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Former king says unrest increasing among general public

Former king says unrest increasing among general public

Former king Gyanendra Shah took an oblique swipe at the major political parties’ failure to bring peace, stability and progress in the country by saying that unrest is increasing among the general public.

Addressing a program in Birgunj on Saturday, Shah said 15 years have passed since he abdicated the throne, and today “discontent, frustration, worry, and anger are prevalent everywhere.”  

Nepal’s centuries old monarchy ended with Shah as a result of the people’s movement of 2006-07 led by major political parties and the then Maoist rebel group, calling for a republic. Shah’s reign lasted for seven years from 2001 to 2008. 

 Shah claimed that he assumed the responsibility of the head of the state at a time when the country was going through a challenging phase. “Even in such difficult circumstances, I worked to avoid further destruction to the country and maintain the credibility of democracy,” he said, emphasizing the urgent need for unity among all people and groups for the greater good of the country. 

He appealed to everyone to not engage in divisive, sectarian and confrontational politics.

“It must be acknowledged that our country is facing the extreme misfortune of becoming deserted and impoverished everywhere. The time has come to think about putting an end to this situation. Let’s rethink,” he said.

Shah said when he quit the royal duties in 2008 he had stated through the mass media that he wished to live in Nepal for the greater welfare and peace of the country. “I remain steadfast in my commitment,” he said. “The patriotic feelings, nationalism, democratic commitment and active participation in the development and upliftment of the country that I expressed that day still resonate with me today.”

The former king also spoke at length about the misinformation that is being peddled to the general public regarding the 2001 royal massacre in which the monarch of the time, Birendra Shah, his entire family and several other members of the royal family were killed.  

Shah said that it was unjust and unfortunate that he and his family members were being slandered and attacked for the incident that took place on the night of 1 June 2001. 

“There are direct witnesses among us and yet there are many of us who are running behind falsehood and conspiracy. Truth always remains true. The victory of falsehood is never permanent,” he said.

Gyanendra was a ‘dummy king’: Oli 

CPN-UML Chairman KP Sharma Oli has likened former king Gyanendra Shah to a dummy version of a monarch.

“Just like a Brahmin priest prepares a dummy priest by placing a halfa grass over rice grains, Gyanendra is also a dummy version of a king,” Oli told the media on Sunday. 

The UML leader was responding to a speech that Shah gave in Birgunj on Saturday. 

He also claimed that the 2001 royal massacre was a conspiracy, stating that crown prince Dipendra could not have perpetrated the slaughter.   

“Nepalis should not lose their wisdom. Does a person who is supposed to be a king die like that? Could he operate four rifles and a pistol together?” Oli said, rubbishing the findings of the investigation conducted after the incident. 

“There was an investigation, but the national and international situations were different back then. Our then General Secretary Madhav Kumar Nepal himself was part of the investigation committee, but we recalled him in order not to get involved in the drama,” said Oli.

“The first son of the king becomes the next king. But when the first son, the second son and even the daughter of the king are dead, the monarchy ends right there,” he said. “It was the weakness of the government at that time to coronate Gyanendra as the king.”

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