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India-Pakistan
Nepal king to lose cooks, waiters and servants
2007-03-16
KATHMANDU - NepalÂ’s government will withdraw hundreds of King GyanendraÂ’s aides including cooks, waiters, clerks and the queenÂ’s beauticians from the palace, a minister said on Thursday. The decision is a further blow to King Gyanendra, who has largely been confined to his palace since 2006 when he bowed to weeks of pro-democracy protests and handed power back to political parties a year after he sacked the government.

Some 774 staff have been removed and includes servants used to pluck flowers for prayers conducted by the king and his family members, Queen KomalÂ’s hairdressers and palace photographers apart from clerks, secretaries and accountants.

After the king relinquished power, NepalÂ’s new multi-party government moved swiftly to strip him of most of his powers including control over the powerful army. He has also been told to pay taxes. The government also plans to nationalise property accumulated by King Gyanendra since he ascended the throne in 2001, Shah said.

Since the king gave up power, there has been a groundswell of demand for abolishing the monarchy and turning Nepal into a republic. This week, Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala, who had been supporting a ceremonial role for the king in the hugely religious nation, asked King Gyanendra to abdicate, saying the monarch and Crown Prince Paras had lost their reputation.

But analysts said the veteran politician had not abandoned his stance on keeping the monarchy in some forms. “On the surface it looks like it is a pro-republican statement but in reality it is the prime minister’s last ditch attempt to save the monarchy from extinction,” said Kunda Dixit, editor of the weekly Nepali Times. “Koirala reasons that the only way the monarchy could be preserved now is by skipping the two generations and making Gyanendra’s four-year-old grandson the king,” Dixit said.
Queen Elizabeth should be taking notes on skipping a generation.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  ... saying the monarch and Crown Prince Paras had lost their reputation.

Of course, the author neglects to make any mention of Prince Paras' abominable conduct, such as running over with his sports car and killing the popular Nepalese entertainer, Praveen Gurung, or other minor peccadilloes of that sort.

Small wonder that there is rampant speculation by the public over whether Gyanendra or Paras may have had a role in the 2001 slaying of nearly the entire Nepalese royal family.
After the shock of Crown Prince Dipendra's role in the killings, the focus has shifted to King Gyanendra's 30-year-old son, Prince Paras. Katmandu is rife with stories of the prince's careening through narrow streets in a Japanese four-wheel-drive luxury vehicle, injuring or killing several people -- and remaining immune to prosecution. The most serious case, confirmed by two government ministers and by an ambassador with access to a Western intelligence report, resulted in the death of a popular sitar player last fall.

According to these accounts, Prince Paras became embroiled in an altercation over a waitress at a nightclub attached to a hotel in which his father is a major shareholder. The sitar player, Pravid Gurung, joined other employees in demanding that the prince leave the waitress alone. When Mr. Gurung left the nightclub, he was pursued and knocked off his motorcycle by Prince Paras, who then put his vehicle in reverse and ran over Mr. Gurung before driving off. Later, 600,000 Nepalese signed a petition to King Birendra demanding action against the prince, but Paras was never touched.

Now, Prince Paras is next in line to the throne. His father, King Gyanendra, apparently wary of provoking popular feeling, has so far avoided naming him formally as crown prince. When Parliament was re-convened a month after the palace killings, Prince Paras was notably absent. At the Katmandu nightspots he frequented before the massacre, he has been a no-show as well ...

"We know now that we had a crown prince who was a drinker and a drug user, that we have a new king who was a smuggler, that his son is a killer, and that we have a government that is so corrupt that it is incapable of effective action."
Posted by: Zenster   2007-03-16 22:54  

#2  "The whole world is in revolt. Soon there will be only five Kings left - the King of England, the King of Spades, the King of Clubs, the King of Hearts, and the King of Diamonds."

-- King Farouk I of Egypt (1920-1965)
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-03-16 10:17  

#1  I wonder how the 774 jobless staff feel about the descision? Does seem a bit much though.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2007-03-16 08:21  

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