioners, in Nepal’s transitional body mechanisms—the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and Commission of Investigation on Enforced Disappeared Persons (CIEDP). Issuing a joint statement on Tuesday, Advocacy Forum, Amnesty International Nepal, Accountability Watch Committee, INSEC, Juri-Nepal, Legal Aid and Consultancy Centre (LACC), Human Rights and Justice Centre, Voices of Women Media, Human Rights Organization of Nepal (HURON) and Collective Campaign for Peace (COCAP) said that the selection process is far from victim-centred.

They have called for ensuring measures such as consultation with victims’ community, checking background of the candidates before shortlisting them, public hearing and presentations, among others, to ensure fair and objective selection process. They have said that the ongoing selection process has become a ritual with the same individuals being recommended again and again, and mostly based on bhagbanda, distributing powers and privileges based on political influence rather than merits.

They have demanded that the government of Nepal should adopt all measures to ensure reliability and transparency of selection process while also considering concerns of the victims’ communities.