In a single day, the Parliament Secretariat spends more than 1m in the various sections. It includes the rent of Parliament buildings, allowances, transport fees and other expenditures. But, both the House of Representative and National Assembly have made very little or little progress in the law-making.The new parliament elected from Nov 9 elections has not passed even a single bill. On several occasions, lawmakers go to Parliament only to register their attendance. The list of abuse by lawmakers goes on.
The daily rent for the Parliament building is Rs 416,000, while Rs 550,000 is allocated for allowances and transport fares of lawmakers, and another Rs 100,000 is earmarked for miscellaneous expenses. This translates to a total expenditure of Rs 20m on parliamentary meetings. Lawmakers have expressed dissatisfaction over the government's failure to provide adequate business to the parliament.
The parliament has been devoid of any meaningful business as the government and parties were preoccupied with the formation of the government and the elections of the President and Vice-president. In the four months since the election, the parliament has managed to draft House of Representatives Regulations.
Additionally, several bills including the Prevention of Money Laundering and Promotion of Business Environment Bill, Enforced Disappearances Enquiry, Truth and Reconciliation Act (Amendment) Bill, Food Hygiene and Quality Bill, and Constitutional Council (Functions, Duties, Powers and Procedures) Act Amendment Bill have been tabled for discussion in parliament. The government aims to expedite the Enforced Disappearances Enquiry, Truth and Reconciliation Act (Amendment) Bill through a fast track process.
However, the main opposition, CPN-UML, has been insisting that the discussion on the Bill should take place in parliament. The government was also expected to table the Nepal Citizenship Act Amendment Bill which was previously refused authentication by the former President Bidya Devi Bhandari. The government has not yet tabled the bill.
Furthermore, the government has not tabled 28 bills, which become inactive automatically with the end of the previous parliament’s term, in parliament.
The Federal Parliament Secretariat has been providing Rs 18,000 as house rent allowance to members of both houses who do not have a residence in Kathmandu Valley. However, lawmakers, who have their own house in the Valley, have been collecting Rs 9,000 as house maintenance allowance every month. According to the secretariat, out of 124 lawmakers, who have residences in the valley, 123 are collecting house rent allowance from the secretariat every month. Sunil Sharma of the Nepali Congress is the only lawmaker who has refused this allowance. Staffers of the secretariat showed Sharma wrote to the secretariat stating that he doesn’t need a house maintenance allowance.
Several prominent lawmakers, including NC President Sher Bahadur Deuba, CPN-UML Chairman KP Sharma Oli, CPN (Unified Socialist) Chairman Madhav Kumar Nepal, Rastriya Swatantra Party Vice-president Dol Prasad Aryal, and Rastriya Prajatantra Party Vice-president Bikram Pandey, among others, have been availing themselves of the house repair allowance.