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About Nepal
Nepal is famous for having 8 of the 10 highest
peaks, including Everest, 7 world heritage sites in Kathmandu
and elsewhere - and its people have a legendary reputation for
hospitality. Nepal is also the land of the Gurkhas and the Sherpas
- hardy peoples who have gained a worldwide reputation. A very
devout society, with over 350,000 shrines, temples, chortens,
stupas and other sacred places, the small land-locked Himalayan
Kingdom of Nepal is little known in the West.
The majority of Nepalis face huge challenges.
Today, Nepal is the third poorest country in the world. Whilst
people living in Kathmandu and the Kathmandu Valley are relatively
well-off, much of the rural population struggles to put food
on the table. Almost half of the population live on under half
a dollar a day. Infant and maternal mortality rates are high
and life expectancy is 60 years on average. Only one-third can
read or write. There are massive disparities in education and
health care provision across the caste system. In most river
beds, the poorest crush stones into gravel and sand for sale
to building sites. It takes 6 adults to crush stones for 15
days to raise 1000 Nepalese Rupees (around £7.50) between
them. Many children are also forced into crushing and carrying
stone instead of going to school for economic reasons.
Nepali society exhibits various feudal tendencies.
The King has hitherto been thought of by the less educated to
be a reincarnation of a God. Most of the land is owned by a
narrow elite and the state and government are dominated by the
top two castes (Bramin and Chettri). The political system has
until recently been unresponsive to popular demands, corruption
has been endemic and it's who, rather than what you know that
counts. The extreme poverty in the rural regions fuelled a Maoist
insurgency which between 1996 and 2006 claimed in the order
of 13,000 lives.
With Jan Aandolan II (People's Movement II)
in April 2006, the democratic Seven Party Alliance joined forces
with the Maoists in peaceful protests which eventually forced
the King to hand back power to the democratic authorities. The
Trust's activities continued long after large INGOs such as
DFiD were pulling out - and we only had to stop our work about
two weeks before the revolution got substantively under way.
Now peace has held for a year and elections
are due by November 2007 to select a new political settlement,
it is vital to work all the more to rebuild this deeply damaged
society and enable Nepalis to take thier rightful place among
the peaceful, democratic and prosperous nations.
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