Nepal Diaspora Digest

Nepal Diaspora Digest

Your weekly dose of curated news, stories, and insights from Nepal and the global Nepali community—keeping you informed, inspired, and connected.
Krajina Nepál
Žánre Správy, Politika
Jazyk EN
Epizódy 69
Najnovšia 03.07.2026

The Nepali Diaspora Digest is a weekly podcast that curates news, stories, and insights from Nepal and the global Nepali community. Hosted by AI agents, it covers topics like news, sports, lifestyle, and diaspora achievements in a 15-20 minute format. The podcast is accompanied by a written newsletter, aiming to keep listeners connected and informed wherever they are.

Epizódy

  • 'No Petrol' Boards, No Bail for Paudel & Half a Million Birds Gone 03.07.2026 19min
    Namaste, diaspora family! This was a week of things running short back home. Fuel got cheaper on paper and then vanished from the pumps overnight, an outbreak of bird flu emptied poultry sheds and shut the country’s only zoo, and the Supreme Court declined to free the opposition heavyweight the anti-corruption drive is holding. There was harder-edged news for the diaspora too, as the draft of a long-awaited NRN law quietly left a whole community out, even while the numbers show our footprint abroad growing faster than ever. And a clock is ticking on Nepali football. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationThe Promise With Fine PrintFor months the government’s pitch to the diaspora has been a warm one, summed up in a slogan you have probably seen: “Once a Nepali, Always a Nepali.” The Shah administration has dangled property rights, voting rights, and a headline diaspora bond worth as much as Rs 100 billion a year to pull overseas capital home, even floating the idea of recognising NRNs as a special class of investor. This week the fine print drew scrutiny. A circulating draft of the amended Non-Resident Nepali Act turns away from the roughly 140,000 Nepali-Bhutanese of the diaspora, the community pushed out of Bhutan decades ago, leaving them outside the very promise the slogan makes. The Nepal Policy Institute, a think tank run largely by diaspora professionals, is urging the government to treat this rewrite as a rare chance to define its relationship with an estimated 3 million Nepalis abroad, not narrow it. For a readership that spans continents, the lesson lands cleanly: a law is only as generous as who it decides to count (The Kathmandu Post).The Australia Chapter Gets BiggerIf you want to see where the diaspora is heading, look south. A study by the Institute for Integrated Development Studies, backed by Australia’s foreign ministry, found the Nepali-born population in Australia has jumped to about 213,580 by mid-2025, nearly doubling from 122,506 in 2021. This is not the old story of remittance and return. Some 61 percent arrived for higher education, close to half now earn between AUD 65,000 and 120,000 a year, and about a third have made formal investments. It is a young, credentialed, increasingly rooted community whose contribution is shifting from money sent home to businesses built, networks opened, and knowledge shared. Foreign Minister Shishir Khanal has called this diaspora “central” to the Nepal-Australia relationship, and the figures make the case for him. The challenge now sits with Kathmandu: whether its policies can keep pace with a community that is clearly not waiting around (The Annapurna Express).In Brief: A few more notes from across the diaspora.* Balancing both neighbours. Foreign Minister Khanal followed a visit to New Delhi with four days in Beijing, meeting Wang Yi to talk connectivity, border management, trade and technology transfer. Wang called Nepal important to China’s neighbourhood diplomacy, and the back-to-back trips signal a deliberately even-handed foreign policy from the new government (Nepal News).* The lifeline holds. Even as fewer workers leave, remittances still run near a quarter of the entire economy, with inflows for the first nine months of the fiscal year around $11.55 billion, up roughly 39 percent year on year. It remains the number that keeps Nepal’s accounts standing (NepYork).🏛️ Politics & GovernanceThe Court Keeps the Cell Door ShutThe biggest test yet of Nepal’s anti-corruption drive played out in the Supreme Court this week, and the drive held. A joint bench of Justices Binod Sharma and Nityanand Pandey dismissed the habeas corpus petition filed by Domaya Paudel on behalf of her husband, Bishnu Prasad Paudel, the CPN-UML vice-chair and eight-time former finance minister arrested on June 22 in Surkhet in a money-laundering probe. With the petition rejected, the Special Court’s order keeping him in judicial custody for further investigation stands. For a figure this senior in the main opposition, that is a heavy outcome, and the UML has not softened its line, calling the arrest politically motivated and its chair KP Sharma Oli branding it “illegal.” The government insists this is the law finally reaching the untouchable. The distinction between reform and revenge is now the argument running through Nepali politics, and this week the courts, at least, declined to hand the opposition an early exit (Nepal News).Trying to Unjam ParliamentWhile the courts moved, Parliament sat stuck. Rabi Lamichhane, freshly re-elected as chair of the Rastriya Swatantra Party, spent the week playing fixer, holding consultations with Prime Minister Balendra Shah and convening an all-party meeting to break a legislative standoff that has slowed the government’s agenda. The timing is pointed. Only days earlier, at his party’s convention, Lamichhane floated a wholesale redesign of Nepal’s system, a directly elected executive and a fully proportional electoral model, ideas the old parties treated as an attack on the parliamentary order itself. So the man questioning whether the current system works is now the one trying to make it function week to week. For a diaspora long weary of coalition churn, it is a familiar bind: the reformers need the old machine to keep running even as they argue for replacing it (OnlineKhabar).In Brief: The rest of the week in governance.* A body built for the money trail. The Council of Ministers discussed creating a separate, more powerful agency dedicated to financial crimes including money laundering, a sign the government wants permanent machinery, not just a moment, behind its graft crackdown (The Kathmandu Post).* An old idea returns. A campaign for a Hindu state and the restoration of the monarchy, fronted by former RPP figure Dhawal Shumsher Rana and activist Durga Prasai, is set to launch from Madhesh Province on July 6 (Nepal News).* The passport case grinds on. The CIAA’s Rs 10.13 billion graft case over rigged e-passport procurement continues against 18 people, even as booklet stocks run below 47,000 (The Kathmandu Post).💸 Economy & DevelopmentCheaper Fuel Nobody Would SellHere is a Nepali paradox for the week: the price of petrol fell, and petrol disappeared. On July 1, the Nepal Oil Corporation cut petrol by Rs 20 a litre and diesel and kerosene by Rs 30, the kind of relief households rarely get. Within hours, private pumps across the Kathmandu Valley hung “No Petrol” and “No Diesel” boards and simply stopped selling, unwilling to move fuel they had bought at the older, higher price without eating the loss. Only stations run by the Army, Police and Armed Police Force stayed open, drawing long, frustrated queues. The NOC dispatched three monitoring teams, insisted there was “no shortage,” and by later reports declared the disruption resolved with fresh supplies pushed out from the Thankot depot. It is a small drama with a familiar shape, the gap between a policy announced in Kathmandu and what actually reaches the consumer, and this time it played out at the pump in a single day (New Spotlight).Fixing the PlumbingAway from the pumps, the government kept working on the unglamorous machinery of the economy. The Asian Development Bank approved a $50 million policy loan to modernise Nepal’s customs and logistics, funding digital systems, risk-based inspections and streamlined procedures meant to move goods faster and cut the friction that inflates prices. In the same stretch, the House of Representatives passed the Public Procurement (Second Amendment) Bill, another piece of the reform agenda the Shah government has staked its credibility on. Neither headline will thrill anyone, but for a diaspora that has watched projects stall for years in paperwork and leakage, better customs and cleaner procurement are exactly the sort of plumbing that decides whether the bigger promises, the diaspora bonds and investment pitches, ever hold water (The Kathmandu Post).In Brief: A few more figures worth filing away.* The market drifts down. NEPSE slipped to around 2,608 on June 30, down nearly a percent, before clawing back a few points midweek on turnover above Rs 4 billion, with commercial banks leading the small rebound. The post-election glow has well and truly faded (Nepal News).* Tourists keep coming. Nepal welcomed 91,363 foreign visitors by air in June, up 19.5 percent on last year and above pre-pandemic levels. South Asia supplied more than half, with India alone sending 41,809 (ekantipur).* Money for the unfinished. The infrastructure ministry set aside Rs 2 billion for the coming fiscal year to complete stalled roads across 39 districts under the constituency road program, a nod to how many projects sit half-built (Nepal News).⭐ Social & CulturalThe Flu That Emptied the CoopA quieter crisis has been building on Nepal’s farms, and this week the scale of it came into view. Since the first cases in mid-March, an outbreak of bird flu has forced the culling of more than 596,000 poultry and the destruction of over a million eggs, and it has now closed the country’s only zoo, the Central Zoo in Jawalakhel, as a precaution. For farmers this is a livelihood emptied out overnight, and for households it means pressure on the price and supply of eggs and chicken, staples of many Nepali kitchens. Bird flu has visited before, but the numbers this year are large enough to ripple through markets and dinner tables alike. Authorities are leaning on the blunt tool that works, widespread culling, while trying to keep the outbreak from crossing into people. It is the kind of slow-moving story that rarely leads the bulletins but reaches almost every plate (NAMPA).Football’s Ticking ClockNepali football spent the week watching a calendar. After FIFA suspended the All Nepal Football Association on June 24 over what it called third-party interference, the fallout now comes with hard dates. Nepal can still contest the AFC U17 Women’s Asian Cup qualifiers if the suspension is lifted by July 13, just before the July 16 draw, and the U20 Asian Cup qualifiers if it is cleared by August 1. Miss those windows and the youth teams are simply struck from the competitions, on top of an AFC Women’s Champions League slot already lost. FIFA’s terms are specific: revoke the National Sports Council’s March order against the ANFA executive, reinstate that committee, and let the stalled elections finish. Sports Minister Sasmit Pokharel has acknowledged the federation long suffered political interference and corruption, which is part of how it landed here. The governance fight is real, but so is the cost, and right now it is measured in young players who may not get to take the field (The Kathmandu Post).In Brief: A couple of last notes as the monsoon settles in.* The rains bite early. With forecasters warning of extremely heavy rain, authorities barred night travel between 5pm and 5am on the Hetauda-Kathmandu Kanti Highway at the turn of the month, citing the risk of landslides, flash floods and rising rivers. A reminder that monsoon season is as much about roads closed as skies opened (myRepublica).* A nation watching on its phones. Nepal’s sporting life is increasingly lived on the mobile screen, with 16.6 million internet users and 32.4 million mobile connections nationwide, and cricket the common thread, as local Nepali-language broadcasts bring the big tournaments to fans far from any stadium (The Kathmandu Post).Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • An Opposition Heavyweight Cuffed, FIFA Locks Nepal Out & Two Gods Fly Home 26.06.2026 18min
    Namaste, diaspora family! It was a heavy week back home. The anti-corruption drive that put establishment names on notice finally reached the main opposition, with former finance minister Bishnu Paudel arrested and his party calling protests. The war in West Asia kept tightening the Gulf job market that so many of our families depend on, and football took a blow few saw coming when FIFA locked Nepal out. But the week also handed us two reasons to smile, both shaped by the diaspora itself: a pair of stolen gods flew home from New York, and the courts moved Nepal closer to full marriage equality. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationThe Gulf Door NarrowsFor two decades the Gulf has been the default answer to the question every young Nepali eventually asks: where do I go to earn? This week the data showed that door swinging halfway shut. Labour-permit approvals fell 19 percent in the first ten months of the fiscal year, to 367,100 from 452,311 a year earlier, as the US-Israeli war on Iran and post-Gen Z visa tightening drained demand. The UAE, long the single biggest destination, saw its share of new permits collapse from nearly 40 percent to 25 percent. Qatar recruitment dropped from roughly 30,000 a month to a few thousand, and halted construction at Saudi Arabia’s NEOM added to the freeze. New paperwork costs are piling on too, with Saudi skills-verification and UAE police-certification fees adding close to Rs 30,000 between them. “Most hotels are not even 20 percent booked right now,” said one Nepali hotel worker in the Emirates, Suraj Sharma. For a country where roughly 1.9 million people worked the Gulf before the conflict, this is the labour map being redrawn in real time (The Kathmandu Post).A Hard Warning From JapanIf the Gulf is the old frontier, Japan is the new one, and this week brought a sobering account of its cost. Foreign Ministry figures show 67 Nepalis died in Japan in roughly ten months, between mid-July 2025 and the start of June, and 25 of those deaths were suicides. Most of the dead were student-visa holders, young people juggling classes with the part-time work that a 28-hour weekly cap is supposed to limit. Japan now hosts about 116,000 Nepali students and some 309,000 Nepalis in all, alongside an estimated 6,000 Nepali-run restaurants and hotels, so this is no longer a fringe destination. “Living costs in Japan are high, and earnings from 28 working hours a week are not enough for rent, food and tuition,” said NRNA Japan secretary Sachin Acharya. Because many students never hold formal labour permits, embassy help is harder to give, and bringing a body home can cost around Rs 1.2 million. The dream of Japan is real, but so is the pressure underneath it (The Kathmandu Post).In Brief: A few more notes from across the diaspora.* The map shifts east. As the Gulf cools, Malaysia has been Nepal’s top labour destination for four straight months, and a remarkable 61,072 Nepalis received foreign-employment permits in the single May-to-June window. Officials credit better wages, overtime and insurance under Malaysia’s revised policies (Nepal News).* A blast in Ras Laffan. An explosion and fire at the Barzan gas plant in Qatar killed 13 people and injured 66, including Nepali workers, none of them reported among the dead. QatarEnergy’s chief executive called it a “technical accident” rather than sabotage, a small reassurance for families who feared the worst (The Kathmandu Post).* Korea pulls up the ladder. South Korea cut its 2026 EPS intake to 80,000 worldwide, down 52 percent from 2024, which could push Nepali placements from around 18,000 to as few as 6,000. Selected workers already left in limbo have begun protesting, and a labour-ministry delegation is preparing for talks in Seoul (EPS Nepal).🏛️ Politics & GovernanceThe Crackdown Reaches the OppositionThe anti-corruption wave that carried Balendra Shah’s government to power has spent months working through bureaucrats and middlemen. This week it reached a heavyweight. On June 22, the Department of Money Laundering Investigation arrested CPN-UML vice-chair and former finance minister Bishnu Prasad Paudel in Surkhet, an eight-time minister and one of the most senior figures in the main opposition. Investigators allege he leaned on a businessman to sell company shares far below value, a stake worth around Rs 300 million handed over for Rs 37.5 million, to a firm tied to the controversial businessman Deepak Bhatta, in exchange for official favours. A Special Court remanded him for seven days, and on June 25 the Supreme Court declined to order his immediate release, issuing a show-cause notice instead, with a full hearing set for June 30. The UML is not taking it quietly. The party announced nationwide protests and party chair KP Sharma Oli branded the arrest “politically motivated” and “illegal.” Whether this is reform reaching the untouchable or a government settling scores is now the argument consuming Nepali politics, at home and in the diaspora (The Kathmandu Post).A Party That Wants to Rewrite the RulesWhile one party fought a courtroom battle, another used its big week to question the system itself. At its first general convention in Chitwan, the Rastriya Swatantra Party re-elected Rabi Lamichhane as chair unopposed, with PM Balendra Shah among those proposing him. More striking than the coronation was the agenda. Lamichhane tabled proposals to scrap the parliamentary system for a directly elected executive, adopt a fully proportional electoral system, and turn the National Assembly into a non-partisan house of experts chaired by the Vice President. “We support a fully proportional electoral system instead of the current, highly expensive one, to ensure the representation of all communities,” he said. The old guard pushed back fast. Nepali Congress leader Pushpa Bhusal countered that “the parliamentary system is the one that remains closest to the people,” and the UML argued stability is achievable within the existing rules. For a diaspora that has watched coalition after coalition collapse, the question of whether Nepal needs a new operating system, not just new operators, is more than academic (The Kathmandu Post).In Brief: The rest of the week in governance.* The passport case goes to court. The CIAA filed a Rs 10.13 billion graft case against 18 people over rigged e-passport procurement, naming the passport department’s former director general and executives of the German firms Muehlbauer and Veridos. Former foreign minister Arzu Rana Deuba, summoned last week, was not listed as a defendant, though the inquiry into her continues. Passport booklet stocks have meanwhile fallen below 47,000 (The Kathmandu Post).* A hundred days, graded. A near-100-day review of the Shah government found real wins on plumbing, ministries cut from 25 to 17, e-procurement rolled out, exam results published on time, betting sites shut overnight, but weak revenue, soft investment and a warning that actual corruption convictions “will take much longer” (Peoples’ Review).* An old idea stirs again. A new campaign for a Hindu state and the return of the monarchy is taking shape, with former RPP figure Dhawal Shumsher Rana and activist Durga Prasai planning to launch it from Madhesh Province on July 6 (Nepal News).💸 Economy & DevelopmentSomeone to Mind the MarketAfter years in which Nepal’s stock market has felt like a casino with no one watching the floor, the government finally named a referee. On June 19, the Cabinet appointed Dr Gopal Prasad Bhatt, a former Nepal Rastra Bank executive director and capital-market analyst, as chairman of the Securities Board of Nepal. The seat had sat vacant long enough that brokers openly called it a source of investor unease. He arrives at a low moment. The NEPSE index has slid to around 2,660, down roughly 8 percent since March after a post-election rally fizzled, and share turnover over the first eleven months of the fiscal year fell about 22 percent year on year. The stock exchange itself only just got a new chief after six weeks without one. None of this is fixed by an appointment, but the budget’s promises of capital-market reform and diaspora bonds need a functioning regulator to mean anything, and many NRNs are among the retail investors who have been waiting for one (ShareSansar).The Gap Only Remittances Can HideThe fiscal year’s near-final trade numbers tell the same story Nepal has told for years, only larger. In eleven months the trade deficit widened to Rs 1.616 trillion, up almost 16 percent. The good news is genuine, exports grew 12.28 percent to Rs 277.97 billion, the kind of figure officials like to quote. The trouble is that imports grew faster, climbing past Rs 1.89 trillion, with petroleum still the single biggest line. India accounts for the bulk of the imbalance, a deficit of close to Rs 864 billion, with China adding another Rs 381 billion. What keeps this from becoming a crisis is the one number that always rescues Nepal’s accounts: remittances, now running near a third of the entire economy. It is a precarious kind of stability, an import-hungry country kept solvent by the earnings of the people it sends abroad, and this week’s data is a reminder of how thin that cushion really is (New Spotlight).In Brief: A few more figures worth filing away.* The lifeline holds. Even as worker outflows fall, remittances hit a record Rs 1.916 trillion in ten months, up 41.2 percent year on year, with a single-month peak above Rs 257 billion. Fewer people are leaving, yet those already abroad are sending more than ever (Nepal Rastra Bank).* The off-season that wasn’t. Heat-fleeing Indian travellers turned the slow season into a boom, with Mustang drawing nearly 66,000 visitors in a month, 94 percent of them Indian, and Pokhara hotels so full that some visitors slept in tents by the lake (Nepali Times).* Industry’s wishlist. The Confederation of Nepalese Industries handed the central bank its asks ahead of the new monetary policy, calling external indicators “encouraging and strong” but the domestic economy “out of rhythm,” and pressing for cheaper credit, a startup loan facility and a modernised interest-rate system (Ratopati).⭐ Social & CulturalFIFA Locks Nepal OutThis was the week Nepali football fans dreaded and could see coming. On June 24, FIFA suspended the All Nepal Football Association until further notice, citing “third-party interference” by the government-linked National Sports Council, which had refused to recognise ANFA’s own electoral process and forced its election to be postponed. The consequences are blunt. Until the ban lifts, no Nepali team can play in any FIFA or AFC competition, the men’s side, the women’s side, the age-group squads and the domestic clubs all locked out, and the funding, coaching courses and development money that flow from world football stop with them. FIFA and the AFC had warned the Sports Council to back off in March and again in April, so the suspension is less a bolt from the blue than the end of a slow collision. The way out is equally clear: the council must withdraw and recognise ANFA’s independence, and the ban can be reversed before the next FIFA Congress. Until someone in Kathmandu blinks, a footballing nation sits on the sidelines of its own sport (The Kathmandu Post).Two Gods Fly Home, and We Brought ThemHere is the week’s reason to feel proud, and it has the diaspora’s fingerprints all over it. At the Nepali Consulate in New York on June 23, US authorities formally returned two sacred statues looted decades ago: a 13th-century bronze of Padma Pani, taken from Tham Bahil in Kathmandu sometime in the 1970s, and a 16th-century wooden figure of Nrityadevi, the goddess of dance, trafficked from a Patan courtyard and later recovered from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Consul General Dadhiram Bhandari and Colonel Matthew Bogdanos of the Manhattan District Attorney’s antiquities unit signed the handover, but Bhandari was quick to share the credit, pointing to “the longstanding contributions of the Nepali diaspora, particularly Newa Guthi, New York.” The community group did more than lobby; it helped coordinate the journey and accompanied the gods on the flight home, where they were handed to the Department of Archaeology on June 25. For a diaspora that often worries about what its children will inherit of Nepal, here is an answer: sometimes you are the ones who carry it back (Spotlight Nepal).In Brief: A few more moments from the week.* A step toward equality. Following a Supreme Court ruling that Nepal must extend full marriage rights to same-sex couples, moving beyond the limited 2023 registration and putting Nepal among the first in Asia to do so, the Blue Diamond Society urged Parliament to update the civil code. “The Supreme Court has spoken clearly,” said executive director Manisha Dhakal (Washington Blade).* A scare in Jawalakhel. The country’s only zoo closed for at least two weeks after an H5N1 outbreak killed more than 40 animals, including a common leopard. The zoo had stayed open for five days after a positive test, and its chief was relieved of duty and placed under investigation for allegedly concealing the outbreak (Mongabay).* Medals beyond the mountains. On Olympic Day, the Nepal Olympic Committee handed out its annual awards, naming karateka Arika Gurung and wushu athlete Bijaya Sinjali the year’s best, a welcome reminder that Nepali sport runs deeper than cricket and climbing (The Kathmandu Post).Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • A Scandal Reaches the Deubas, New Rails for Our Money & Nepal's First Cannes Win 19.06.2026 20min
    Namaste, diaspora family! This week the anti-corruption story that has been simmering for months reached one of the biggest names in Nepali politics, with the CIAA summoning former Foreign Minister Arzu Rana Deuba over the e-passport contract. There was lighter news too, and some of it touches our wallets directly: India and Nepal switched on a remittance link that lets money move home in seconds, and a small Nepali film made history at Cannes. Add seven provincial budgets, a tourism charm offensive, and a quiet rise in the price of daal, and you have a week that ran from the courtroom to the red carpet. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationNew Rails for the Money We Send HomeFor anyone who has stood in a remittance queue or watched a transfer take three days to clear, this is the development of the week. India and Nepal have switched on a direct link between India’s UPI and Nepal’s National Payments Interface, allowing instant, person-to-person money transfers between bank accounts and digital wallets in both countries. What makes it notable is the word “person-to-person.” Earlier UPI tie-ups abroad mostly let Indian tourists pay shopkeepers; the Nepal corridor is the first to send money both ways, directly between individuals. The plumbing was built by NPCI International on the Indian side and Nepal Clearing House on ours, and it makes Nepal the ninth country wired into India’s payments network. For the millions of Nepalis whose lives straddle the open border, and for families splitting earnings across Kathmandu and Indian cities, it promises cheaper, faster transfers and one less reason to carry cash across a checkpoint. The real test, as always, will be the fees and the daily limits, but the direction of travel is clear (Asia News Network).The Gulf State That Keeps CallingIf India was the week’s big structural story, the Gulf supplied its diplomacy. On June 18, the UAE’s ambassador to Nepal, Abdulla Saeed Mubarak Jarwan Al Shamsi, called on Speaker Dol Prasad Aryal, and the agenda read like a summary of the diaspora’s whole relationship with the Emirates: employment, investment, trade, tourism, air services, even artificial intelligence. Aryal used the moment to press a very practical grievance, asking the UAE to ease the police-report requirement that slows down visas for Nepali workers, a piece of paperwork that costs time and money for people who can spare neither. He also welcomed the start of daily Pokhara to Dubai flights from September 23, a real boost for the new international airport that has struggled to fill its schedule, and floated reviving the Dubai to Bhairahawa route. The UAE is home to a large share of Nepal’s migrant workforce, so easier visas and direct flights are not abstractions. They are the difference between seeing family once a year or once every two (Nepal News).In Brief: A few more notes from across the diaspora.* The other side of the wire. As remittances break records, the workers behind them are feeling the Gulf’s downturn. Reports this month describe Nepalis sent on unpaid leave, salaries frozen and contracts canceled as regional conflict slows construction and tourism, with one group of 36 workers in Qatar left unpaid for eight months (The Kathmandu Post).* A community that keeps growing. NRNA Australia welcomed the new budget’s provisions for migrant workers, from skills recognition to social-security enrolment, as fresh figures put Australia’s Nepali-born population at 213,580, nearly double the 2021 count (Nepal News).* A new dot on the map. Himalaya Airlines began direct scheduled flights between Kathmandu and Shenzhen, opening another link to southern China for traders, students and tourists (Travel and Tour World).🏛️ Politics & GovernanceThe Passport Scandal Reaches a DeubaThe corruption case that has slowly engulfed Nepal’s passport department took its most politically charged turn yet. On June 18, the Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority summoned former Foreign Minister Arzu Rana Deuba over the e-passport procurement contract, serving notice at her Budhanilkantha home and giving her three days to appear. The CIAA alleges that close to Rs 8 billion in irregularities ran through the printing and supply deal, and more than thirty-five people are now under its lens. Several are already in custody, including the passport department’s former director general Tirtharaj Aryal, a director, and the Nepali agent of the German firm Muehlbauer; the agent of a second German firm is reported to be absconding. The pressure does not stop at her. Her husband, former Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba, faces a parallel money-laundering inquiry. Deuba, a senior Nepali Congress figure, replied by email that she is abroad for medical treatment and cannot meet the deadline, but pledged to cooperate. For a government that rode to power on an anti-corruption wave, watching the establishment’s biggest names answer summonses is exactly the spectacle its voters wanted (The Kathmandu Post, OnlineKhabar).Seven Provinces, One CalendarWhile the capital chased a scandal, the rest of the federation did its annual arithmetic. On June 15, the first day of Asar, all seven provincial governments tabled their budgets for the coming fiscal year, as the constitution requires them to. The numbers map the country’s uneven geography of money. Bagmati, anchored by Kathmandu, unveiled the largest at Rs 66.93 billion, with Lumbini at Rs 37.38 billion and Gandaki at Rs 32.99 billion. None of this happens in isolation: the federal budget set aside Rs 424.27 billion in transfers to sub-national governments, split between the seven provinces and the country’s 753 local units. The provincial plans lean on the familiar promises of roads, clinics, irrigation and tourism, with pledges to keep day-to-day spending in check. Ten years into federalism, these budgets are less about headline drama and more about whether the system can actually deliver closer to home, a question the diaspora, much of which left because services never reached their villages, has a personal stake in (Rising Nepal Daily).In Brief: The rest of the week in governance.* A crack on the bench. The senior-most Supreme Court justice, Sapna Pradhan Malla, stayed away from a Full Court convened by Chief Justice Manoj Kumar Sharma to finalise the judiciary’s digital plans, a public sign of friction at the top of the court (Nepal News).* The remark that lingers. Opposition parties kept disrupting parliament, demanding that PM Balendra Shah retract his earlier comment that Nepal too had encroached on Indian land, a line they say undercuts Nepal’s own border claims (The Himalayan Times).* Money for classrooms. Education and sports drew Rs 218.3 billion, or 10.28 percent of the national budget, funding skills training, school buildings, smartboards in community schools and the midday meal programme (Nepal News).💸 Economy & DevelopmentWiring a Country That Sells LightNepal’s defining economic ambition is to turn falling water into exportable power, and this year’s energy program lays out how far that dream still has to travel. The Energy Ministry’s plan for the new fiscal year aims for 15,000 MW of generation by 2030, a target that would move Nepal from chronic shortage to surplus and seasonal export. The less glamorous half is the wiring: extending 66 kV transmission lines to 7,808 circuit kilometres and 33 kV lines to 8,429, with a dozen major transmission projects slated for completion, plus modest additions of 43 MW from micro-hydro and 99 MW from solar. Transmission is where Nepal’s hydropower story has repeatedly stalled, with finished plants left unable to sell because the lines to carry their power were years behind. The big builds still in progress, Arun 3 at 900 MW and Betan Karnali among them, will only matter if the grid catches up. For a diaspora that pays the country’s bills in remittances, a Nepal that earns from electricity rather than only exporting workers is the more hopeful future (Investopaper).A Decade On, the Quake’s Last RepairsTen years after the 2015 earthquake flattened homes, clinics and temples, the rebuilding reached a milestone this month. India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar formally handed over 72 health facilities and 12 cultural heritage sites reconstructed under the post-quake programme, after talks with Foreign Minister Shishir Khanal. The same meeting launched the UPI to NPI remittance link and signed an agreement between India’s Bhashini platform and Kathmandu University to build a “voice first” Nepali-language translation tool, a small but interesting bet on technology that works in Nepali rather than only English. The handover is a reminder that earthquake recovery, so urgent in 2015, became a slow decade of paperwork and half-finished sites. Completed clinics and restored monuments are real gains, even if they arrive long after the headlines moved on. They also sit inside a wider India-Nepal agenda of hydropower, connectivity and trade that quietly shapes daily life on both sides of the border (New Spotlight).In Brief: A few more figures worth filing away.* The cost of living creeps up. Year-on-year inflation reached 5.04 percent in the tenth month of the fiscal year, up from just 2.77 percent a year earlier, a reminder that record remittances are landing in households whose grocery bills are rising too (Nepal News).* Markets hold their nerve. The NEPSE index steadied near 2,736 after an early-week dip, though banking stocks stayed soft under the weight of rising bad loans (Nepal News).* Business likes the budget. The Nepal-India Chamber of Commerce endorsed the Rs 2.124 trillion federal budget, backing a higher tax-free income ceiling, a lower top rate, and the new diaspora bonds meant to draw NRN savings into Nepal (Nepal News).⭐ Social & CulturalNepal Walks the CroisetteHere is the week’s reason to feel proud. , the debut feature by director Abinash Bikram Shah, has become the first Nepali film to win an award at the Cannes Film Festival, taking the Jury Prize in the Un Certain Regard section. On June 12, the French Ambassador to Nepal, Virginie Corteval, hosted a reception for the cast and crew at her residence, with Acting Kathmandu Mayor Sunita Dangol among the guests, turning an international honour into a hometown celebration. The film itself refuses the postcard version of Nepal. Set in the Terai plains, it follows Pirati, the leader of a marginalised Kinnar community, whose world unravels after one of her daughters disappears. A co-production spanning Nepal, France, Germany, Brazil and Norway, it carries a story that rarely reaches a screen this big. For a film industry long overshadowed by its Bollywood neighbour, and for diaspora parents who want their children to see Nepal as a place that makes art, not just news, the win lands as something close to validation (The Kathmandu Post).Selling the Mountains, AgainNepal spent the week reminding the world it is open for visitors. The Nepal Tourism Board took a delegation of eight tourism firms to ITE Hong Kong from June 11 to 14, pitching the country’s mix of heritage, adventure and wellness travel to one of Asia’s busiest source markets. At home, the sixth Himalayan Travel Mart wrapped up after drawing more than 600 delegates from 27 countries and arranging some 2,400 business meetings between Nepali operators and foreign buyers. Running underneath it all is a new Wellness Tourism Strategy for 2026 to 2035, an attempt to sell Nepal as a place to slow down and heal rather than only to climb. The pitch makes sense for a country whose biggest tourism risk is being seen as a one-trip destination for hardcore trekkers. Whether the strategy translates into hotel rooms booked and yoga retreats filled is next year’s question, but the diaspora, often the first to bring foreign friends home, is part of how that story spreads (Travel and Tour World).In Brief: A few more moments from the week.* Music without borders. The International Music Festival 2026, hosted by Tribhuvan University’s Lalitkala Campus, gathered musicians, scholars and teachers from several countries, putting Nepali classical traditions and instruments in front of a global audience (Manasukh Dhvani).* Monuments come home. Among the India-funded reconstruction handovers were 12 cultural heritage sites rebuilt after the 2015 quake, restoring temples and monuments that anchor both faith and tourism (New Spotlight).* A meal and a smartboard. The headline education number had a human edge: continued funding for community-school smartboards and the midday meal that keeps many children in class through the lean months (Nepal News).Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • A Record Month for Our Money, a Cabinet Reshuffled & a 25-Year-Old Wound Reopened 13.06.2026 20min
    Namaste, diaspora family! This was a week of records and reckonings. The money we send home hit a single-month high that even Nepal Rastra Bank seemed startled by, and yet in the same breath the central bank published a paper warning that our remittances may be quietly hollowing out the economy they keep afloat. Back in Kathmandu, Sudan Gurung walked back into the Home Ministry after a seven-week absence and, within a day, ordered a fresh look at the one case that has haunted the country for a quarter century: the Narayanhiti massacre. And on a cricket field in Singapore, a young Nepali side gave us a reason to simply cheer. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationA Record Month, and the Hands Behind ItThe numbers landed this week and they are staggering. In the first ten months of the current fiscal year, remittances rose 41.2 percent to Rs 1.917 trillion, according to Nepal Rastra Bank’s latest macroeconomic report. In dollar terms that is 13.26 billion, up a third on the year. The headline figure is the single month of Baishakh, mid-April to mid-May, which brought in Rs 257.49 billion, the highest monthly inflow Nepal has ever recorded and far above the Rs 165 billion of a year earlier. A year ago this same flow was growing at just 13.3 percent, so the acceleration is real, not a rounding quirk. Behind the money are the people: 335,510 Nepalis took first-time labour approvals and another 326,364 renewed theirs over the same period. Analysts credit a strong US dollar, a slow shift toward Western labour markets, and more of us sending money through formal digital channels rather than carrying cash. It is, on paper, the diaspora at its most generous. The harder questions about what that generosity is doing to Nepal come later in this issue (Himalayan Tribune).The Cost of Sending That Money HomeWhile the inflows broke records, a sobering report reminded us what life can look like at the other end of the wire. Human Rights Watch, in a joint moment with Amnesty International on June 11, documented how Gulf governments have tightened surveillance and curbed free expression among migrant workers during the region’s recent conflict. Researchers interviewed 38 Indian, Nepali and Bangladeshi workers in March and 15 more in April across Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. One Nepali worker said his company ordered him to “delete all videos and pictures” from his phone before he flew home for vacation. In Kuwait, police carried out random phone searches, with fines reaching 1,000 dinar, roughly 3,200 dollars, and the threat of jail for anything deemed conflict-related. Amnesty counted more than 1,000 people arrested across the Gulf over such expression. HRW’s Michael Page warned that the crackdown is making it even harder for workers to speak up about the labour abuses many already endure. For families watching from Nepal, it is a reminder that the remittance figures are also a measure of risk (Human Rights Watch).In Brief: A few more notes from the migration economy.* Where they are going. The same NRB data showed 661,874 total labour approvals in ten months, first-time and renewed combined, a quiet measure of how many households still see the answer abroad (Himalayan Tribune).* Korea narrows the door. South Korea has set its 2026 EPS quota at 80,000, down sharply from 165,000 two years ago, tightening one of the most sought-after destinations for Nepali workers (The Kathmandu Post).* Looking to Europe. The government is studying new labour destinations and bilateral deals in Europe, with Germany and Romania named as priorities, the latter already taking close to 28,000 Nepali workers in a single year (New Business Age).🏛️ Politics & GovernanceA Familiar Face Back at Home AffairsThe first real change to Balendra Shah’s cabinet since it took office in March came on June 9, when President Ramchandra Paudel administered the oath to two new ministers at Shital Niwas. The headline was a return: Sudan Gurung, the Rastriya Swatantra Party leader who had resigned as Home Minister on April 22 over questions about share investments and his asset declaration, was reinstated after a government committee reviewed his case and found little to fault in his landholdings. Stepping in beside him was a genuinely unusual appointment, Mahabir Pun, the independent lawmaker from Myagdi best known for bringing wireless internet to remote villages, who takes the new portfolio of Science, Technology and Innovation. Pun is not an RSP member, and his arrival gives a young, tech-forward government a recognisable face for its innovation agenda. Gurung’s reinstatement is more contested, given the unresolved financial questions, but it restores a key security post that had sat vacant for nearly seven weeks. For a government elected on a promise of clean competence, the optics cut both ways (The Kathmandu Post, OnlineKhabar).Reopening NarayanhitiWithin a day of taking back the Home Ministry, Gurung reached for the case that no Nepali government has dared to truly close. He announced that the state would carry out a fresh investigation into the June 1, 2001 Narayanhiti Palace massacre, in which King Birendra, Queen Aishwarya and eight other royals were shot dead, by re-examining the original inquiry reports. The 2001 investigation, led by then-Speaker Taranath Ranabhat, concluded that Crown Prince Dipendra was the sole gunman, a finding many Nepalis have never accepted. The timing is striking: the announcement came just days after the country marked the twenty-fifth anniversary of that night, and from a minister listing it as one of four sweeping moves that also included reviewing old criminal files and weighing whether to drop charges against 2025’s Gen Z protesters. For now it is a statement of intent more than a plan. Gurung named no investigator, no timeline and no terms of reference, and analysts quickly noted the obvious hurdle: the prime suspect died within days of the killings. Still, for a diaspora that grew up under the shadow of that mystery, even the words carry weight (Nepal News, The Tribune).In Brief: The rest of the week under the dome.* The border row cools. After roughly ten days of obstruction, opposition parties lifted their blockade of the House once Foreign Minister Shishir Khanal clarified that the PM’s earlier remark about Nepal encroaching on India referred only to minor cross-border occupation (Khabarhub).* Ordinances in doubt. With seven government ordinances stalled, including one that retroactively removed 1,594 political appointees, the Law Ministry is weighing whether to reintroduce them as ordinary bills the RSP majority can pass (The Kathmandu Post).* A second look at the protests. Among Gurung’s announcements was a task force to assess withdrawing charges against participants in the 2025 Gen Z demonstrations that helped bring this government to power (Nepal News).* Unions on notice. On June 12 the Supreme Court declined to extend an earlier stay, clearing the way for the government to dissolve party-affiliated trade unions in the civil service. A constitutional bench led by Chief Justice Manoj Kumar Sharma ruled that implementation would cause no “irreparable harm,” handing the government a notable win for its civil-service reform drive (Himalayan Tribune).💸 Economy & DevelopmentWhen the Lifeline Becomes a TrapIn the same week remittances broke records, Nepal Rastra Bank published a paper saying, in effect, be careful what you celebrate. Working Paper No. 63 argues that the country’s enormous remittance inflows are quietly pushing the economy toward consumption and away from the farms and factories that create lasting jobs. Most of the money, the central bank’s own researchers found, goes to household spending and paying off debt rather than productive investment, and the result is what economists call “Dutch disease,” a creeping loss of competitiveness, alongside a premature decline in manufacturing. The paper makes an uncomfortable point: Nepal’s decade of apparent macroeconomic calm, all those healthy reserves and steady inflows, has masked weak productivity growth and a shrinking industrial base. It is a rare moment of public candour from the institution that manages the very flows it is warning about, and it lands precisely as the new budget claims it will pivot the economy toward production and exports. The question the diaspora might fairly ask is whether anyone in Kathmandu has a plan to turn our remittances into something more durable than groceries (Nepal Rastra Bank).The Gap That Will Not CloseIf you want the proof of the central bank’s worry, look at the trade numbers from the same ten-month stretch. Nepal’s trade deficit widened 14.9 percent to Rs 1.443 trillion, as imports climbed to Rs 1.692 trillion while exports, even after respectable double-digit growth, reached only Rs 248.96 billion. Put plainly, imports still make up around 87 percent of all the goods crossing Nepal’s borders. The shopping list tells the story: diesel alone cost Rs 103 billion, crude soybean oil another Rs 97 billion, then petrol and cooking gas. This is an economy that earns abroad and spends at home, sending much of that hard-won remittance straight back out to pay for fuel and food it does not produce. Exports are growing, which is genuinely good news, but from a base so small that the gap keeps widening anyway. Until Nepal makes more of what it consumes, the budget’s bold growth targets will keep running into this same wall (Nepalnews).In Brief: A few more figures worth filing away.* Markets steady. The NEPSE index clawed back to 2,737.61 by June 11 after a four-session slide, though the banking stocks stayed soft under the weight of rising bad loans (Nepalnews).* Clearing the dead wood. An Energy Ministry panel, part of the government’s reform push, recommended scrapping the licenses of 38 stalled hydropower projects worth 1,388 MW that signed power deals but never broke ground, and proposed ending Nepal’s hydropower “license raj” in favour of competitive licensing. It is a pointed move given how many big schemes, the flagship 1,063 MW Upper Arun among them, remain stuck (New Spotlight).* The outside view. The Asian Development Bank and World Bank both expect a sharp slowdown this fiscal year, to between 2.3 and 2.7 percent, before a rebound toward 5 percent in 2026/27 as the shocks of last year fade (Asian Development Bank).⭐ Social & CulturalCricket Books a Ticket to JapanHere is the week’s pure joy. On June 8 in Singapore, Nepal’s men’s cricket team finished the Asian Games Qualifier unbeaten, beating Hong Kong in a rain-shortened final to seal a place at the 2026 Asian Games in Aichi-Nagoya, Japan. Chasing a modest target, Nepal had raced to 114 for 2 when the rain arrived and the Duckworth-Lewis method handed them the win. The campaign belonged to opener Kushal Bhurtel, who was untouchable throughout, hammering back-to-back T20I centuries earlier in the tournament, including an astonishing 129 off 43 balls against China, and anchoring the final with a brisk half-century. For a cricketing nation that has clawed its way up through associate ranks on sheer passion, a continental-games berth is more than a result, it is a stage. Expect the diaspora’s WhatsApp groups from Sydney to Reading to be planning watch parties already (OnlineKhabar).From Jhamsikhel to the World StageNepal’s young dancers had their own night to remember. The grand finale of World of Dance Nepal 2026 wrapped up on June 6 at The Plaza in Jhamsikhel, Lalitpur, judged by the celebrated Indian choreographer Terence Lewis. Champions were crowned across four divisions, with young Ridhi Sarkar taking the top spot in the Junior Division. The real prize, though, is what comes next: the winning acts will represent Nepal at international competitions, including the World Finals in the United States, a global slot in Thailand and the World Supremacy Battleground in Hong Kong. It is a small but telling sign of a creative generation that no longer sees Kathmandu as the ceiling. For diaspora parents whose children are growing up dancing to both Nepali and global beats, it is a reminder that the talent pipeline back home is very much alive (Glamour Nepal).In Brief: A few more moments from the week.* Words without borders. The fourth Kathmandu Kalinga Literary Festival ran June 6 to 7 at Hotel Himalaya under the theme “Beyond Borders,” gathering more than 400 speakers and poets reciting in Nepali, Newari, Hindi, Maithili, Bhojpuri and English (OnlineKhabar).* Grounded at the gate. Immigration officials stopped ANFA president Pankaj Bikram Nembang and general secretary Kiran Rai from flying out to the FIFA World Cup opening, citing a National Sports Council probe into the football body’s finances (Nepal News).* A record reel. Nepali cinema is having its best box-office year in memory, with the May release ‘Lalibazar’ crossing Rs 79 million and domestic films outdrawing foreign ones in peak season (The Film Nepal).Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • A Border Slip, a Rs 100 Billion Pitch to the Diaspora & 25 Years After the Massacre 05.06.2026 21min
    Namaste, diaspora family! It was a week when a 35-year-old prime minister learned how heavy his own words have become. In his first proper address to Parliament, Balendra Shah told the chamber that Nepal too has encroached on Indian land, and the backlash has not stopped since. Closer to home for many of us, the new budget made its boldest move yet to turn our remittances into something more than grocery money: a Rs 100 billion diaspora bond and a promise to treat NRNs as “super organic investors.” And on June 1, the country paused to mark twenty-five years since the night nine royals were shot dead inside Narayanhiti. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationBalen’s Rs 100 Billion Pitch to the DiasporaFor years the diaspora has been told it is the backbone of the economy and then handed an NRN card that opens few doors. The budget for fiscal year 2026/27 tries something different. The Balen Shah government has proposed an annual Rs 100 billion diaspora bond to channel overseas capital into roads, energy, and export industries, alongside a Remittance-Investment Matching Fund to push some of that money into local startups rather than household consumption. NRNs would get “super organic investor” status with preferential access to priority sectors, the secondary stock market would open to offshore citizens, and the government is promising double-taxation treaties with the countries where most of us live. There is even a “Return to Motherland after Retirement” scheme aimed at first-generation migrants. It is the most serious attempt in years to treat the diaspora as a development engine rather than an ATM. The catch, as always, is delivery: bonds and funds are easy to announce and hard to run (myRepublica, Ratopati).The Study That Says “Stop Underusing Us”A virtual policy discourse hosted by the Nepal Policy Institute on May 29 put numbers behind a frustration many of us feel. There are roughly 3 million Nepalis abroad, about a tenth of the home population, and they are not the unskilled labour force the old stereotypes assume. Some 51 percent of Nepali Americans aged 25 and over hold a bachelor’s degree or higher, and remittances now run at 25.3 percent of Nepal’s GDP. The institute’s argument is that tinkering with the NRN Act is the wrong frame entirely. It wants the government to replace “NRN” with a broader “Nepalis Abroad” category that splits the diaspora into three groups, from migrant workers to former citizens to persons of Nepali origin, and to legislate for engagement as a national strategic priority. NPI chair Dr Khagendra Raj Dhakal framed it as “a constructive offer to work with the state,” not a list of demands. For a diaspora tired of symbolic gestures, that is the right register (NEPYORK).In Brief: Three threads from the harder edge of life abroad.* The cost of the oil money. A FairSquare report documented 23 alleged labour violations among subcontractors for Saudi Aramco, with Nepali workers describing 12 to 19 hour shifts in heat above 50 degrees Celsius, “slum housing,” and compensation paid in only one of six injury or death cases (The Kathmandu Post).* Eight months, no pay. Thirty-six Nepali workers employed by Intertectra Qatar WLL have gone unpaid for eight months, their combined dues now topping Rs 20.5 million (The Kathmandu Post).* Come home, eventually. Among the budget’s diaspora measures is a “Return to Motherland after Retirement” plan to ease first-generation migrants back into Nepal after their working lives abroad (myRepublica).🏛️ Politics & GovernanceThe PM Who Conceded Too MuchPrime Minister Balendra Shah used his first formal address to the Federal Parliament to say something no Nepali leader says out loud. After becoming prime minister, he told the House, he had learned that not only has India encroached on Nepal’s land, but Nepal has also encroached on India’s “in multiple places.” He named no locations and offered no evidence, and the room turned on him. Opposition MP Basana Thapa demanded the remark be struck from the record, and a former ambassador stated flatly that “no land of India has been encroached on by the Nepali state.” The worry is strategic: Nepal’s entire case over Kalapani, Lipulekh, and Limpiyadhura, rooted in the 1816 Sugauli Treaty, rests on the position that India is the one occupying disputed ground. By conceding mutual fault, the PM handed New Delhi a talking point, and India promptly rejected any “third-party role” in the matter. The Foreign Ministry spent the week in damage control, clarifying that Shah meant minor cross-border occupation in no-man’s-land. Analysts called it an off-the-cuff slip from a leader still learning that a PM’s casual aside is never just casual (Al Jazeera, The Kathmandu Post).A House That Cannot Sit StraightThe chamber that was supposed to debate a record budget spent the week debating its own conduct. After a disorderly sitting on Sunday, a probe panel was formed under House of Representatives secretary Prakash Adhikari to investigate “indecent and objectionable behaviour” by lawmakers, and Speaker Dol Prasad Aryal adjourned proceedings to June 8. The Kathmandu Post’s read was blunt: Parliament, constitutionally the country’s chief forum for national debate, is being overshadowed by its own disputes while pressing public business waits. It is not the image a young post-election government wants, especially with a stack of bills and the border row both demanding serious floor time. The optics of a legislature investigating its own manners, rather than governing, are exactly the kind that feed the cynicism the March election was supposed to cure (The Kathmandu Post).In Brief: The rest of the week under the dome.* Not a shadow cabinet, apparently. Nepali Congress parliamentary leader Bhisma Raj Angdembey insisted the party has only assigned thematic responsibilities matching the 18 ministries, not formed a “shadow council of ministers” (Nepal News).* Talk, don’t shout. The Nepali Communist Party stressed that the border dispute with India should be settled through diplomatic channels, not parliamentary theatrics (Nepal News).* Know the map. For anyone lost in the border row, the contested ground is Kalapani, Lipulekh, Limpiyadhura, and Susta, all tangled in where the Kali River truly begins under the 1816 Sugauli Treaty (Al Jazeera).💸 Economy & DevelopmentBig Budget, Small GrowthThe numbers in the Rs 2.124 trillion budget are built to impress: a 7 percent growth target, a push to lift GDP to Rs 7.4 trillion, a revenue goal of Rs 1.6 trillion, the personal income tax exemption raised to Rs 1 million, and the top rate cut from 39 to 29 percent. Business bodies, including the Nepal-India Chamber of Commerce, have endorsed the framework. The trouble sits in the government’s own paperwork. The Economic Survey, tabled in the same Parliament, pegs growth this fiscal year at just 3.85 percent, barely half the new target, and notes the trade deficit widened 11.2 percent to Rs 1.098 trillion. So the budget asks the economy to nearly double its pace in a year when imports are still outrunning exports and capital projects keep stalling. None of this makes the targets impossible, but it does make them a statement of intent rather than a forecast. For the diaspora weighing those new bonds and funds, the honest question is whether the delivery machinery has changed as much as the ambition (Khabarhub, The Kathmandu Post).Betting the Budget on WattsIf there is one sector the budget treats as Nepal’s way out, it is electricity. The plan is to add another 1,040 MW in the coming year, 670 MW from hydropower and 370 MW from solar, lifting total installed capacity to 5,535 MW. The most strategic line item is the Karnali Corridor National Transmission Line, described as the backbone for the next phase of hydropower expansion and cross-border power trade, the part that actually lets new megawatts reach buyers at home and in India. The long-delayed 140 MW Tanahu project, Nepal’s first major reservoir scheme in more than 35 years, is nearing completion, and reservoir storage is being framed as the answer to dry-season shortfalls. Power has long been the one resource Nepal has in genuine surplus during the monsoon and scarcity in winter. Wiring it into a grid that can store and sell it is the difference between a talking point and an export economy (New Spotlight).In Brief: A few more figures worth filing away.* Still the lifeline. Remittances are projected at roughly 33 percent of GDP this year, and foreign exchange reserves now cover an extraordinary 18.5 months of imports (The Kathmandu Post).* Lights on after dark. The budget funds an upgrade to Bharatpur Airport to handle night flights, a small but real boost for Chitwan’s connectivity (Nepal News).* The compact moves. The government allocated Rs 29.344 billion to advance the Millennium Challenge Corporation project in the coming fiscal year (Nepal News).⭐ Social & CulturalTwenty-Five Years After NarayanhitiOn the night of June 1, 2001, nine members of Nepal’s royal family were shot dead inside Narayanhiti Palace, among them King Birendra and Queen Aishwarya, in a few minutes that bent the course of the country’s history. Twenty-five years on, the anniversary was marked with quiet remembrance and candle-lighting, and the mystery that has never fully settled, an official inquiry named Crown Prince Dipendra as the gunman, still draws argument. What gives this anniversary its weight is the timing. The grief is being remembered under a republican government led by Balendra Shah, in a Nepal that has since abolished the monarchy the massacre helped doom. For older members of the diaspora, this is a date carved into memory, the night the news from home stopped making sense. For younger ones born into the republic, it is the origin story of the country they inherited (Ratopati).So Close in GoaNepal’s women footballers gave the diaspora a night of nerves and then heartbreak. In the SAFF Women’s Championship semifinal in Margao, Goa, on June 3, the Gorkhali Chelis led Bangladesh through a 23rd-minute strike by Gita Rana and looked, for long stretches, like the better side. Bangladesh equalised on the stroke of half-time, the second half went blow for blow, and then Sagorika struck a last-gasp winner to end it 2-1 and send Bangladesh to the final. It is a brutal way to lose, but the performance said something hopeful: a Nepali women’s side that can lead a regional semifinal on the road is no longer a surprise package, it is a contender that fell a single moment short (Outlook India).In Brief: A few more moments from the week.* Stories from the mountains. The Kathmandu International Mountain Film Festival wrapped its 23rd edition, screening 50 films from 29 countries and opening with the national premiere of ‘Shape of Momo’ (Nepal News).* Summit roll call. Kathmandu’s second Everest Summiteers Summit honoured 176 climbers from 26 countries, a reminder that the spring season still draws the world to Nepal’s doorstep (Nepal News).* Country number twenty. Folk-rock institution Nepathya played its first ever Malaysia concert, making the country the 20th and Kuala Lumpur the 58th city on a touring map built almost entirely on diaspora crowds (The Kathmandu Post).Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • A Record Budget, a Bill That Bites Back & Volleyball Fever 29.05.2026 21min
    Enjoying the Digest? We pour a lot into each issue. The best way to help us grow is to forward this email to one friend or family member who’d like it. Thank you.Namaste, diaspora family! It was budget day back home, and Finance Minister Swarnim Wagle went big: a Rs 2.12 trillion package, the largest in Nepal’s history, promising 7 percent growth, tax relief, and even a sovereign AI computing center. But the number that should worry every one of us reading from abroad is a different one. A draft NRN Act now circulating would bar non-resident Nepalis from voting or standing for election, and diaspora groups want it scrapped before it ever reaches a vote. Meanwhile remittances kept the lights on at Rs 7 billion a day, Kathmandu’s women charged into a volleyball semifinal at home, and the festival halls of Thamel filled up with film. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationThe Draft That Tells the Diaspora to Sit DownA draft of the new Non-Resident Nepali (NRN) Act now circulating among overseas communities has set off a revolt, and for once the anger is unanimous. In its present form the bill bans NRNs from both voting and standing for election, and the NRN Association warns that more than 500,000 Nepalis could be stripped of their political rights. Diaspora bodies, including NRNA New Zealand, are not asking for amendments. They want the draft thrown out and rebuilt from scratch around the principle that once a Nepali, always a Nepali. The irony is hard to miss: the same people the bill would silence sent home a record share of the Rs 1.66 trillion that is currently holding the national economy together. There is legal history here too. Back in March 2018 the Supreme Court ordered the government to enable overseas voting within two years, an order that remains unfulfilled eight years on (The Kathmandu Post).The Australia Study That Names the ProblemIf you have ever wondered whether your NRN card actually does anything, a new study has your answer, and it is not reassuring. A report from the Institute for Integrated Development Studies (IIDS), released this month, looks at the more than 213,000 Nepal-born residents now living in Australia, one of the fastest-growing Nepali populations anywhere. Respondents described the NRN card as largely symbolic in practice: the investment, property, and inheritance rights it is supposed to unlock are poorly communicated, inconsistently applied, and often unenforceable when it counts. The study puts hard data behind a frustration most of us already feel, and it lands at exactly the moment the draft NRN Act is under fire. Taken together, the message from the diaspora is consistent: stop offering symbolic cards and unenforceable promises, and start delivering rights people can actually use (Nepal News).In Brief: A few more threads pulling at the diaspora this week.* Small steps over big slogans. A widely shared column argues Nepal should deliver incremental, practical NRN-citizenship reforms now rather than chase headline dual-citizenship promises that never arrive (The Annapurna Express).* Protection across the whole journey. A national policy dialogue brought government, unions, and development partners together to push for social protection that follows migrant workers before departure, during work abroad, and after they return (ILO).* The map is shifting. Migrant worker numbers fell 3.36 percent this year even as remittances soared, with more Nepalis heading to Europe, Japan, Australia, and the US instead of the traditional Gulf (Nepal News).🏛️ Politics & GovernanceCongress Picks a Fight With ItselfWith the 15th National Convention on the horizon, the Nepali Congress is once again fighting hardest with its own people. On May 25, senior leader Shekhar Koirala floated a five-point plan to settle the party’s long-running membership disputes, the centrepiece being a merger of the Central Working Committees from the 14th National Convention and the Special National Convention. General Secretary Gagan Thapa is having none of it, arguing that stitching the two bodies together would create an unlawful committee of nearly 400 members, well outside what the party statute allows. The disagreement is procedural on the surface, but underneath it is the familiar Congress story: rival camps using the rulebook as a weapon ahead of a leadership contest. For a party that still styles itself as the steady hand in Nepali politics, the optics of an internal stalemate are not great (Nepal News).An Opposition That Won’t Let the House SitParliament spent another week going nowhere. The chief whips of the Nepali Congress, CPN (UML), the Nepali Communist Party, and the Rastriya Prajatantra Party agreed to keep disrupting proceedings in the House of Representatives until the government enforces a mandatory prime minister’s question hour, a fixture in many parliaments where the head of government has to face direct questions on a set schedule. The opposition frames it as basic accountability; the government sees a coalition looking for leverage. Either way, the gridlock arrives at an awkward time, with a record budget and a stack of bills waiting for debate. For a young post-election government still proving it can govern, a stalled chamber is exactly the image it does not want (Nepal News).In Brief: The rest of the week under the dome.* Cleaning up the rolls. The National Assembly unanimously advanced the Voter Roll (First Amendment) Bill, 2026, for formal consideration, while the Film Bill-2025 moved to the lower house (Nepal News).* Order, order. A session of the Koshi Provincial Assembly turned physical when former Chief Minister Rajendra Rai tried to wrench a microphone from the rostrum and throw it (Nepal News).* A generational read. A CSIS analysis frames March’s election as a generational break and a new strategic moment in the Himalayas, worth a read if you want the big-picture view (CSIS).💸 Economy & DevelopmentWagle’s Rs 2.12 Trillion BetOn the morning of May 29, Finance Minister Swarnim Wagle tabled a Rs 2,124.34 billion budget for fiscal year 2026/27, the biggest in Nepal’s history and a 25.2 percent jump on this year’s revised figures. The ambition is just as large: 7 percent growth, inflation held under 6 percent, fewer ministries, and a sweep of tax reforms. The headline relief for ordinary earners is a personal income tax exemption on annual income up to Rs 1 million, and the headline curiosity is a proposed sovereign AI computing center in Syuchatar, Kathmandu. The hard part, as ever, is the gap between the document and the delivery. Capital spending is set at just over 20 percent of the budget, and Nepal’s long record of under-spending its capital allocation is the reason economists are reading this one with cautious eyes. A big number is a promise, not a result (The Kathmandu Post, OnlineKhabar).Remittances Carry the Country, AgainThe figure that makes the budget math even possible came in this month: remittances rose 39.1 percent to Rs 1.66 trillion (about USD 11.55 billion) in the first nine months of the fiscal year, with a record Rs 209.75 billion arriving between mid-March and mid-April alone. That is roughly Rs 7 billion landing in the country every single day, and it has pushed gross foreign exchange reserves up 30.5 percent. Here is the part that keeps economists up at night: this windfall arrived even as the number of migrant workers fell, and most of the money flows straight into consumption rather than into businesses, factories, or jobs at home. So the diaspora is, in the most literal sense, financing the country’s stability. The open question is whether any budget will ever turn that lifeline into lasting productive investment (Nepal News, The Kathmandu Post).In Brief: Numbers and concrete that moved this week.* The real growth rate. The government’s Economic Survey pegs growth this fiscal year at 3.85 percent, a long way short of the new budget’s 7 percent target (The Kathmandu Post).* Power on the way. The 216MW Upper Trishuli-1 project marked its weir operation milestone with the Korean ambassador in attendance, a sign the long-delayed plant is nearing its mid-2027 finish (Nepal Press).* Storing for the future. The energy minister made reservoir-based projects the national priority for energy security and irrigation, as the 140MW Tanahu project crossed 63 percent completion (Peoples’ Review).⭐ Social & CulturalKathmandu’s Women Spike Their Way to the SemisThe best sporting story of the week did not come from a mountain. Hosting the CAVA Women’s Volleyball Championship 2026, Nepal’s national side fought through the group stage with wins over Kyrgyzstan and the Maldives, shaking off a narrow opening loss to defending champion India to book a place in the final four. Their reward is a semifinal against an unbeaten Iran, played in front of a home crowd in Kathmandu that has turned out in real numbers for a women’s team. Whatever happens next, a host nation reaching the semis is the kind of result that gets girls in Dharan and Dhangadhi asking for a volleyball, and that may matter more than the medal (The Kathmandu Post).Thamel Goes to the MoviesThe Kathmandu International Mountain Film Festival (KIMFF) opened its 23rd edition this week, turning the QFX Chhaya Center in Thamel into a five-day window on the world. The programme runs to 50 features, documentaries, and short films from 29 countries, with the mountains as the connective thread rather than the only subject. For a festival that has quietly outlasted governments and grown into one of South Asia’s most respected mountain-film gatherings, the staying power is its own kind of achievement. For the diaspora, it is also a reminder that Nepal exports more than labour and tea: it exports stories, and people are watching (Nepal News).In Brief: A handful of moments worth a smile.* A first on the summit. Makeup artist Nilam Poudel became the first openly LGBTQ+ Nepali to summit Everest, reaching the top on May 23, a quiet milestone on a crowded mountain (Nepal News).* Strings that travel. Sarod maestro Sudarshan Rajopadhyay was honoured with the Kalakshetram title in Pune, India, for his contribution to music (Nepal News).* Folk-rock goes global. Nepathya plays its first ever Malaysia concert at Zepp Kuala Lumpur on June 1, another diaspora crowd about to sing every word back (Nepal News).* Cricket on tour. The Cricket Association of Nepal named its ‘A’ squad for the 42nd All India Gold Cup in Uttarakhand, captained by Anil Kumar Sah (Nepal News).Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Ilam Tea Clears the Border, Uber Hits the Road & Three Everest Records 22.05.2026 18min
    Namaste, diaspora family! It’s a week where the news came from the mountains, the highways, and the tea gardens. After three weeks stranded at the Indian border under a new lab-testing rule, Ilam’s tea trucks finally started rolling again as Delhi quietly blinked. On Everest, Kami Rita Sherpa logged his 32nd summit and Lhakpa Sherpa her 11th — two world records on the same mountain on the same morning — before a record 274 climbers crowded the top in a single day. In Kathmandu, Uber quietly turned on the app, Manoj Kumar Sharma was sworn in as Chief Justice despite a Bar-led revolt over seniority, and ANFA crawled back from a FIFA-ban scare. And the diaspora? Still sending home Rs 7 billion a day. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceSharma Sworn In — The Seniority Bypass Becomes a Fait AccompliTwo weeks ago, the Constitutional Council’s pick of fourth-ranked Dr. Manoj Kumar Sharma for Chief Justice — over three more senior justices including the woman who would have been Nepal’s first female CJ — looked like a story that might still bend. It didn’t. On May 19, the Parliamentary Hearing Committee reviewed 16 complaints filed against Sharma and unanimously endorsed his nomination. A day later, on May 20, President Ram Chandra Paudel swore him in as Nepal’s 33rd Chief Justice. The Nepal Bar Association‘s emergency meeting, Acting CJ Sapana Pradhan Malla‘s implicit case, and dissent from National Assembly Chair Narayan Prasad Dahal all weighed less than a clear ordinance and a government willing to use it. Sharma now inherits a Supreme Court docket that includes the Kamalpokhari guthi case, ongoing transitional-justice petitions, and — inevitably — challenges to the very ordinances that put him there. For the diaspora, the precedent matters as much as the person: judicial seniority in Nepal is no longer load-bearing (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post).Parliament in Paralysis — Picket Lines and a Postponed BudgetThe budget session that was supposed to begin on May 11 has spent most of its first ten days locked in obstruction. On May 21, opposition MPs from the Nepali Congress, CPN-UML and the new Shram Sanskriti Party picketed the well of the lower house demanding PM Balen Shah appear in person to face questions on policy, ordinances and the wave of dismissals. Shah skipped Wednesday’s session, sent word he’d attend Thursday, and didn’t. Frustrated lawmakers accused him of “avoiding parliamentary scrutiny” and chanted for his resignation. Meanwhile, the government has postponed the formal budget meeting overnight and accelerated the ordinance pipeline — drawing criticism from former parliamentarians and constitutional lawyers that the executive is now governing around, rather than through, the legislature. The constitutional deadline to present the 2026/27 budget remains May 29, leaving a one-week runway and a parliament that hasn’t yet allowed the Finance Minister to speak (Tribune India, Khabarhub, Click Nepal).In Brief: More from the political week.* 16 complaints, zero traction. The Parliamentary Hearing Committee reviewed every complaint filed against Sharma — including conduct, jurisprudence, and the seniority-bypass itself — and dismissed all of them in a single sitting (Kathmandu Post).* Finance ministry trims fiscal transfers. Only 21.02% of the fourth-quarter equalization grant is going to provinces and local governments — down from the standard 25% — over objections from the National Natural Resources and Fiscal Commission (Nepal News).* Ordinance surge continues. Critics in the press are now framing the post-March 26 government as one that has issued more ordinances per month than any cabinet in recent memory (Khabarhub).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationRs 7 Billion a Day — The Diaspora Is Quietly Carrying the EconomyWhile Kathmandu’s politics burns, the diaspora has been writing one of the most remarkable macroeconomic stories of the decade. Nepal received Rs 209.75 billion in remittances between mid-March and mid-April — roughly Rs 7 billion every single day. Across the first nine months of FY 2025/26, total inflows hit Rs 1.659 trillion, a stunning 39.1% year-on-year jump. In dollar terms that’s $11.55 billion, up 31.9%. Remittances are now projected to clock in at ~33% of GDP this year, up from 27.8% last year. Forex reserves have ballooned to $23.55 billion, enough to cover well over a year of imports. The rupee’s 7.5% depreciation against the dollar helped, but the underlying story is volume: more Nepalis abroad, sending more money, more often. For NRNs, the irony is sharp — the people the new draft bill threatens to strip of voting rights are the people keeping the macro picture intact (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News).Malaysia Locks in the Health-Screening Rules — What Outbound Workers Need to KnowIf you’re heading to Kuala Lumpur on a labour permit — or you know someone who is — read this carefully. On May 18, the Malaysian Embassy in Kathmandu issued a public notice clarifying the long-disputed health screening regime under the Biomedical System (BMS). The arrangement, anchored in the bilateral labour agreement signed on October 29, 2018, lays out three key points: examinations must be conducted only through 36 authorised health institutions in Nepal; an additional Rs 3,000 service charge above the Nepal government’s fee applies; and all BMS-related costs are to be borne by the Malaysian employer, who must reimburse workers via the first month’s salary. The notice is a direct response to months of complaints from rights groups and migrant aspirants about overcharging at unauthorised clinics. Malaysia remains the single largest destination for Nepali migrant workers — 219,357 went there in 2023 alone — and the absence of clear, enforceable rules has been the single biggest leak in the system. The new clarification doesn’t fix everything, but it’s a start (Kathmandu Post).In Brief: A few more diaspora signals.* NRN bill backlash builds. Diaspora bodies — including NRNA New Zealand — are now publicly calling for the draft NRN Act 2026 to be scrapped, arguing it strips political and voting rights rather than expanding them (Annapurna Express).* A women’s-record holder of Nepali origin. Lhakpa Sherpa, who summited Everest for the 11th time this week, has lived in the United States for over two decades. Her record is a diaspora story as much as a Nepali one (Al Jazeera).* Indian fuel hike will bite at the pump. Indian state oil companies raised petrol and diesel prices by more than 3% — and because Nepal imports its entire fuel supply from India, transport and food prices will follow within weeks (Nepal News).💸 Economy & DevelopmentUber Lands in Kathmandu — Soft Launch, Hard QuestionsThe world’s biggest ride-hailing app finally turned on the lights in Nepal. On May 21, Uber quietly went live in the Kathmandu Valley with a “test launch,” offering both bike and car rides through the app, with a formal launch scheduled for June 1. The local play is a back-office partnership with Taximandu, which is handling driver onboarding, technical coordination and dispute resolution — roughly 1,000 drivers have signed on already. For a market already crowded with Pathao, inDriver, Indrive and Tootle, Uber’s arrival is more about validation than disruption. But there’s a wrinkle: government officials confirm that no formal application for foreign investment or company registration under Uber’s name has been received. The Taximandu workaround lets Uber operate without yet committing to FDI paperwork — a posture that’s already triggering transparency questions at the Department of Industry. Expect a regulatory tussle within weeks. For the diaspora, it’s the first time arriving at TIA and opening the same Uber app you use in Sydney or New Jersey will actually summon a ride (Kathmandu Post, Meroauto).Tea Gets a Reprieve — India Eases the Lab-Testing RuleA three-week border headache for Ilam’s tea growers ended quietly this week. India’s Tea Board, acting on instructions from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, has relaxed the mandatory lab-testing rule it had imposed on imported tea on May 1. Under the original rule, every consignment crossing Panitanki and other border points had to be sent to a Kolkata central food lab for testing — a process that stranded trucks, blew up costs, and threatened to wipe out a Rs 6 billion export trade. Under the revised SOP, tea destined for sale within India is exempt from mandatory testing; only re-export-bound tea still needs the lab certificate. For Nepal’s orthodox tea industry — which sells roughly 90% of its premium leaf to India — the climb-down is a major win. But growers are already drawing the broader lesson: India can turn the tap off on Nepali exports overnight, and the response can’t be diplomatic begging. Two industry voices this week argued — quietly — that China’s renewed interest in Ilam gardens is no longer just a curiosity. It’s an insurance policy (Kathmandu Post, Asia News Network).In Brief: More economic signals.* Everest royalties at Rs 1.24 billion. As of May 21, the Department of Tourism had issued permits to 1,157 mountaineers across 30 peaks — a record haul. Everest alone brought in nearly $6 million at the new $15,000-per-climber rate (Kathmandu Post).* Finance Secretary signals private-sector tilt. Ghanshyam Upadhyaya previewed the FY 2026/27 budget as one designed to “attract private investment,” arguing productivity growth can’t come from government spending. The budget hits parliament May 29 (Nepal News).* Capital spending still broken. With two months left in the fiscal year, the government has spent 68.98% of its recurrent budget but only 27.91% of capital — the same chronic execution gap that’s plagued every budget since federalism began (Nepal News).⭐ Social & CulturalThree Records in a Week — and a Warning From the Man Who Set OneThis was the kind of week that makes Nepal’s mountaineering legend feel both deserved and unsustainable. On May 17, Kami Rita Sherpa, 56, reached the Everest summit at 10:12 am NPT — his 32nd ascent, extending his own world record. The same morning, Lhakpa Sherpa, 52, reached the top for the 11th time, extending her record as the woman with the most Everest ascents. And on May 20, 274 climbers topped out in a single day — the most ever from the Nepal side. Spring 2026 has now set records in royalty revenue, permit numbers, and single-day summits. Then, this Thursday, Kami Rita said the quiet part loud: he is calling on Nepal to cap Everest permits and prioritise climber quality over volume. Coming from the man whose summit count is the global benchmark, the warning is hard to dismiss. For a country that just collected Rs 1.24 billion in mountaineering royalties this season, the question is whether tourism revenue or climber safety wins the next policy round (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post, Washington Post).ANFA Back in the Game — Football Pulls Off a Last-Minute SaveA fortnight ago, Nepali football was staring down a FIFA suspension that would have frozen the national side from international competition, evaporated FIFA funding for four years, and pulled the women’s team out of the SAFF Women’s Championship. This week, the brinkmanship broke. On May 15, Education and Sports Minister Sasmit Pokharel convened a meeting with the NSC and All Nepal Football Association at the ministry and announced the NSC suspension on ANFA was being revoked. By May 16, ANFA officials were back at their desks at Satdobato. Crucially, FIFA followed by lifting its four-year funding ban on ANFA — a development that restores millions in Forward Programme money and unblocks development grassroots projects that had been stuck since 2021. The Kathmandu Post’s read is sharp: this isn’t because anyone solved the underlying governance row between ANFA and NSC. It’s because FIFA’s deadline was real, and someone in government finally believed it. Nepal’s women now travel to the SAFF Championship; the national team gets back to League 2 prep (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post, Nepal News).In Brief: Rounding out the week.* Cricket sweep at Kirtipur. Nepal beat USA (May 16), beat Scotland by 6 wickets (May 18), and beat USA again today (May 22) at TU Cricket Ground after posting 317/8. League 2 qualification math is now genuinely interesting again (ESPNcricinfo, ESPNcricinfo).* Bagmati demolitions push into Kapan. Kathmandu Valley authorities intensified the drive against illegal construction along the Bagmati and its tributaries this week, with Kapan the latest neighbourhood in the crosshairs. Heritage groups are watching to see whether the same energy reaches Kamalpokhari (Kathmandu Post).* Top-100 cricketers. Aasif Sheikh and Dipendra Singh Airee are now both inside the ICC ODI Top 100 batting rankings — a first for Nepal (Nepal News).Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Everest Opens, a Banker in Cuffs & Tea Stuck at the Border 15.05.2026 20min
    Namaste, diaspora family! It’s a week of opposites back home: Sherpas fixed the Everest ropes for a record-breaking spring season just as the chief of one of Nepal’s biggest banks was hauled in by the CIB, and trucks of Ilam tea sat idle at the Indian border thanks to a new lab-testing rule out of Kolkata. We’ve also got a constitutional standoff at Sheetal Niwas, a fresh draft immigration law open for your comments, and the British Gurkha Cricket League back in full swing in the UK. Settle in.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceCabinet resends Constitutional Council ordinance to the PresidentA quiet constitutional standoff broke into the open this week. The Cabinet decided to resend the Constitutional Council (First Amendment) Ordinance 2026 to President Ram Chandra Paudel without any changes after he returned it for reconsideration earlier in the month. The ordinance — which tweaks how key constitutional appointments (CIAA, Election Commission, Supreme Court justices) get pushed through the Council — has been a flashpoint since the Balen Shah government took office, with critics arguing it concentrates appointment power in the executive. By sending the same text back, the Cabinet is essentially daring the President to either issue it or trigger a more visible confrontation. For diaspora readers watching Nepal’s institutional balance, this is the first real test of how the Sheetal Niwas–Singha Durbar relationship will work under a non-traditional PM (Nepal News).National Assembly digs into Wagle’s FY 2026/27 policy & programmeThe National Assembly began formal deliberations on the government’s policies and programme for fiscal year 2026/27 following the President’s joint-sitting address on May 11. Eight amendment proposals have already been registered against Finance Minister Swarnim Wagle’s policy document — a relatively low number that hints at a smoother passage than many expected, but also previews the lines of fight: capital-budget execution targets, the diaspora financing instrument, and federal–province transfer math. The full budget itself lands later in May, but this is the philosophical scaffolding — and so far, the Wagle pitch of “execute, don’t announce” appears to be holding the centre of the conversation (Nepal News).In Brief: Three smaller political stories worth flagging.* “Cleanliness Week 2026” kicked off May 11 from the PMO, branded “A New Commitment to Clean Governance” and covering all federal, provincial and local offices plus public schools — equal parts symbolism and signal (Nepal News).* The Supreme Court issued an interim order stopping authorities from dissolving student organisations, after a writ challenged a recent government decision — a small but meaningful win for campus politics (Nepal News).* Vice President Ram Sahay Prasad Yadav met EU Ambassador Veronique Lorenzo, marking 52 years of Nepal–EU ties and floating expanded cooperation in health, education, energy and rural development (Nepal News).💸 Economy & DevelopmentNIMB chief executive Jyoti Prakash Pandey detained by CIBThe week’s biggest economic story is also its most uncomfortable. Jyoti Prakash Pandey, chief executive of Nepal Investment Mega Bank (NIMB) — one of the country’s largest commercial lenders — was taken into custody by the Central Investigation Bureau on May 14 for investigation. NIMB sits at the heart of Nepal’s banking system, and a detention of a sitting CEO is genuinely rare; it lands on a sector already under pressure, with deposits ballooning to Rs 7.9 trillion while credit flow stagnates around Rs 5.87 trillion. The Nepal Rastra Bank has been quietly mopping up that excess liquidity (a fresh Rs 40 billion drained this week alone via a 21-day deposit-collection instrument), but a high-profile CEO probe will rattle confidence in ways macro tools can’t fix. Expect both regulatory ripples and political theatre in the days ahead (Nepal News).Nepali tea trucks stuck at the Indian borderFor a fourth straight week, the India–Nepal trade plumbing keeps clogging — this time at the tea border. The Tea Board of India’s new Standard Operating Procedure, enforced from May 13, requires every truck of Nepali tea to be sent to Kolkata for individual laboratory testing, a process taking 10 to 15 days per consignment. The result has been an immediate, complete standstill in tea exports just as the spring flush from Ilam and Jhapa comes off the gardens. Tea is a flagship Nepali export with deep diaspora resonance, and the new SOP follows a series of friction-heavy Indian moves (the recent customs-side trucks crisis, and now an outright sugar export ban through September 30). The economic damage is real; the diplomatic message is louder (Nepal News).In Brief: A packed economy week beyond the headlines.* World Bank country head David Sislen told Kathmandu Post the private sector must be at the centre of Nepal’s infrastructure and jobs push, noting the government spent only 59% of its capital budget last year (Kathmandu Post).* India’s sugar export ban through September 30, 2026 is set to tighten supply across Nepali wholesalers and sweet shops in the run-up to festival season (Nepal News).* Construction has begun on the 132 kV Myagdi Corridor transmission line — a 16.48 km link tying three hydropower plants into the national grid for Rs 426.2 million (Nepal News).* The new Customs Regulation 2026 is now in force, replacing a 17-year-old framework; the border market town of Bhadrapur is already reporting a 30–40% jump in sales as informal cross-border flows get squeezed (Nepal News).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationBritish Gurkha Cricket League returns for its 6th editionThe British Gurkha Cricket League (BGCL) — the homegrown summer institution of the UK’s Nepali community — bowled off its sixth edition on May 10, with matches running all the way through August. The 40-over format remains a serious professional platform for players of Nepali origin in Britain, with several BGCL alumni having gone on to feature for the national side or in the NPL back home. Beyond the cricket, the league has quietly become one of the most important social anchors for the UK diaspora — a weekend ritual where ex-Gurkha families, students, NHS workers and Belayat-based business owners all show up at the boundary rope. With the ICC T20 World Cup looming and Nepal’s Associate-nation profile at an all-time high, this year’s BGCL feels less like a local league and more like a feeder system the national team can no longer ignore (Nepal Sportz).NRNA Australia signs on to FY 2026/27 — but with conditionsThe Non-Resident Nepali Association (NRNA) Australia chapter formally welcomed the Government of Nepal’s policy and programme for FY 2026/27, becoming one of the first major NRN bodies to back the Balen Shah government’s first full-year agenda. The statement specifically applauded the diaspora-facing items — property rights movement, voting-rights signalling, and the new diaspora-targeted financing instrument — but pointedly urged Kathmandu to ensure “timely execution, transparent legal frameworks, and strong institutional mechanisms.” Translation: we’ve heard the speeches before. With the controversial NRN draft bill still circulating and being widely criticised in diaspora circles as regressive, NRNA Australia’s qualified endorsement reads as a careful first move from a chapter that wants to keep the pressure on (Nepal News).In Brief: A short, busy week for diaspora policy.* The Home Ministry has published a draft of a new immigration law consolidating Nepal’s current patchwork rules, and is taking public comment for seven days — NRNs with views on visa categories, work permits and border facilitation should weigh in (Nepal News).* President Paudel’s new infrastructure financing model formally names diaspora capital as a pillar alongside private and alternative finance — the clearest sign yet that NRN money is being designed into Nepal’s growth math (Clickmandu).* Remittances reached Rs 1.65 trillion (~$11.55B) in the first nine months of FY 2025/26 — up 39.1% YoY — the diaspora is, by several measures, now the single largest contributor to the Nepali economy (Nepalism).⭐ Social & CulturalEverest route opens — 14 Nepalis summit on a record-breaking seasonA 14-member Nepali rope-fixing team summited Everest on May 13, officially opening the route for hundreds of foreign climbers stacking up at South Base Camp. Nepal has issued a record 492 climbing permits this spring and earned an unprecedented Rs 1.07 billion in royalty revenue from Everest alone — the most commercially lucrative season the mountain has ever produced. For a tourism economy still rebuilding post-pandemic, the numbers are a genuine bright spot; but the same record permits are reigniting old questions about crowding, waste, and whether Nepal’s biggest brand is being well managed by its biggest beneficiary — the state. The Sherpa community’s quiet, lethal expertise is once again the only reason any of this works (Kathmandu Post).Nepal hosts USA & Scotland in Kirtipur tri-seriesThe Rhinos are back in Kirtipur for a marquee Associate-nation tri-series against the United States and Scotland, kicking off May 12 at TU International Cricket Ground after the recent leg with Oman and the UAE. The matches matter: every result feeds into ICC rankings and World Cup qualification routes, and Nepal’s home form has been a major reason Kathmandu’s cricket scene continues to draw 15,000-plus crowds on a Wednesday. With Aasif Sheikh and Dipendra Singh Airee newly inside the ICC ODI Top 100 batting rankings (more on that in the briefs) and a generation of NPL talent pushing through, this series feels like a checkpoint for whether Nepal can hold its place at the top of the Associate ladder (Nepal News).In Brief: A few more things worth your weekend.* Aasif Sheikh (93rd) and Dipendra Singh Airee (99th) are both now inside the ICC ODI Top 100 batting rankings — the first time two Nepali batters have sat there together (Nepal News).* The Second South Asian Trade Fair 2026 closed at Bhrikutimandap on May 11 with all eight SAARC nations exhibiting handicrafts, food, garments and EVs — a quiet but symbolically important regional moment (Nepal News).* The Kathmandu Post reports Nepal’s only dedicated mental hospital is stretched beyond capacity — a sobering reminder of how thin the country’s mental-health infrastructure remains (Kathmandu Post).Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Seniority Skipped, 1,594 Sacked & 2,000 Trucks Going Nowhere 08.05.2026 23min
    Namaste, diaspora family! If last week was about ordinances, this week is about what happens when a government uses them at scale. PM Shah’s Constitutional Council bypassed three senior justices including the woman who would have been Nepal’s first female Chief Justice to pick its own candidate. Meanwhile, 1,594 political appointees were terminated overnight, 12 trade unions were scrapped, and a botched import labelling rule stranded 2,000 trucks at the border before the government quietly backed down. On the diplomatic front, the Lipulekh dispute with India is back after six years. And if you’re one of the 3,933 Nepalis holding a DV lottery selection and waiting for a visa that isn’t coming, the clock is ticking. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceChief Justice Controversy — Sharma Picked Over Nepal’s First Woman CJThe Constitutional Council made history on May 7 just not the kind most people were hoping for. In a meeting convened by PM Shah, the council recommended Dr. Manoj Kumar Sharma as Nepal’s next Chief Justice — bypassing the three most senior justices, including Acting CJ Sapana Pradhan Malla, who would have been Nepal’s first woman to lead the judiciary. Sharma is ranked fourth in the seniority order, making this the first time in Nepal’s history that a judge so far down the hierarchy has been elevated to the top. The move was enabled by the Constitutional Council First Amendment Ordinance, signed by President Paudel on May 5 to break an eight-month institutional deadlock. National Assembly Chair Narayan Prasad Dahal and opposition leader Bhishma Raj Angdembe registered written dissent. The Nepal Bar Association called an emergency meeting. Sharma must still clear a parliamentary hearing — but the signal is clear: this government is willing to reshape the judiciary on its own terms (Khabarhub, Himalaya Times, Nepal Press).The Great Purge — 1,594 Appointees Terminated, 12 Trade Unions ScrappedThe most sweeping administrative overhaul in recent memory landed this week — and it’s still reverberating. On May 2, President Paudel endorsed an ordinance that automatically terminated 1,594 office-bearers appointed prior to March 26 across more than 110 laws and dozens of institutions: Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu University, eight other universities, Nepal Telecommunications Authority, Civil Aviation Authority, Nepal Airlines, Nepal Electricity Authority, the Employees Provident Fund, and Gorkhapatra Sansthan, among others. Vice-chancellors, registrars, board members all gone. Four days later, the government annulled 12 civil service and health trade unions for alleged political affiliations and ordered them to return government property. Former University Grants Commission chairperson Bhim Prasad Subedi warned: “Such massive vacancies at once can create confusion.” The government frames it as depoliticisation. Peoples’ Review asks the harder question: “Mass Dismissals: Fixing Politics or Fueling Instability?” No timeline for replacements has been announced (Kathmandu Post, Spotlight Nepal, Peoples’ Review).In Brief: More governance developments this week.* Parliament finally has a date. President Paudel summoned both houses for May 11 the budget session where the government must present its annual budget by May 29. It may be the first session held in the new parliament building at Singha Durbar (Kathmandu Post).* The Lipulekh dispute is back. Nepal’s Foreign Ministry lodged a formal diplomatic protest against India’s plan to route the 2026 Kailash Mansarovar Yatra through Lipulekh Pass territory Nepal claims under the 1816 Treaty of Sugauli. India’s MEA called the claim “untenable.” The Cabinet sent notes to both India and China (Al Jazeera).* Bank chairs are out too. The chairs of Rastriya Banijya Bank and the Agricultural Development Bank resigned amid the government’s wider institutional shake-up (Khabarhub).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationLipulekh Stand-Off Returns — Nepal Fires Diplomatic Protest Over Pilgrimage RouteIf you were in Kathmandu in 2020 when India built a road through Lipulekh and the streets erupted, you remember what this issue means. It’s back. On May 3, Nepal’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs lodged a formal diplomatic protest after India and China announced plans to resume the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra sending approximately 500 Hindu pilgrims through the Lipulekh Pass in Uttarakhand between June and August. Nepal’s position is unambiguous: Limpiyadhura, Lipulekh, and Kalapani are Nepali territory, defined by the 1816 Treaty of Sugauli that drew the Kali River as the western boundary. India’s Ministry of External Affairs rejected the claim, stating it is “neither justified nor based on historical facts.” China, for its part, treated the yatra as a bilateral India-China arrangement — effectively ignoring Nepal’s protest. The Cabinet sent diplomatic notes to both governments. For the diaspora, this is a sovereignty question that cuts across party lines and generations — and PM Shah’s willingness to push back will be closely watched (Al Jazeera, Nepal News).America’s Doors Keep Closing — DV Freeze, $15K Bonds & 800+ DeportedThe US visa crisis facing Nepalis is now hitting from every direction simultaneously. The diversity visa lottery for decades the single biggest pathway for Nepalis to reach America — has been frozen since December 23, 2025. No DV visas are being stamped, even as interviews proceed at the Kathmandu embassy. For Nepal’s 3,933 DV-2026 selectees, the September 30 deadline is approaching fast if the freeze isn’t lifted, their numbers expire and the dream dies. It gets worse: the F-1 student visa refusal rate hit 81% in 2025. B1/B2 tourist and business visa applicants now face bonds of up to $15,000. And deportations have passed 800 since Trump’s second term began with 231 removed in January and February alone. The termination of Temporary Protected Status means an additional 7,000+ Nepalis face potential removal. NepYork’s investigation “Tricked, Trafficked, and Tossed Out” documents the dangerous pipeline many face. For families who’ve invested everything in an American future, the walls are closing in (Nepal News, NepYork).In Brief: More diaspora developments this week.* NRN legislation is moving. The government is preparing a draft NRN Act for the upcoming parliamentary session the first concrete legislative effort to codify the rights, responsibilities, and contributions of Nepalis abroad in years. Foreign Minister Shishir Khanal is leading the push (Peoples’ Review).* The South Asia Trade Fair 2026 opened at Bhrikutimandap Exhibition Hall (May 7–11) with participants from all SAARC nations a rare regional trade event in Kathmandu, organised in collaboration with Bangladesh’s Ministry of Industries (Nepal News).💸 Economy & DevelopmentThe MRP Fiasco — 2,000 Trucks Stranded, Then the Government BlinkedGood policy, terrible execution. On April 28, the government made it compulsory for all imported finished goods to carry Maximum Retail Price (MRP) labels before clearing customs. The idea was consumer protection. The reality was chaos. Traders halted clearance across every major border point Birgunj, Bhairahawa, Biratnagar, Nepalgunj, Rasuwagadhi, Kakarbhitta arguing it was logistically impossible to label thousands of individual items at the border. In Birgunj alone, 2,000 trucks sat idle. Customs revenue dropped over 50%. The standoff exposed an embarrassing rift between the PM’s Office and the Finance Ministry over who authorised the rule and who should fix it. The crisis escalated through the Department of Customs, the Ministry of Industry, the PMO, and finally the Finance Minister before a resolution emerged. On May 7–8, the government backed down: importers can now self-declare MRP at customs and affix labels at their warehouses. The temporary fix runs for three months while permanent rules are drafted for the 2026/27 budget (Peoples’ Review, Kathmandu Post).Simara SEZ Comes Alive — Six Industries, 700 Jobs & a Lesson in IncentivesNepal’s special economic zones have been promised, delayed, and mocked for years. This week, one of them actually worked. Six industries in the Simara Special Economic Zone have begun production Pashupati Ceramics, Brilliant Shoes, Balaji Manufacturing, Nepal Agro Tools, ACM Vehicles, and Biokalpa Nepal — creating approximately 700 jobs. The catalyst? A simple policy change: the government slashed land rent from Rs 20 to Rs 5 per square metre, and investment surged. A total of 21 industries are now registered in the zone, with new projects backed by Indian, Chinese, and South Korean investors including a ceramics joint venture with India’s AGL Group and a South Korean cosmetics facility. It’s still one zone out of several that remain largely empty — but Simara is now proof that when the incentive structure works, the investment follows (Kathmandu Post, Ujyaalo Nepal).In Brief: A few more economic signals this week.* The Nagdhunga tunnel is almost here. The Japan-built Nagdhunga-Sisnekhola tunnel is set for its trial run in mid-May, with free vehicle passage during testing. A Chinese-Nepali joint venture (Yusin-ART JV) will operate it with 150 staff. Commercial operation is targeted for July, promising a 7-minute Dhading–Kathmandu journey (Khabarhub).* NEPSE keeps sliding. The index closed at 2,708.58 — down from 2,738 last week and 2,838 the week before. The sustained decline reflects persistent economic uncertainty and weak market sentiment (ShareHub).* E-billing goes mandatory. The Inland Revenue Department now requires electronic billing for businesses with Rs 10 crore+ annual turnover (Rs 5 crore for hospitality). One-month compliance deadline. Part of the broader digital governance push (Nepal News).⭐ Social & CulturalSave Kamalpokhari — Heritage Protesters Take On Thamel’s Controversial ComplexA Licchavi-era pond, a commercial complex built on top of it, and a fight that has been simmering for over a decade came to a head this week. Protesters gathered at Maitighar Mandala demanding the demolition of the Chhaya Devi Complex in Thamel — a commercial building constructed on land that includes the historic Kamalpokhari pond, a sacred Newar heritage site believed to date back to the Licchavi kingdom (450–750 AD). The case has reached the Supreme Court, which is examining whether guthi (communal trust) land can be retained in private hands through a settlement agreement. Lead activist Bhagabat Narsingh Pradhan, who has campaigned for the pond’s restoration for years, has faced threats, intimidation, and a contempt of court case — prompting UN human rights experts to flag the case internationally. For a government that bulldozed riverbank settlements in the name of urban reform, the Kamalpokhari question is a test: does heritage protection get the same energy as encroachment clearance? (Ratopati, ShareHub).Four Golds in Hainan — Nepal’s Taekwondo Stars Shine in ChinaNepal doesn’t win four gold medals at an international tournament every week — so when it happens, it deserves a moment. At the Hainan Open International Taekwondo Championship in Sanya, China, Nepali athletes brought home four golds. Vision Tamang led the charge with two gold medals, while Ayush Bohra and Sandeep Basnet (in the breaking event) each added one. The results are a reminder that Nepal’s combat sports athletes — often underfunded and underrecognised — continue to punch above their weight on the international stage. Coach Indraraj Khadka led the squad. For a country where cricket and football dominate headlines, these are the quiet achievers who keep showing up (Radio Nepal, Nepal News).In Brief: A few more stories to round out the week.* Cricket ended on a high. Nepal hammered Oman by 81 runs on May 5 to close the home tri-series. Now the real test: Scotland and the USA arrive from May 12 for the next CWC League 2 round. Nepal sit 7th with 12 points — 16 still available from remaining home matches. World Cup qualification is difficult but mathematically alive (Wisden).* Football remains in limbo. The NSC-ANFA dispute blew past the May 4 FIFA deadline with no resolution. Nepal’s women’s team has already pulled out of the FIFA Women’s Series, the National League is suspended, and youth competitions are cancelled. A FIFA ban now looks increasingly likely (Kathmandu Post).* Women’s cricket heads to Malaysia. The national squad, captained by Indu Barma, has been named for the ACC Women’s Premier Cup (May 23–31) and Asian Games Qualifiers (June 1–13) (Nepal News).Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Seven Ordinances, One Serac & Nepal Takes Harvard 01.05.2026 19min
    Namaste, diaspora family! The government that promised to do things differently just passed seven laws without parliament and the opposition is having a field day. While Kathmandu’s political class was busy arguing about ordinances, Nepal’s brightest were making history at Harvard and MIT, where the first-ever Ivy League Nepal summit drew 400 people and 50 speakers across two days. Up on Everest, a 30-metre wall of ice kept a thousand climbers pinned at base camp for days. Down on the Bagmati riverbank, the bulldozers rolled through Thapathali and the Supreme Court asked the government to explain itself. And at Kirtipur, the Rhinos split their first two home matches beating UAE, then getting hammered by Oman. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceSeven Ordinances Parliament Bypassed Before It Even SatThe optics are brutal. On April 21, the government recommended summoning parliament. On April 23, it recommended suspending the session before a single member took their seat. And on April 27, with both houses still shuttered, the cabinet asked President Paudel to issue seven ordinances covering the Constitutional Council Act, Cooperatives Amendment, Health Science Academies, Public Procurement, and university governance. The opposition erupted. Nepali Congress demanded the ordinances be withdrawn and parliament reconvened immediately. A Nepal News long-read titled “Nepal’s Ordinance Trend: Convenience or Constitutional Drift?” noted that the RSP government is now following the exact legislative shortcut it once denounced governing by presidential decree rather than parliamentary debate. Khabarhub reported that opposition parties are framing this as a test of the government’s democratic credentials: a movement that rode to power on accountability is now making law without a single vote in the House. PM Shah’s defenders argue the ordinances address urgent governance gaps cooperatives reform, procurement transparency, university autonomy that can’t wait for a parliamentary calendar derailed by political obstruction. But the precedent is set, and the opposition now has a talking point that cuts to the heart of the RSP’s brand (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News, Khabarhub).Nepali Congress Finally Picks a Leader Angdembe Elected UnanimouslyAfter weeks of delays, factional deadlock, and growing embarrassment, the main opposition finally has a voice in parliament. Bhishma Raj Angdembe was unanimously elected leader of the Nepali Congress parliamentary party on April 27, breaking a stalemate that had paralysed the party since the March election. The breakthrough came when both the Sher Bahadur Deuba and Shekhar Koirala factions backed Angdembe a veteran from Jhapa who commands cross-factional respect. Abhishek Pratap Shah was named deputy leader, Basana Thapa chief whip, and Nishkal Rai whip. In the National Assembly, Kamala Panta replaced Krishna Prasad Sitaula as party leader. The timing matters: with seven ordinances on the table and parliament suspended, NC now has a recognised floor leader to challenge the government when or if the House reconvenes. Whether Angdembe can transform a fractured 38-seat caucus into an effective opposition is the next test (Kathmandu Post, Radio Nepal).In Brief: The political churn doesn’t stop.* The money laundering probe keeps widening. Shekhar Golccha, chair of the powerful Golccha Group, was arrested in a related securities case. A Peoples’ Review investigation titled “Bhatta, Agrawal, Golccha: Probe Exposes Deep NEPSE Rot” alleges systematic share price manipulation through interconnected corporate networks raising questions about the structural integrity of Nepal’s stock market itself (Peoples’ Review, Himalayan Times).* UML’s grand rally fizzled. The planned April 25 Kathmandu mega-demonstration was quietly postponed. The party held cultural events for its establishment day instead, though rhetoric against the government continued to escalate. On April 27, police detained 10 individuals including UML leader Mahesh Basnet’s wife following an assault at Maitighar Mandala (Ujyaalo Nepal, Nepal News).* Prachanda is building a coalition. The NCP chairman announced plans to form a seven-party opposition front to hold the government accountable through parliament and the streets signalling that the old guard isn’t done yet (Nepal News).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationNepal Takes Harvard Inaugural Summit Draws 400 to CambridgeIt happened. The Nepal Discourse 2026 the first-ever Nepal summit at an Ivy League institution wrapped up on April 27 after two days at Harvard University and MIT, and by every measure it exceeded expectations. More than 50 speakers and nearly 400 participants including 35 delegates who flew in from Nepal filled 16 panels structured around four pillars: artificial intelligence and the future of work, next-generation leadership, resilient institutions, and diaspora engagement. Finance Minister Swarnim Wagle opened the event virtually from Kathmandu. The speaker roster read like a who’s who of the Nepali innovation ecosystem: Sameer Maskey (Fusemachines), Pukar C Hamal (SecurityPal), Ncell CEO Michael Foley, and World Bank Country Director David Sislen. AI researcher Karvika Thapa spoke at both venues on Nepal’s economic transformation. For a diaspora that has long felt disconnected from the decision-making table, having Nepal’s challenges and opportunities debated at Harvard is more than symbolic it’s a statement that the global Nepali community has the intellectual firepower to shape the conversation. Now the question is whether the conversations translate into action (Kathmandu Post, Nepalism, Nepal on the Web).Nepal’s “Cash Cow” Left Underprotected Gulf Workers’ Social Security Gap ExposedHere’s a number that should alarm every Nepali family with someone in the Gulf: of the 2.2 million migrant workers registered with Nepal’s Social Security Fund, only about 2% continue contributing after their initial enrollment. That’s the finding in a devastating Kathmandu Post investigation published April 30, which reveals that the system designed to protect Nepal’s biggest economic asset is barely functioning. The International Labour Organization warns that gaps persist across every stage of the migration cycle from pre-departure to return. Workers face job losses, wage theft, limited healthcare access, and near-impossible paths to compensation when things go wrong. Women migrants, low-wage earners, and undocumented workers are the most vulnerable. The West Asia conflict has made everything worse: with contracts being cut short and salaries delayed, the lack of a functioning safety net means workers are absorbing losses alone and their families back home are absorbing the consequences. Nepal earned $10.15 billion in remittances in the first eight months of this fiscal year. The question is what it’s spending to protect the people who earn it (Kathmandu Post).In Brief: More diaspora developments this week.* Nepali fashion is going global. Designer Kriti Mainali debuted a 10-piece “Heritage of Nepal” couture collection at New York Fashion Week, while London-based Umanga Raut (age 23) presented “Setubandh” a jacket embroidered with Gen Z revolution imagery at the British Fashion Awards. The Kathmandu Post notes that for Nepalis abroad, fashion is becoming “a language of culture” (Kathmandu Post).* Fresh violence in India’s Manipur has left roughly 60,000 Nepali-speaking people living in fear. More than 10,000 have been displaced over the past decade. Settlements in Kalapahar, Irang, and Purao Valley are emptying out, with community members reporting harassment, extortion, and dozens of Nepali-owned shops burned (Kathmandu Post).* US deportations of Nepalis have now passed 800 since President Trump’s second term began. A NepYork investigation — “Tricked, Trafficked, and Tossed Out” — documents the dangerous pipeline of trafficking, exploitation, and eventual deportation that many face (NepYork).💸 Economy & DevelopmentThe Growth Numbers Don’t Add Up 3.85% or 2.3%?How fast is Nepal’s economy actually growing? Depends who you ask and the gap has never been this wide. On April 28, the Kathmandu Post reported that Nepal’s National Statistics Office estimates GDP growth at 3.85% for FY 2025/26. The World Bank says 2.3%. The ADB says 2.7%. The IMF says 3.0%. That’s not a rounding error it’s a 1.55 percentage point gap between the government’s own projection and the World Bank’s, which translates to real differences in how much money the economy is actually generating and how many jobs are being created. The government’s figure looks optimistic given the evidence: a fuel crisis that has pushed diesel up 68% in five weeks, capital spending stuck at 23.58% of the annual target after nine months, the September 2025 unrest that disrupted economic activity for weeks, and tourism arrivals from key markets still down double digits. The World Bank’s April Development Update projects poverty rising to 6.6% in FY26, with an additional 17,267 people pushed below the poverty line by the Gulf conflict alone. The numbers matter because they drive budget planning for FY 2026/27 and if the government is budgeting on 3.85% growth that doesn’t materialise, the revenue gap could be painful (Kathmandu Post, World Bank).Two Infrastructure Milestones in One Week Tunnel Trial & Ring Road GrantIn a week dominated by political drama, two concrete infrastructure developments landed. First: the Nagdhunga-Naubise Tunnel one of Nepal’s most anticipated road projects is preparing for its first vehicle trial run by May 3. A service provider has been selected for Rs 1.1 billion over five years to manage and maintain the tunnel, which will dramatically cut travel time on the country’s busiest highway corridor between Kathmandu and the Tarai. Second: the Chinese government committed Rs 11 billion in grants for the Ring Road Expansion (Second Phase), extending from Kalanki to Basundhara through Kathmandu Valley’s most congested stretch. For anyone who has sat in traffic at Kalanki which is everyone who has ever been to Kathmandu this is the project that’s been promised and delayed for years. Neither project is finished, and Nepal’s infrastructure track record demands healthy scepticism. But trial runs and signed grants are more than most weeks deliver (Nepal News, Radio Nepal).In Brief: A few more economic signals this week.* NOC cut diesel by Rs 12/litre — the first reduction after weeks of relentless hikes — and petrol by Rs 2/litre. But it simultaneously hiked LPG by Rs 150 per cylinder, meaning cooking gas just got more expensive even as transport fuel got marginally cheaper. Current prices: petrol Rs 217, diesel Rs 225.50 in Kathmandu (Khabarhub).* NEPSE slid below 2,750, closing the week at 2,738.72 — down from 2,838 the week before. Only 42 of 349 traded companies gained on April 28. The fuel crisis and economic slowdown are weighing heavily on market sentiment (ShareHub).* Provincial budgets are shrinking as federal grants decline. Sudurpashchim Province set its FY 2026/27 ceiling at Rs 22.63 billion — down Rs 2.24 billion from this year. Lumbini is preparing a budget of ~Rs 33 billion, down from Rs 38.91 billion. The squeeze reflects the broader fiscal challenge facing Nepal’s federal structure (Nepal News).⭐ Social & CulturalBulldozers, Protests & a Show-Cause — The Thapathali Eviction EscalatesLast week we reported that Amnesty International had told the government to put the bulldozers away. This week, the bulldozers came anyway. At 6 AM on April 25, demolition crews backed by metropolitan police, Nepal Police, and Armed Police Force moved through Thapathali, Shantinagar, and Gairigaun, flattening riverbank squatter settlements along the Bagmati. 144 families were processed at a stadium, temporarily moved to hotels, and promised relocation to government apartments in Nagarjun Municipality within two weeks. By April 26, the eviction drive had expanded to Manohara and Sinamangal. The response was swift from multiple directions. Amnesty International released a formal research briefing — “Nowhere to Go: Forced Evictions in Nepal” — condemning what it called a “blatant disregard” for human rights and noting the affected families are disproportionately Dalit and Indigenous communities. The All Nepal Squatters Association announced phased protests. And critically, the Supreme Court issued a show-cause order to the government, raising constitutional questions about the right to housing. The tension is real and legitimate on both sides: riverbank encroachment is an environmental and flood-risk problem that every government has talked about and none has solved. But mass evictions of vulnerable communities without completed resettlement infrastructure puts the reform government in uncomfortable territory (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post, Amnesty International).Everest 2026 — A 30-Metre Wall of Ice and 1,000 Waiting ClimbersThe mountain had its own plans this week. A 30-metre unstable serac — a tower of glacial ice — lodged itself in the Khumbu Icefall, the treacherous passage between Everest Base Camp and Camp 1, effectively blocking the route and stalling the entire spring 2026 climbing season for days. Over 1,000 people — climbers, Sherpa guides, porters, and support staff — waited at base camp while the Icefall Doctors assessed whether to route around or wait for the serac to collapse. By April 29, the route was finally opened to Camp 2, and rope fixers began pushing toward Camp 3 — but the serac hasn’t fully collapsed, and it hangs over the route like an unresolved question. This season, Nepal issued permits to 425 climbers (including 98 women) from 42 expedition teams. The north side via Tibet is closed to international teams this year, funnelling all traffic through Nepal’s route. A new waste regulation requires each climber to carry 2 kg of rubbish down from Camp 2 and above. The main summit window is expected in mid-to-late May — if the icefall cooperates (CNN, Alan Arnette, Global Rescue).In Brief: A few more stories to round out the week.* Cricket at Kirtipur delivered drama. Nepal beat UAE by 37 runs on April 25 — Dipendra Singh Airee anchoring with 75 and Karan KC devastating with 4/19. But on April 29, Oman crushed Nepal by 102 runs (DLS) after captain Jatinder Singh smashed 130. The Rhinos sit 7th in the CWC League 2 standings with qualification looking increasingly difficult. The tri-series runs through May 5 (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News).* Nepal faces a FIFA ban. FIFA and the AFC have set a May 4 deadline for the National Sports Council to lift its suspension of ANFA or Nepal will be banned from international football. The government also banned 24 ANFA officials from travelling abroad. Nepal will lose its AFC Challenge League spot — again (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post).* May Day brought three announcements: Labour Minister Ramji Yadav launched a five-year National Occupational Safety and Health Programme and a 6% interest rate housing loan for workers enrolled in the contribution-based social security fund (Radio Nepal).Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • 26 Days & Out, Gulf Gates Reopen & Dozers at the Riverbank 24.04.2026 21min
    Namaste, diaspora family! The honeymoon period — if there ever was one — is officially over. Home Minister Sudhan Gurung resigned after just 26 days in office, brought down by links to a businessman under money laundering investigation. It's the second cabinet exit in a month, and it stings: this was supposed to be the government that was different. Meanwhile, parliament was summoned and then suspended before it even sat — an unprecedented move that has the opposition crying foul. But it's not all turbulence: Gulf labour permits have been restored after a 50-day freeze, Nepal is about to make history at Harvard, and up in the Himalayas, three 8,000-metre peaks fell in 48 hours. Down at the Bagmati riverbank, though, Amnesty International is telling the government to put the bulldozers away. Let's get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceHome Minister Gurung Resigns After 26 Days — Second Cabinet Exit in a MonthThe shine came off fast. Home Minister Sudhan Gurung tendered his resignation on April 22 — just 26 days after being sworn in — citing the need to avoid “any conflict of interest” as investigations swirled around him. The trigger: media reports and leaked documents revealed that Gurung held shares in Star Micro Insurance Company, where he appears as shareholder number 49 with an investment of Rs 2.5 million. The problem? Deepak Bhatta, the businessman at the centre of Nepal’s biggest active money laundering probe, and Sulav Agrawal of the Shanker Group are also partners in the same firm. Gurung’s official property declaration on April 12 made no mention of these micro-insurance holdings. The resignation makes Gurung the second minister to exit PM Balen Shah’s cabinet in under a month — Deepak Kumar Sah was removed earlier over nepotism allegations. Al Jazeera’s headline captured the mood: “Nepal’s home minister resigns, second cabinet exit in one month.” PM Shah has taken over the Home Ministry portfolio himself. For a government elected on an anti-corruption mandate, the episode is a credibility test — and the OCCRP’s analysis, titled “Nepal’s Anti-Corruption Crackdown: New Era or False Dawn?”, asks the question many are thinking (Al Jazeera, Kathmandu Post, OCCRP).Parliament Summoned, Then Suspended — Before It Even SatIn a move opposition leaders are calling unprecedented, President Ram Chandra Paudel suspended the federal parliament session on April 23 — just one day after summoning both houses to convene on April 30. The Cabinet recommended the suspension citing “special reasons,” but disclosed nothing further. The timing raised immediate eyebrows: the suspension came within hours of Gurung’s resignation and amid the widening Bhatta-Shanker Group investigation. Senior Nepali Congress lawmaker Arjun Narsingh KC — the longest-serving parliamentarian — called the government’s decision “unprecedented and surprising.” For a government that promised transparency and zero pending files, suspending parliament before it has even met sends a mixed signal — and hands the opposition a talking point at a moment when UML is preparing its grand rally in Kathmandu on April 25 (Khabarhub, Outlook India, Radio Nepal).In Brief: The political machinery keeps grinding — and cracking.* Deepak Bhatta and Sulav Agrawal were remanded in custody for an additional seven days on April 22 as the money laundering investigation widens. The OCCRP published a deep-dive feature asking whether Nepal’s crackdown represents genuine reform or another false dawn — noting that the Shanker Group’s Rs 125 billion turnover and Rs 200 billion in bank loans make this probe potentially systemic (OCCRP, Kathmandu Post).* Nepali Congress still can’t choose a parliamentary party leader. The election, scheduled for Friday, was postponed again — a taskforce led by VP Bishwaprakash Sharma has been formed to build consensus, but the Thapa-Sharma rivalry continues to paralyse the main opposition (Khabarhub).* CPN-UML’s two-week protest campaign climaxes with a grand rally in Kathmandu on April 25, after demonstrations rolled through municipalities, wards, and all seven provincial capitals. Whether the old guard can still fill the streets in the RSP era is about to be tested (Review Nepal).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationGulf Labour Permits Restored After 50-Day Freeze — 1.9 Million Workers Breathe AgainThe gates are open again. On April 20, the Department of Foreign Employment reopened labour permits for 12 countries — Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Iraq, Yemen, Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, and Israel — ending a 50-day freeze imposed on March 1 when the US-Iran conflict erupted. The decision followed a recommendation from the Emergency Response Team under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which assessed that conditions had improved enough to resume new labour approvals. The stakes are enormous: nearly 75% of Nepali migrant workers are employed in the Middle East, and their remittances account for more than 25% of GDP. But the resumption comes with caveats. The Diplomat published a major analysis — “Nepal’s Remittance Reckoning: The Gen Z Mandate Meets the Gulf Crisis” — warning that workers across the Gulf are already facing salary cuts, reduced hours, and contract non-renewals. A prolonged crisis threatens not just slower remittance flows but a reverse-migration wave of potentially hundreds of thousands of workers arriving home into an economy with very limited absorption capacity. The permits are open — but the risk hasn’t closed (Kathmandu Post, Middle East Eye, The Diplomat).Nepal Discourse at Harvard — A First for the DiasporaMark the date: April 25–26, Nepali student organisations at Harvard University and MIT are convening the first-ever Nepal summit at an Ivy League institution. The Nepal Discourse 2026 brings together roughly 400 participants and 30 speakers to address Nepal’s structural challenges and emerging opportunities across four pillars: artificial intelligence, next-generation leadership, resilient institutions, and diaspora engagement. The speaker list reads like a who’s who of the Nepali innovation ecosystem: Biswas Dhakal (F1Soft), Sameer Maskey (Fusemachines), Prasanna Dhungel (GrowByData), and David Sislen (World Bank). AI researcher Karvika Thapa will speak at both Harvard and MIT on Nepal’s economic transformation. For a diaspora that has often felt disconnected from the decision-making table, having a Nepal-focused summit at Harvard is a symbolic milestone — and if the conversations translate into action, potentially a substantive one (Kathmandu Post, Technology Khabar).In Brief: More diaspora developments this week.* US deportations of Nepalis have now exceeded 800 since President Trump’s second term began. A NepYork investigation published April 22 — “Tricked, Trafficked, and Tossed Out” — documents the dangerous pipeline of trafficking, exploitation, and eventual deportation that many Nepali migrants face. On April 7 alone, 48 Nepalis — including two green card holders — were deported on a single chartered flight (NepYork).* The government is preparing draft NRN legislation for the next parliamentary session, with Foreign Minister Khanal signalling intent to clearly incorporate the rights, responsibilities, and contributions of Nepalis abroad — the first concrete legislative movement on the NRN question in years (Peoples’ Review).💸 Economy & DevelopmentFuel Crisis Goes Economy-Wide — Border Runs, Construction Halts & Tourist No-ShowsThe fuel crisis is no longer just about the price at the pump — it’s rewriting daily life. With diesel at Rs 234.50 (up 68% in five weeks) and petrol at a record Rs 219, the cascading effects are now hitting every sector. Construction has slowed dramatically as contractors report soaring costs for diesel, bitumen, cement, and steel. Tourism is taking a hit: March 2026 data shows arrivals from the United States down 28% and from the United Kingdom down 20%, with higher transport costs and Middle East flight disruptions discouraging travel. And along Nepal’s 1,800-km open border with India, a new phenomenon has emerged: fuel tourism — Nepalis driving across to refuel where prices are significantly lower. The government’s two-day weekend (introduced April 6) has cut some fuel consumption, and the 50% customs duty cut helps NOC’s balance sheet — but NOC is still losing Rs 99 per litre on diesel and none of those savings reach consumers (Peoples’ Review, Kathmandu Post).The Remittance Alarm — Two Major Analyses Say Nepal’s Lifeline Is FrayingTwo heavyweight analyses landed this week, and they’re saying the same thing. The Diplomat published “Nepal’s Remittance Reckoning: The Gen Z Mandate Meets the Gulf Crisis,” arguing that PM Shah “barely settled into office before colliding with a severe disruption to the remittance economy on which Nepal depends more than almost any other nation in the world.” The piece warns of a potential reverse-migration wave — hundreds of thousands of workers returning to an economy that can’t absorb them — and notes that Nepal imports 100% of its liquid fuels from India, which sources much of its crude from the Gulf, creating a double vulnerability. Separately, Spotlight Nepal published “When Conflict Abroad Leads to Economic Risks at Home,” documenting the hidden layer: many migrant workers fund their migration through high-interest loans secured against land and family property, meaning disrupted earnings abroad don’t just reduce remittances — they trigger household debt crises and forced asset sales. The World Bank projects poverty rising to 6.6% in FY26, with 17,267 additional people pushed into poverty by the conflict alone (The Diplomat, Spotlight Nepal).In Brief: A few more economic signals this week.* LPG demand has dropped 50%, with gas industries reporting the steepest decline in years. The driver: a government directive requiring half-weight cylinder distribution combined with an accelerating consumer shift to electric cooking. In a country with surplus hydropower, the transition makes strategic sense — but it’s hitting the LPG supply chain hard (Nepal News).* Banana prices hit Rs 350 per dozen after the government halted imports from India. Traders say domestic production simply cannot meet demand — a reminder that import bans without supply alternatives create shortages, not self-sufficiency (Nepal News).* NEPSE held steady around 2,838, essentially flat on the week. Gold continues its record run driven by global safe-haven demand.⭐ Social & CulturalDozers at the Riverbank — Thapathali Eviction Draws Amnesty InterventionThe reform government’s hardest week yet didn’t come from parliament — it came from the Bagmati riverbank. On April 23, teams from the metropolitan police, Nepal Police, and Armed Police Force moved through the Thapathali squatter settlement with loudspeaker warnings: clear out by Saturday morning, or the bulldozers move in. The eviction order, directed by PM Shah in a meeting with security chiefs, covers settlements along the Bagmati in Thapathali, Sinamangal, Teku, and Balkhu. The Kathmandu Post captured the human cost in a headline: “Where do we go now?” — residents who have lived there for decades were given less than 24 hours to move. By Friday, protests had erupted across the affected areas. Amnesty International issued an urgent statement calling on the government to immediately halt the evictions, warning they demonstrate “a blatant disregard for Nepal’s human rights obligations and the rule of law.” The tension is real: riverbank encroachment is a genuine environmental and urban planning problem, but mass evictions without resettlement plans raise fundamental rights questions (Kathmandu Post, Khabarhub, Amnesty/Ratopati).Three 8,000ers in 48 Hours — Spring Climbing Season Explodes OpenThe mountains don’t care about politics. On April 17–18, the spring 2026 climbing season burst open with successful summits on three of the world’s fourteen 8,000-metre peaks within 48 hours: Annapurna (8,091m), Dhaulagiri (8,167m), and Makalu (8,485m). The first summit came on Annapurna, where 14 Peaks Expedition placed five international climbers and 11 Nepali guides on top of the world’s tenth-highest — and statistically deadliest — peak. The Department of Tourism has issued 27 climbing permits for Annapurna this season, generating Rs 12.49 million in revenue. Attention now turns to Everest, where the Icefall Doctors are progressing through the Khumbu Icefall and a 10-member fixing team is preparing the route to the summit. The main Everest summit window is expected in mid-to-late May (Himalayan Times, Peoples’ Review).In Brief: A few more stories to round out the week.* Nepal’s women’s cricket team beat Italy by 50 runs in the ICC Women’s T20 Challenge Trophy in Kigali, Rwanda on April 19 — the team’s first-ever win in the tournament. Vice-captain Pooja Mahato scored 48 runs, and Rubina Chhetry was devastating with the ball, taking 4 wickets for just 4 runs in 2.4 overs (Himalayan Times).* The ICC CWC League 2 tri-series kicks off at TU International Cricket Ground, Kirtipur on April 25 — Nepal vs Oman and UAE. Captain Rohit Paudel’s side needs a strong home campaign to keep World Cup qualification hopes alive (ICC).It was always going to get harder from here. The easy part was winning the election.Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • TIME's Spotlight, Cabinet Gold & Five Fuel Hikes in 31 Days 17.04.2026 21min
    Namaste, diaspora family! What a week to be Nepali. TIME magazine just named PM Balen Shah one of the 100 most influential people on the planet — the first sitting Nepali leader to make the list. Back home, the cabinet did something no previous government has done this fast: publish every minister’s property details within a month of taking office. The numbers are eye-opening, the debates are fierce, and we’ll break it all down. Meanwhile, diesel has now been hiked five times in 31 days, the government has gone to a two-day weekend to save fuel, and Nepal Airlines has had to cancel Doha flights as Gulf airspace tightens again. But there’s also a new year, a new national roadmap, and cricket coming to Kirtipur. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceCabinet Opens the Books — Property Disclosures Spark DebateIn a move unprecedented in speed, the Balen Shah government made public the property details of the Prime Minister and all 17 Cabinet members on April 13 — less than a month after taking office. PM Shah declared Rs 14.6 million in cash and cited social media as his main income source, alongside 190 tolas of gold received as his wife’s ancestral inheritance from Morang. The disclosures quickly became the most talked-about topic in the country. Home Minister Sudhan Gurung declared 89 tolas of gold, land across three districts — including 221 ropani in Gorkha listed under his grandfather’s name — and shares worth crores. Finance Minister Dr. Swarnim Wagle disclosed properties in Sanepa, Bhainsepati, Dhulikhel, and Bandipur valued collectively at over Rs 127 million. The reaction has been split: supporters praise the transparency, while critics — and a biting Nepal News analysis titled “Elites in Power” — ask whether an anti-establishment movement has produced its own wealthy governing class. Either way, no previous cabinet has opened the books this quickly (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News, Himalayan Times).National Commitment + Zero Pending Files — The Reform Machine Doesn’t StopOn Naya Barsha itself (April 14), the government unveiled an 18-point “National Commitment” document — a unified development roadmap synthesising the election manifestos of all six nationally recognised parties. The plan covers 18 sectors, from economic reform and agricultural self-reliance to e-governance and climate change, and will guide budgets starting FY 2026/27. Among the sharpest provisions: assets of all public officeholders since 1991 will be audited transparently, political affiliations in the civil service will be eliminated, and federal ministries remain capped at 17. The document has already sparked political debate — some parties objected to language describing Nepal as a “buffer state” and references to the Mahendra Highway. In parallel, the government launched a “Zero Pending File Week” (April 13–20), requiring every government desk to clear files within three days or trigger automatic review. Employees who clear backlogs get commendations; those found deliberately sitting on files face departmental action. It’s the kind of granular bureaucratic reform that rarely makes headlines but directly affects how fast a passport or citizenship certificate reaches your family (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News, Radio Nepal).In Brief: The political churn continues on all fronts.* Balen Shah made TIME’s 100 Most Influential People of 2026, appearing in the Leaders category alongside Trump and Xi Jinping. TIME described the 35-year-old as a former hip-hop star whose “landslide victory was galvanized by deadly street protests led by a Gen Z determined to purge a political old guard perceived as venal and out of touch.” It’s the first time a sitting Nepali leader has appeared on the list (TIME, Fiscal Nepal).* CPN-UML’s internal revolt is escalating. A formal signature campaign demanding a Special General Convention to replace Oli as chairman has been launched after the party was reduced to just 9 direct seats — with 11 of its 15 Kathmandu Valley candidates losing their deposits. Acting Chairman Ram Bahadur Thapa issued an ultimatum to halt the drive, but the pressure is mounting (Khabarhub, Review Nepal).* Nepali Congress remains stuck in a power struggle over its parliamentary party leader. The election, scheduled for April 17 after multiple delays, pits President Gagan Thapa’s pick (Mohan Acharya) against VP Bishwa Prakash Sharma’s (Bhishmaraj Angdembe). The main opposition still can’t organise itself (Kathmandu Post).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationNRN Citizenship — 11 Years of Constitutional Promise, Zero ImplementationSpotlight Nepal published a stinging analysis on April 16 examining why the Non-Resident Nepali citizenship provision enshrined in Article 14 of the Constitution remains unimplemented — 11 years after the Constitution was adopted. The provision grants NRN citizenship to persons of Nepali origin who have acquired foreign nationality, with economic, social, and cultural rights to be defined by federal law. The problem? That federal law has never been written. The article argues that practical steps are possible without a constitutional amendment — what’s missing is political will. The Annapurna Express echoed the point in a companion piece: “Small, practical steps on NRN citizenship — not big talk on dual citizenship.” For the millions in the diaspora who want to buy property, invest, or simply feel legally connected to Nepal, this isn’t an abstract debate — it’s the single biggest unresolved policy question affecting their relationship with home. The new government’s 18-point National Commitment mentions NRN engagement, but whether it translates into the legislation that has eluded every previous administration remains to be seen (Spotlight Nepal, Annapurna Express).Gulf Airspace Closes Again — Nepal Airlines Cancels Doha FlightsThe Gulf migrant corridor took another hit this week. Nepal Airlines cancelled all Kathmandu–Doha flights from April 13 to 15 after Qatar tightened airspace restrictions amid the ongoing US-Iran conflict. The Doha route is critical — the majority of Nepali migrant workers heading to Qatar and neighbouring Gulf states for construction, hospitality, and domestic work depend on this corridor. With flights suspended at short notice, workers found themselves stranded in Kathmandu or facing uncertain onward journeys from alternative transit points. The US-Iran ceasefire that began on April 8 has paused — but not ended — the military conflict, and a patchwork of airspace restrictions across Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and the UAE continues to disrupt commercial aviation. Meanwhile, bodies of deceased workers remain stranded across the region awaiting repatriation, and over 86,000 Nepalis have registered on the government’s emergency evacuation platform. Labour permits remain frozen for 12 countries (Travel and Tour World, Kathmandu Post).In Brief: More diaspora developments worth watching.* Nepal Discourse at Harvard (April 25–26) — the first-ever Nepal summit at an Ivy League institution — expects ~400 participants and ~30 speakers including F1Soft’s Biswas Dhakal, Fusemachines’ Sameer Maskey, and the World Bank’s David Sislen. Themes span AI, diaspora engagement, and institutional resilience. It’s backed by Leadership Academy Nepal and Kantipur Media Group (Kathmandu Post).* The US Supreme Court is hearing TPS arguments this month on the Haiti and Syria cases, with a decision expected by early July. The ruling could shift the legal landscape for 7,000+ Nepalis whose TPS was effectively terminated after the 9th Circuit stay in February. Meanwhile, 585 Nepalis have been deported since Trump’s second term began (Kathmandu Post).💸 Economy & DevelopmentFive Fuel Hikes in 31 Days — Nepal Now Among the Costliest in South AsiaThe numbers are relentless. Nepal Oil Corporation hiked fuel prices for the fifth time in 31 days on April 16, pushing diesel and kerosene up by Rs 30 per litre to Rs 234.50 in the Kathmandu valley. Petrol was held at Rs 219 — already a record. To put that in perspective: diesel was Rs 139 in early March — a 68% jump in barely five weeks. Despite the repeated hikes, NOC is still losing Rs 99 per litre on diesel and haemorrhaging Rs 5.75 billion every fortnight. The cascading effects are everywhere: public transport fares are up 16.71%, cargo rates up 15–22%, and the Kathmandu Post reports that Nepal now has among the highest fuel prices in South Asia. The government’s response has been two-pronged: it halved customs duty on petroleum imports in early April and, on April 6, introduced a two-day weekend (Saturday–Sunday) for all government offices and schools — partly to reduce fuel consumption. Nepal Rastra Bank adjusted banking hours to match. It’s the most tangible lifestyle change the fuel crisis has produced, and for many Nepalis, the first two-day weekend in the country’s modern history (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post, Al Jazeera).The Spending Gap — Only 23% of Capital Budget Used in Nine MonthsThe government has big plans. Spending them is another matter. In the first nine months of FY 2025/26, Nepal managed to spend just Rs 96.19 billion on capital projects — 23.58% of the Rs 407 billion annual target. Total government spending sits at Rs 1.059 trillion, or roughly 54% of the Rs 1.964 trillion budget, with only three months left in the fiscal year. The shortfall is partly structural — the September 2025 protests and March 2026 elections disrupted infrastructure timelines — and partly driven by the fuel crisis itself: bitumen shortages have stalled road projects across the country. For a government that has set 7% annual GDP growth as its five-year target and committed to transformative infrastructure, the gap between ambition and execution is the single biggest risk to credibility. Finance Minister Wagle has ordered 100-day action plans from every ministry. The clock is ticking (Clickmandu, World Bank).In Brief: A few more economic signals this week.* Nepal launched its second-ever National Economic Census on April 15, deploying 5,000 enumerators across 84 district offices. The census covers everything from small shops to large industries and will update the GDP base year from 2010/11 to 2022/23 — the first such update in over a decade. Final report expected FY 2026/27 (Peoples’ Review).* NEPSE introduced a new circuit breaker system from April 17, widening the daily price fluctuation limit to 15%. The index closed the week stable around 2,832 (ShareHub).* Gold hit Rs 302,800 per tola — a record domestic price driven by global safe-haven demand amid Middle East uncertainty (Rising Nepal Daily).⭐ Social & CulturalNaya Barsha 2083 — A New Year, a New Nepal?Nepal rang in Bikram Sambat 2083 on April 14, and this year the celebrations carried an extra charge. In Bhaktapur, the ancient chariots of Bisket Jatra rolled through the streets as they have for centuries — the idols of Kal Bhairav and Bhadra Kali pulled in the traditional tug-of-war, the 25-metre lingo erected and toppled in Pottery Square. In Thimi, Sindoor Jatra drenched the dawn in vermillion. In Kathmandu, the Thamel Road Festival brought 32 stalls to Tridevi Marg, showcasing traditional food and local products. And across the diaspora — from New York to Sydney to London — Nepali communities gathered to mark the occasion with music, food, and the familiar greeting: Naya Barsha ko hardik shubhakamana. This is the first New Year under the Balen Shah government, and for many, the mood is cautiously hopeful. Whether that hope survives the fuel crisis, the spending gap, and the hard work of governing remains to be seen — but on Baisakh 1, at least, the country was celebrating (Annapurna Express, Khabarhub).Cricket Comes to Kirtipur — Nepal Hosts Crucial World Cup League 2 Tri-SeriesMark the calendar. Nepal hosts the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup League 2 tri-series at TU International Cricket Ground, Kirtipur, from April 25 to May 5, taking on Oman (3rd in standings) and UAE (8th). A second tri-series follows from May 12 to 22 against table-toppers USA and second-placed Scotland. The stakes are enormous: the top four teams at the end of the competition earn automatic spots at the Cricket World Cup 2027 Qualifier, and captain Rohit Paudel’s side currently sits 7th with just 5 wins from 20 matches. The tri-series was originally scheduled for March but was postponed due to the Middle East conflict — a reminder of how the Gulf crisis touches even Nepal’s sporting calendar. For a country that barely played cricket a generation ago, hosting back-to-back international series is a statement. Now the Rhinos need the results to match (ICC, Ratopati).In Brief: A few more stories to round out the week.* Nepal’s women’s football team withdrew from the FIFA Series, with players expressing frustration as politicking in sports bodies and the government’s suspension of ANFA cost them a major international opportunity. The Kathmandu Post called it evidence of “the rot in Nepali football” (Kathmandu Post).* Nepal’s women’s cricket team returned winless from the Women’s Asia Cup Rising Stars in Bangkok — a disappointing campaign that underscores the investment gap in women’s sport.* The Manjushree Trail Race kicks off April 17–19 at Chandragiri, featuring five categories from 100 miles to 10 km. If you’re in the valley and feeling brave, there’s still time.Naya Barsha 2083 ko hardik shubhakamana! Happy Nepali New Year to you and yours.Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Four Fuel Hikes, Two Downgrades & a New Year Worth Celebrating 10.04.2026 20min
    Namaste, diaspora family! Two weeks into the Balen era and the plot is already thickening. The Supreme Court ordered former PM KP Sharma Oli released after 13 days in custody and his CPN-UML has announced a nationwide protest campaign starting tomorrow. Meanwhile, petrol has been hiked four times in a single month and now costs more than a plate of dal bhat in some neighbourhoods, the World Bank just halved Nepal’s growth forecast to 2.3%, and 38 bodies of Nepali workers remain stranded across the Gulf because the flights can’t get through. But it’s not all grim: Bisket Jatra is rolling through Bhaktapur, half a million students are finishing their SEE exams, and NEPSE just had its best week in months. Naya Barsha 2083 is days away. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceSupreme Court Checks the Executive; Oli and Lekhak Walk Free After 13 DaysThe judiciary drew a line. On April 7, the Supreme Court ruled that former Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli and ex-Home Minister Ramesh Lekhak did not need to remain in custody for the ongoing investigation into the September 2025 Gen Z protest crackdown that killed 76 people. The court ordered authorities to either complete the investigation or release both men by Thursday, April 9. On Thursday morning, they walked out — released on bail after 13 days in judicial custody, with the condition that they appear before authorities when required. The case itself is far from over: the charges of criminal negligence amounting to reckless homicide still stand, and the investigation continues under the Gauri Bahadur Karki Commission framework. But the Supreme Court’s intervention sent a clear signal — even in a moment of political reckoning, due process matters. CPN-UML has announced a two-week nationwide protest campaign beginning April 11: demonstrations in all municipalities, expanding to ward-level on April 16, provincial capitals on April 20, and a grand rally in Kathmandu on April 25. The party calls the arrests “illegitimate, unconstitutional, and political revenge.” Whether the protests gain traction or fizzle will be the first real test of whether the old parties can still mobilise on the streets in the RSP era (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post, Spotlight Nepal).Nepal’s Legacy Parties Face an Existential CrisisWhile all eyes were on Oli’s custody drama, a quieter crisis is unfolding inside Nepal’s two establishment parties — and it may be more consequential. Spotlight Nepal this week published a damning analysis titled “NC and UML: On the Brink of Collapse,” while the Kathmandu Post editorial board ran “Reform or Collapse: The UML is Running Out of Time to Save Itself.” The numbers tell the story: Nepali Congress was reduced to 38 seats (its worst ever), with party president Gagan Thapa losing his own seat. CPN-UML collapsed to 25 seats, losing more than two-thirds of its previous strength. Inside UML, the cracks are visible. Ram Bahadur Thapa was elected parliamentary leader after young lawmaker Suhang Nembang was pressured not to run — a move that has alienated younger cadres. Thapa then blamed the Nepal Army, Nepal Police, and civil servants for the party’s defeat in his House address, a claim that drew ridicule. Nepali Congress has taken a strikingly different approach to the Oli arrest — remaining largely silent and respecting the legal process — but this restraint masks the same internal paralysis. Both parties face a fundamental question: can organisations built on patronage politics reinvent themselves in a country that just gave a rapper a supermajority? The answer will shape whether Nepal develops a functioning opposition or drifts toward de facto one-party dominance (Spotlight Nepal, Kathmandu Post).In Brief: The political machinery keeps grinding.* President Ram Chandra Paudel addresses a joint session of both houses of parliament today (April 10) at 3:00 PM — the first presidential address since the March 5 elections. Under Article 95, the speech outlines the government’s policy direction and legislative agenda. The current session will be prorogued from midnight tonight (Nepal News, Ratopati).* A government advertising directive issued April 1 — requiring all ministries to publish notices exclusively through state-owned media — has triggered a full-blown press freedom row. The Federation of Nepali Journalists launched a pressure campaign on April 8, calling it “an attack on private media.” Rural radio stations that depend on local government ads face an existential threat. IFEX flagged the move internationally (IFEX, Himalaya Times).* Education Minister Sasmita Pokharel’s ban on bridge courses and entrance prep classes lasted approximately two hours before a contradictory clarification narrowed it to classes up to Grade 12 only. The original press statement was quietly removed from the ministry website, fuelling accusations of policy-by-impulse (The Statesman, Khabarhub).* PM Shah expanded his Cabinet on Friday, inducting two new Madhesi lawmakers: Ramji Yadav (Saptari-2) takes Labour, Employment & Social Security — replacing dismissed minister Dipak Kumar Sah — and Gauri Kumari Yadav (Mahottari-4) takes Industry, Commerce & Supplies, a portfolio the PM had been holding himself. The cabinet is now 17 members (Kathmandu Post).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationGulf Crisis: 38 Bodies Stranded as War Disrupts Flight RoutesThe human cost of the Gulf conflict keeps mounting. As of April 4, the bodies of 38 deceased Nepali workers remain stranded across the region — 17 in Riyadh, 15 in Dubai, 5 in Jeddah, 4 in Abu Dhabi, 3 in Tel Aviv, 2 in Qatar, and one each in Oman and Bahrain. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lok Bahadur Chettri told reporters that flight disruptions caused by the ongoing US-Israel-Iran conflict are making repatriation “extremely difficult.” The government has dispatched non-scheduled flights to Dubai and continues Nepal Airlines rescue operations, but irregular commercial routes — particularly from Riyadh and Tel Aviv — mean families are enduring waits of over a month to bring their loved ones home. The broader picture is equally sobering: 86,420 Nepalis have registered on the government’s online evacuation platform. A Spotlight Nepal analysis this week — “Beyond Remittance: A Crisis of Dignity and Protection” — argued that Nepal has never built the institutional infrastructure to protect its citizens abroad, despite sending 1.7 million workers to the Gulf. Labour permits remain frozen for 12 countries, with over 2,000 workers denied permits daily. The eight-member panel formed by FM Khanal to recommend a long-term protection strategy is the right idea — but the 38 coffins waiting for flights are a reminder of how late it comes (Kathmandu Post, Spotlight Nepal).World Bank Warns: Gulf War Threatens Nepal’s Remittance LifelineThe World Bank’s Nepal Development Update, released April 8 under the title “Growth Under Pressure: Navigating Domestic and Global Shocks,” paints a stark picture of what a prolonged Gulf conflict means for Nepal’s most important income stream. The report projects GDP growth of just 2.3% in FY26 — halved from 4.6% in FY25 — and explicitly names the Middle East conflict as the primary driver. Here’s why the diaspora should pay attention: Gulf countries contribute 41% of Nepal’s remittances, which in turn account for 28.6% of GDP. A prolonged conflict doesn’t just mean stranded workers — it means reduced earnings, delayed transfers, and weaker consumption back home. The services sector, which includes tourism, is expected to be “most affected,” with higher transport costs and supply chain disruptions compounding the damage. The World Bank does offer a silver lining: growth could recover to an average of 4.4% over FY27–28, driven by reconstruction, hydropower expansion, and spending ahead of 2027 subnational elections. But that recovery assumes the Gulf stabilises — and right now, with crude above $105 and the Strait of Hormuz still contested, that’s an assumption, not a certainty (World Bank, Himalayan Times).In Brief: More diaspora developments this week.* The US Supreme Court is hearing arguments on TPS lawsuits (Haiti and Syria) this month, with a decision expected by early July. The ruling could shift the legal landscape for 7,000+ Nepalis whose TPS was effectively terminated after the 9th Circuit stay in February. Meanwhile, 585 Nepalis have been deported since Trump’s second term began (Kathmandu Post).* Australia’s Assessment Level 3 designation for Nepali student visas continues to bite — mandatory upfront proof of AUD 29,710 in living costs plus tuition, with processing times stretched to 4–12 weeks. Thousands of applicants are affected as the new academic cycle begins (Access Edu).💸 Economy & DevelopmentPetrol Hits Record Rs 219 — Four Hikes in One Month as Gulf War BitesIt’s not a typo. Nepal Oil Corporation has raised fuel prices four times in a single month, and the numbers are staggering. As of April 10, petrol costs Rs 216.50–219 per litre depending on the region, and diesel sits at Rs 204.50–207. To put that in perspective: diesel was Rs 139 in February — a 47% jump in roughly five weeks. The cascading effects are hitting every household. On April 8, the Department of Transport Management approved a 16.71% increase in public transport fares, with cargo rates up 15.75–21.68% depending on route terrain. Economists estimate the cargo fare hikes alone could push inflation up by 2 percentage points. The government tried to intervene: on April 7, the Cabinet cut customs duty and infrastructure tax on petroleum imports by 50% — reducing the duty on petrol from Rs 25 to Rs 12.5 per litre. But here’s the catch: NOC is sitting on accumulated losses so large that it won’t pass the savings to consumers. The tax cut helps NOC’s balance sheet, not your fuel bill. The one genuine bright spot is the government’s parallel push on electrification — a new Cabinet decision this week approved a legal framework for converting petrol and diesel vehicles to electric, and Nepal’s EV charging network has grown to roughly 270 stations nationwide (Kathmandu Post, Spotlight Nepal, Kathmandu Post, Spotlight Nepal).World Bank Halves Growth Forecast: Nepal’s Toughest Year Since COVIDThe World Bank’s April 2026 Nepal Development Update doesn’t mince words. Growth is projected at 2.3% for FY26 — down from 4.6% in FY25 and the weakest performance since the pandemic year. The report, titled “Growth Under Pressure,” identifies a double blow: the Middle East conflict disrupting remittances, tourism, and supply chains, and the lingering economic damage from the September 2025 Gen Z protests, which caused an estimated Rs 86 billion in destruction and shattered investor confidence. The services sector — Nepal’s largest — is expected to bear the brunt, with tourism arrivals slowing, transport costs spiking, and consumption weakening as remittance flows face uncertainty. On the fiscal side, the fuel crisis is squeezing government revenue even as spending pressures mount. The one sector bucking the trend is electricity: power generation grew 22.74% in Q2, driven by continued hydropower expansion — a reminder that Nepal’s long-term energy story remains strong even as the short-term macro picture darkens. The World Bank expects recovery to 4.4% average over FY27–28, contingent on reconstruction spending, hydropower commissioning, and the economic stimulus that typically accompanies subnational elections. Finance Minister Dr. Swarnim Wagle’s response has been to accelerate the reform agenda — but even the best-designed reforms take time to show results, and Nepal’s economy is feeling the pain now (World Bank, World Bank PDF).In Brief: A few more economic signals worth watching.* The ADB piled on the same day, projecting 2.7% growth in its April 2026 Asian Development Outlook — slightly more generous than the World Bank’s 2.3% but still a dramatic cut from 4.6% last year. The Kathmandu Post headlined it bluntly: “Nepal growth outlook dims as global lenders cut projections below 3 percent.” Two multilateral downgrades in the same week is hard to ignore (Himalayan Times, Kathmandu Post).* NEPSE had its best week in months, gaining 175 points across the week to close at 2,851.24 on Thursday. All 13 sub-indices rose, market capitalisation hit Rs 4.764 trillion, and single-day turnover reached Rs 8.31 billion. Analysts caution that trading volume hasn’t fully supported the rally (Kathmandu Post).* The Kathmandu-Terai Fast Track reached 43.6% physical progress this week, with the government approving land acquisition for the Nagdhunga Tunnel and Pasang Lhamu Highway sections. Completion remains targeted for March 2027 at the original Rs 201.3 billion budget (myRepublica).* Gold prices hit Rs 299,000 per tola before pulling back, reflecting global safe-haven demand amid Middle East uncertainty. The bullion market saw its most volatile week of the year (Kathmandu Post).⭐ Social & CulturalNaya Barsha 2083 — Nepal Rings in the New Year with Bisket JatraAs the political world churns, Bhaktapur is doing what it has done for centuries. Bisket Jatra — the nine-day Newar festival marking the transition from Chaitra to Baisakh — kicked off on April 10 and will run through April 18, with Nepali New Year (Baisakh 1, 2083 BS) falling on April 14. The central ritual hasn’t changed in generations: massive wooden chariots carrying the idols of Kal Bhairav and Bhadra Kali are pulled through Bhaktapur’s narrow streets by residents in a dramatic tug-of-war, while the lingo (a 25-metre ceremonial pole) is erected and toppled in Pottery Square. Across the valley in Thimi, Sindoor Jatra — where participants drench each other in vermillion powder — will mark the new year’s dawn. For the diaspora, Naya Barsha is the annual reminder of what makes Nepal irreplaceable: a country where a 35-year-old rapper can run the government and a 500-year-old festival can still stop the city. If you’re in Bhaktapur, you’re lucky. If you’re not, call someone who is (Jagadamba Holidays, Termatree).Half a Million Students Finish SEE — Results Coming in Record TimeThe Secondary Education Examination (SEE) 2082 wraps up on April 12 after a 10-day run across 1,966 centres nationwide. Over 517,000 students sat for what remains Nepal’s most consequential academic milestone — and for the second consecutive year, female candidates outnumbered males. The big change this year is speed: the National Examination Board has approved a new procedure to check answer sheets directly at exam centres, promising results within one month — a dramatic improvement over the previous average of 79 days. For families anxiously waiting to plan the next step — whether that’s Grade 11 in Nepal, a bridge course (if the Education Minister’s policy survives the week), or an application abroad — faster results are a genuine quality-of-life improvement. The new academic session begins April 28, with formal teaching starting May 4 (RedVoiceNepal, Nepal News).In Brief: A few more stories to round out the week.* Nepal will host ICC World Cup League 2 action at TU International Cricket Ground, Kirtipur, from April 25 to May 5 — a rescheduled tri-series with Oman and UAE that is crucial for 2027 Cricket World Cup qualification. Captain Rohit Paudel and the Rhinos need a strong home performance (ICC, Kathmandu Post).* The government launched a 10-point digital governance plan this week, headlined by the commitment to clear the 2.9 million driver’s licence backlog by mid-July. Domestic printing capacity of 40,000 cards per day — after shifting from foreign contractors — makes the target plausible, if ambitious (Clickmandu, Kathmandu Post).* Nepal Police arrested 226 people in four days of search operations targeting illegal activities including hooliganism and brokering — 51 from Kathmandu Valley alone. The crackdown signals the new Home Ministry’s approach to urban law and order.Naya Barsha 2083 ko hardik shubhakamana! Happy Nepali New Year to you and yours.Until next week, stay connected!Let’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Oli Behind Bars, 100 Promises & Rescue Flights Over the Gulf 03.04.2026 20min
    Namaste, diaspora family! Balen Shah’s government is barely a week old and it’s already moving at a pace Nepal hasn’t seen in decades. Former PM KP Sharma Oli was arrested within 24 hours of the new administration taking power — charged over the Gen Z crackdown that killed 76 people — and four more high-profile figures followed him into custody in the same week. The Cabinet dropped a 100-point reform roadmap that reads like a manifesto on steroids: slash ministries, digitise everything, investigate every ill-gotten rupee since 1990. Meanwhile, Nepal Airlines is flying rescue missions to the Gulf as bodies come home and the migrant crisis deepens. And in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Nepali students at Harvard are building a summit that could reshape how the diaspora engages with home. It’s been seven days. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceFormer PM Oli Arrested; Five Detentions in Five Days Shake Nepal’s Political OrderJust 24 hours after Balen Shah was sworn in, police detained former Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli and ex-Home Minister Ramesh Lekhak on charges of criminal negligence amounting to reckless homicide — tied directly to the September 8–9, 2025 Gen Z protest crackdown that left 76 people dead, including minors. The arrests followed the new government’s decision to implement the Gauri Bahadur Karki Commission report, which had identified political leaders who authorised force against protesters. Oli, a post-renal transplant patient, was hospitalised at Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital and appeared before Kathmandu District Court via video link; the court initially granted a 2-day remand, later extended to 5 days. Within the government’s first five days, five high-profile figures were in custody: Oli, Lekhak, former minister Deepak Khadka, Lumbini Province lawmaker Rekha Sharma, and former Chief District Officer Chhabilal Rijal. Foreign Policy ran the arrests under the headline “Nepal’s New Leaders Go on the Offensive.” CPN-UML has announced a two-week nationwide protest campaign beginning April 11, calling the detentions “illegitimate, unconstitutional, and political revenge,” while Nepali Congress accused the government of “selective” justice — targeting politicians while forming a separate study committee for the security forces who pulled the triggers. The opposition’s argument has a point: accountability that stops at the politicians who gave orders but doesn’t reach the officers who carried them out will feel incomplete to the families of the 76 (Al Jazeera, Kathmandu Post, Foreign Policy).100-Point Reform Agenda — The Most Ambitious Blueprint Nepal Has SeenThe Balen Shah Cabinet didn’t wait for the honeymoon period. At its very first meeting, the government released a 100-point governance reform roadmap that is either a masterclass in ambition or a setup for spectacular disappointment — possibly both. The headline items: federal ministries to be cut from ~22 to 17 within 30 days; an Asset Investigation Committee formed within 15 days to probe illicit wealth of political leaders and officials from 1990 onward; a ban on student politics in educational institutions, with non-partisan Student Councils replacing political unions within 90 days; and a pledge to fully digitise government services — including doorstep delivery of passports, citizenship certificates, and driving licences via a new “Government Courier Service” within 100 days. In parallel, Finance Minister Dr. Swarnim Wagle launched his own reform blitz: he abolished the Revenue Investigation Department in his first executive action, initiated the repeal or amendment of 15 outdated laws (some dating to 1956), and set growth targets of 7% annual GDP over five years with per capita income above $3,000. The Confederation of Nepalese Industries welcomed the signals. Fitch Ratings noted that RSP’s majority “reduces near-term political uncertainty” but cautioned that “weak implementation capacity may constrain results.” The plan is on paper. Now comes the hard part (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News, Kathmandu Post).In Brief: The political machinery is cranking into gear.* The first session of the new Federal Parliament opened on April 2 at Singha Durbar. Speaker nominations are set for April 3, with the election on April 5. RSP President Rabi Lamichhane — who separately appeared before Parsa District Court on April 1 for his Rs 115.69 million cooperative fraud case — addressed the first House session, declaring “the prosperity of the country is the only aim of the government” (Radio Nepal, Khoj Samachar).* A constitutional amendment task force has been formed under PM’s political advisor — and filmmaker — Asim Shah. The all-party body will draft a discussion paper on reforming electoral systems and federal structures, with a directly elected executive PM among the options on the table. The appointment of a filmmaker to chair a constitutional process has drawn predictable backlash (Spotlight Nepal, The Statesman).* The Lipulekh sovereignty dispute is heating up again. India and China are preparing to resume border trade through the disputed pass in June 2026, after a six-year hiatus. Nepal claims Lipulekh as sovereign territory — enshrined in a 2020 constitutional amendment — and public pressure is mounting on the new government to take a clear stand. It’s the first foreign policy test for FM Shishir Khanal (Kathmandu Post, PressAdda).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationGulf Crisis Escalates — Rescue Flights Launch as Bodies Finally Come HomeThe Gulf migrant crisis entered a critical new phase this week. A chartered Kuwait Airways flight landed at Gautam Buddha International Airport on April 1 carrying the bodies of 9 deceased Nepali workers and over 300 stranded citizens — the first major repatriation since the conflict disrupted the region in late February. Foreign Minister Shishir Khanal then convened an emergency meeting and ordered Nepal Airlines special rescue flights to Dubai (April 3–4) and Dammam, Saudi Arabia (April 5) — the first such flights since regular service was suspended on February 28. One Nepali has been confirmed killed — Dibas Shrestha, a 29-year-old security guard from Gorkha, hit by shrapnel from an intercepted missile at Abu Dhabi’s Zayed International Airport. His family had been planning his wedding. A Human Rights Watch report released April 1 documented the toll on South Asian workers across six Gulf states: salary cuts (some employers slashing pay by half), mass layoffs, and workers trapped without exit options. A Nepali chef in Abu Dhabi told HRW: “To lose a job after taking recruitment loans is sad. People pay 300,000–400,000 Nepali Rupees for these jobs.” Labour permits remain frozen for 12 countries, with over 2,000 workers denied permits daily. Khanal has formed an eight-member panel to recommend a long-term national strategy for protecting citizens abroad — a policy framework Nepal has never had (Kathmandu Post, ANI, Human Rights Watch).Nepal Summit at Harvard — The Diaspora Builds Its Own TableIn a signal that the Nepali diaspora is maturing beyond remittance cheques and cultural associations, students at Harvard and MIT have announced “Nepal Discourse 2026” — the first-ever Nepal summit at an Ivy League institution, scheduled for April 25–26 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The invitation-only event expects ~400 participants and ~30 speakers drawn from tech, policy, and academia — including Biswas Dhakal (F1Soft), Prasanna Dhungel (GrowByData), Sameer Maskey (Fusemachines/Columbia University), David Sislen (World Bank), and Peter Blair (Harvard Kennedy School). The summit is organised around four pillars: AI and the future of work, next-gen leadership, resilient institutions, and diaspora engagement. It’s backed by Leadership Academy Nepal and Kantipur Media Group. The timing couldn’t be better: with an RSP government that owes much of its momentum to young Nepalis at home and abroad, and a diaspora that has been demanding a seat at the policy table, this is a chance to move from asking for change to designing it (Kathmandu Post).In Brief: More diaspora developments this week.* Remittances surged 37.7% to Rs 1.449 trillion ($10.15 billion) in the first eight months of FY 2025/26, with forex reserves hitting $23.08 billion (18.5 months of imports). But economists warn the numbers mask a “sluggish” economy — production, investment, and job creation aren’t keeping pace with money flows (Radio Nepal, Spotlight Nepal).* Australia has moved Nepal to Assessment Level 3 (high-risk) for student visas, requiring mandatory upfront proof of financial capacity (AUD 29,710 for living costs plus tuition) after a spike in fraudulent documents. Processing times have stretched to 4–12 weeks, affecting thousands of Nepali applicants (Access Edu).* US TPS for ~12,700 Nepalis remains effectively terminated after the 9th Circuit Court stayed a lower court’s reversal in February. Meanwhile, 585 Nepalis have been deported under the current administration, with January 2026 recording the highest monthly total at 101 (Kathmandu Post).💸 Economy & DevelopmentWagle’s First Week — Abolishing Laws, Setting Targets, Earning Cautious PraiseFinance Minister Dr. Swarnim Wagle isn’t wasting time. The PhD economist — who spent 25+ years at UNDP and the World Bank — made the abolition of the Revenue Investigation Department his first executive decision, calling it a relic of a “harassment-based” enforcement culture. He followed up by initiating the repeal or amendment of 15 outdated laws, including the Export-Import (Control) Act of 1956 and the Foreign Investment Prohibition Act of 1964 — legislation older than most of his cabinet colleagues. The government has set growth targets of 7% average annual GDP over five years, with per capita income above $3,000 and the economy approaching Rs 10 trillion. Wagle ordered a comprehensive Economic Status Report within five days and pledged 100-day, semi-annual, and annual action plans for every ministry. The Confederation of Nepalese Industries welcomed the agenda. Fitch Ratings assessed that RSP’s majority “reduces near-term political uncertainty” and maintained Nepal’s BB- stable outlook, but cautioned that “weak implementation capacity may constrain results” — diplomatic language for: Nepal’s problem has never been a lack of plans (Kathmandu Post, Clickmandu, Ratopati).NRB’s 8-Month Report — Record Reserves Hide a Fragile RealityNepal Rastra Bank’s latest macroeconomic snapshot looks impressive on paper: forex reserves at $23.08 billion (up 27.5%, covering 18.5 months of imports), remittances at Rs 1.449 trillion (up 37.7%), a balance of payments surplus of Rs 658 billion, and CPI inflation holding at 3.62%. But look beneath the headline numbers and the picture is less reassuring. The economy remains structurally dependent on remittances — money earned abroad that sustains consumption at home but doesn’t build productive capacity. NEPSE dropped sharply from 2,950 to 2,782 in a single week as the post-inauguration euphoria faded and global uncertainty weighed on sentiment. And at the household level, the fuel-driven cost-of-living squeeze is real: with petrol at Rs 187 and diesel at Rs 167, freight costs have pushed food prices up Rs 30–50 across the board. The informal “Momo Index” — the price of Nepal’s beloved dumplings — has hit an all-time high, which may sound trivial but is a near-perfect proxy for how ordinary families are feeling the pinch (Nepal News, myRepublica, Trending Net Nepal).In Brief: A few more economic signals worth watching.* The $2.32 billion Dudhkoshi Storage Hydroelectric Project (670MW) has secured unprecedented multilateral backing — ADB ($580M), EIB ($500M), World Bank ($200M), AIIB ($200M), OFID ($100M), and SFD ($100M). The 220-metre dam in eastern Nepal would be a game-changer for energy security. Financial approval is expected by September 2026 (Kathmandu Post, AIIB).* Tourism keeps climbing. March recorded 120,516 international arrivals, and Nepal Tourism Board announced Nepal-ASEAN Tourism Year 2026. The country is on track to surpass its pre-pandemic 2019 peak if momentum holds (Ratopati).* Nepal is racing to exit the FATF grey list by year’s end, but remains compliant with only 21 of 40 anti-money laundering recommendations. The 100-point reform agenda includes AML measures, but weak investigation and prosecution capacity remain the bottleneck (Clickmandu).⭐ Social & CulturalMeasles Crisis Deepens — “We Don’t Have Vaccines in Stock”Nepal’s measles crisis is escalating into a public health emergency. The country has experienced its fourth outbreak since January 2026, with the disease spreading from Malangawa (Sarlahi) to Dhorpatan (Baglung) and now into neighbouring Nisikhola and Badigad rural municipalities. Dozens of children have been hospitalised. The most alarming revelation came from Dr Abhiyan Gautam, chief of the Immunisation Section, who told the Kathmandu Post: “We don’t have measles vaccines in stock for outbreak response.” There is no dedicated budget for outbreak-response vaccines, and aid agencies have yet to provide requested doses. Nepal had set an ambitious target to eliminate measles by 2026 — a goal now in serious jeopardy as the new Health Minister Nisha Mehta inherits a crisis that requires immediate funding and vaccine procurement. The WHO helped contain an earlier outbreak in Sarlahi through rapid response, but the vaccine supply gap means each new outbreak is a race against time with dwindling ammunition (Kathmandu Post, WHO Nepal).Nepal Cricket Gears Up — World Cup Squad Named, New Jersey UnveiledNepal’s cricket journey continues to build momentum. The Cricket Association of Nepal has named a 24-member camp squad for the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 build-up, headlined by captain Rohit Paudel, spin sensation Sandeep Lamichhane, and all-rounder Dipendra Singh Airee. Emerging talents from the Nepal Premier League — including Sher Malla, Abinash Bohara, and Pratish GC — earned their places alongside the established core. CAN also unveiled a new national jersey: deep navy blue with crimson red accents, “NEPAL” in bold white across the chest, the crescent moon and sun from the national flag on opposite shoulders, and a Mount Everest graphic at the base. Fan jerseys are priced at Rs 799 and the player version at Rs 3,499. Nepal will travel to the Netherlands in July for a tri-series with Namibia as part of World Cup League 2 qualification, and the Women’s T20 World Cup Qualifiers will be hosted at home later this year. For a country that barely played cricket a generation ago, the trajectory is remarkable (CricNepal, CricNepal, ICC).In Brief: A few more stories to round out the week.* SEE 2026 exams kicked off on April 2, with 512,421 students sitting across 1,966 centres nationwide. For the first time, female candidates (257,613) outnumber males (254,801). The exams were delayed 12 days due to the March 5 elections — a small disruption in the grand scheme, but a stressful one for half a million teenagers (Spotlight Nepal).* The 9th Nepal International Film Festival (April 2–6) is screening 88 films from 40 countries at QFX Civil Mall under the theme “Future Forward,” featuring workshops on AI filmmaking. Separately, “Purna Bahadurko Sarangi” became the first Nepali film to earn approximately Rs 500 million domestically and Rs 250 million abroad — a box office milestone (Kathmandu Post, Lens Nepal).* Nepali New Year and Bisket Jatra are just around the corner (April 14–15). Bhaktapur’s dramatic chariot processions carrying idols of Kal Bhairav and Bhadra Kali, and Thimi’s vibrant Sindoor Jatra, are highlights of the cultural calendar for anyone planning a visit or feeling nostalgic from abroad.Until next week, stay connected! — The Nepali Diaspora Digest TeamLet’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • History Made - Nepal's Youngest PM, a Rap Anthem & the Cabinet That Broke the Mould 27.03.2026 24min
    Namaste, diaspora family! It happened. On the auspicious morning of Ram Navami, Balendra “Balen” Shah placed his hand on the constitution and became Nepal’s 40th and youngest-ever Prime Minister. Hours earlier, the former rapper dropped “Jay Mahakaali,” a unity anthem that racked up three million views before the ink on his oath was dry. His 15-member cabinet broke records too: ten ministers under 40, five women, and a PhD economist from the World Bank running Finance. Meanwhile, the Gulf crisis grinds on with permits frozen and fuel prices hitting Rs 187, and Nepal was just named the happiest country in South Asia — because the universe has a sense of timing. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceNepal’s Youngest PM Sworn In — Balen Shah Takes the Oath on Ram NavamiAt 10:36 a.m. on Friday, March 27 a time chosen for its astrological auspiciousness on Ram Navami — President Ramchandra Paudel administered the oath of office and secrecy to Balendra Shah at the President’s Office in Shital Niwas. The 35-year-old walked in wearing black trousers, a matching jacket, his signature black Nepali cloth cap, and sunglasses — the same look that made him an icon during his tenure as Kathmandu’s mayor. Shah is Nepal’s first Madhesi Prime Minister, representing the southern plains bordering India, and the youngest to hold the office in decades. His Rastriya Swatantra Party’s 182-seat landslide on March 5 gives him the first single-party majority government since 1999 no coalitions, no horse-trading. But it was the hours before the ceremony that captured the mood: Shah released “Jay Mahakaali (Victory to Goddess Mahakali),” a rap song with the lyrics “Undivided Nepali, this time history is being made” and “The strength of unity is my national power.” The music video, featuring campaign rally footage, hit nearly three million views before he took the oath. For a diaspora that has watched Nepal’s political class trade power for decades, this felt different. The world noticed too — Al Jazeera, Washington Post, NBC, and Euronews all led with the story (Al Jazeera, Himalayan Times).Meet the Cabinet — Nepal’s Youngest-Ever GovernmentSworn in alongside Shah, the 15-member Council of Ministers is the youngest cabinet in Nepal’s history — 10 of 15 members are under 40, and five are women (one-third of the cabinet). Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Dr. Swarnim Wagle, 51, is the oldest member a PhD economist from the Australian National University who served as chief economic adviser for the Asia-Pacific region at UNDP and held roles at the World Bank. On assuming office, he announced an immediate economic reform drive. The full roster signals RSP’s promise of technocratic governance over patronage politics. Here’s who’s running Nepal (Himalayan Times, Kathmandu Post, OnlineKhabar):The Full Cabinet:* Balendra Shah, 35 — Prime Minister, Defence & Industry — structural engineer, rapper, former Kathmandu mayor* Dr. Swarnim Wagle, 51 — DPM & Finance — PhD economist, ex-UNDP Asia-Pacific chief economic adviser, ex-World Bank* Sudhan Gurung, 38 — Home Affairs — RSP leader tasked with law enforcement and internal security* Shishir Khanal, 47 — Foreign Affairs — faces immediate diplomatic tests including Gulf crisis and India-China balance* Sobita Gautam, 30 — Law, Justice & Parliamentary Affairs — one of five women in cabinet* Sasmita Pokharel, 29 — Education, Science & Technology — youngest minister, overseeing Nepal’s education reform agenda* Sunil Lamsal, 35 — Physical Infrastructure & Transport — inherits the National Pride Projects backlog* Pratibha Rawal, 32 — General Administration/Federal Affairs — managing the bureaucratic machinery* Sita Badi, 30 — Women, Children & Senior Citizens — advancing gender and social protection* Amaresh Kumar Singh, 55 — Industry, Commerce & Supplies — managing supply chains during Gulf crisis* Biraj Bhakta Shrestha, 44 — Energy, Water Resources & Irrigation — overseeing Nepal’s hydropower ambitions and fuel crisis response* Nisha Mehta — Health & Population — faces measles outbreak and health system challenges* Khadak Raj (Ganesh) Poudel — Culture, Tourism & Civil Aviation — boosting Nepal’s tourism recovery* Dr. Bikram Timilsina, 43 — Communication & Information Technology — elected from Nuwakot-1* Deepak Kumar Sah, 49 — Labour, Employment & Social Security — from Mahottari, managing the Gulf migrant worker crisis* Geeta Chaudhary — Agriculture & Livestock/Forest & Environment — fifth woman in cabinetIn Brief: The political transition isn’t without its complications.* Rabi Lamichhane, RSP’s party president, delivered a pointed message at an orientation for new MPs on March 18-19, reminding them that the party’s “right to recall” provision will be enforced. But Lamichhane himself faces suspension from parliamentary duties due to ongoing legal battles, creating an unusual split between party leadership and parliamentary power (Kathmandu Post).* The opposition is in crisis. After their electoral rout — Nepali Congress down to 38 seats (its worst ever), CPN-UML to 25 — leaders of both parties face internal calls to step down. The Diplomat’s analysis piece asks whether Nepal’s traditional parties can survive the “Balen Wave” at all (Kathmandu Post, The Diplomat).* Finance Minister Dr. Swarnim Wagle assumed office on Friday and announced an economic reform drive, signalling the new government’s priority on fiscal discipline and investment climate improvement (Himalayan Times).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationGulf Crisis Month Two — Workers in Limbo as Permits Stay FrozenThe Gulf conflict’s stranglehold on Nepali migrant workers is tightening. One month after the US-Israel strikes on Iran triggered retaliatory attacks across the Gulf, 1.7 million Nepali workers in the region face deepening uncertainty. Labour permits remain frozen for 12 countries — including the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait — and more than 2,000 workers are being denied permits every day. Only 52,944 permits were issued in March, down sharply from an average of 73,000 in previous months. The 22 bodies of deceased workers remain stranded — 8 in the UAE, 7 each in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia — with families enduring waits of over a month despite embassies completing paperwork. The economic stakes are staggering: Gulf countries contribute 41% of Nepal’s remittances — about Rs 422 billion in the first six months of this fiscal year alone. A separate Kathmandu Post investigation found that lack of digital awareness is putting migrants at additional legal risk, as many cannot navigate the online employment systems that host countries now require. This is the first crisis landing on PM Shah’s desk, and Labour Minister Deepak Kumar Sah — himself from the Terai — inherits a portfolio that affects more families than any other (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post).US Nepali Diaspora Sends Its Wishlist to the New GovernmentAs Balen Shah took office, the US Nepali community was already drafting its expectations. A widely circulated NepYork editorial outlined the diaspora’s demands: meaningful voting rights for non-resident Nepalis, dual citizenship pathways, simplified investment and banking channels, and enforceable labour protections for the 1.8 million workers in the Middle East. The timing aligns with the NRNA’s new leadership push — president Dr. Hem Raj Sharma met with the Foreign Minister this week to advance the 12-point Kathmandu Declaration adopted at the Global Conference two weeks ago. The declaration calls for amendments to citizenship, foreign investment, income tax, and property transaction laws. Whether the RSP government — which owes much of its grassroots energy to young Nepalis abroad who championed it on social media — will deliver on these asks will define its relationship with the diaspora (NepYork, Radio Nepal).In Brief: More diaspora developments this week.* US deportations of Nepalis continue to climb — 585 Nepalis have been deported since Trump’s second term began, with January 2026 recording the highest monthly total. The ongoing immigrant visa suspension for 75 countries, including Nepal, remains in effect (Kathmandu Post).* The Gulf war’s economic ripple effects are threatening Nepal’s debt sustainability, as remittances account for 28.6% of GDP and the government may need to reconsider its external borrowing strategy amid persistent fiscal deficits (Fiscal Nepal).💸 Economy & DevelopmentFuel Prices Surge Again — Petrol Hits Rs 187 as Gulf War BitesNepal Oil Corporation raised fuel prices for the second time this month on March 26 — petrol and diesel up Rs 15 per litre each, bringing petrol to Rs 187 and diesel to Rs 167 in Kathmandu. Between March 1 and 24, the purchase cost of petrol has risen by approximately Rs 76 per litre and diesel by Rs 143 per litre as crude oil remains above $105 per barrel following Iran’s Strait of Hormuz disruptions. The LPG shortage continues, with NOC distributing half-filled cylinders and ruling out a return to full cylinders while global supply chains remain unstable. Construction materials are spiking (steel rods up from Rs 95 to Rs 105/kg), freight charges jumped Rs 5,000 per ton, and economy-class flights to the US now cost Rs 300,000. Economist Puskar Bajracharya warned that prices could rise further if crude hits $125/barrel. For the new government, this is a day-one inheritance with no easy fix — though Nepal’s electric cooking push (induction stove imports hit 132,000 units last year) offers a rare silver lining (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post).Markets Rally on Political Stability, But FDI Tells a Different StoryThe Nepal Stock Exchange has been on a tear. NEPSE crossed 2,900 points on March 22 and reached 2,950 by March 26, with turnover exceeding Rs 13 billion in a single session — a clear market vote of confidence in the political stability a single-party RSP government promises. But the foreign investment picture is far less rosy: FDI commitments have plummeted to just Rs 386 million by mid-March, with the Department of Industry linking the collapse to the September 2025 Gen Z protests that caused an estimated Rs 86 billion in damages and shattered investor confidence. The contrast is stark — domestic investors are betting on the new government, but international capital is sitting on the sidelines. Nepal’s trade deficit has meanwhile hit Rs 1.1 trillion in the first two quarters of FY 2025/26, and the ILO’s warning from last week — that LDC graduation in November could cost 132,000 jobs and nearly $1 billion — hangs over the new Finance Minister’s inbox (ShareHub, Nepal News).In Brief: A few more economic signals worth watching.* The trade deficit hit Rs 1.1 trillion in the first two quarters of FY 2025/26, underscoring Nepal’s structural import dependency as fuel costs continue to climb (Nepal News).* LDC graduation in November 2026 could cost 132,000 jobs and nearly $1 billion over five years as trade preferences in textiles are withdrawn — roughly half the affected jobs are held by women (Kathmandu Post).* The World Bank’s $50 million Digital Transformation Project, approved in February, aims to digitize public services — a priority for an RSP government that ran on anti-corruption and transparency (World Bank).⭐ Social & CulturalNepal Tops South Asia in World Happiness Report 2026In a week of political upheaval, here’s an unexpected data point: Nepal ranked 99th globally in the 2026 World Happiness Report, released March 21 — a slight slip from 92nd last year, but still #1 in South Asia, ahead of Pakistan (104th), India (116th), Bangladesh (127th), and Sri Lanka (134th). The report, based on a three-year rolling average of surveys covering 100,000 people across 140 nations, evaluates social support, income, life expectancy, freedom, generosity, and corruption perceptions. It also includes a pointed warning about a “social media trap” eroding youth well-being globally — a finding that resonates in Nepal, where digital entertainment interactions around cricket content alone grew 442% this year. Whether happiness scores survive a Rs 187 petrol bill is another question, but for now, Nepal can claim bragging rights in the neighbourhood (Review Nepal, Press Adda).Nepali Cricketers Go European — Eight Players Sign for Inaugural T20 LeagueNepali cricket continues its quiet march onto the global stage. Eight players secured contracts in the inaugural European T20 League, to be held in Brussels from June 4-14 — the most star-studded T20 competition to debut in continental Europe. Captain Rohit Paudel will play for the Ghent Gladiators, spin sensation Sandeep Lamichhane signed with the Liege Red Lions, and five players joined JB Bruges. The signings come on the back of Nepal’s T20 World Cup 2026 campaign earlier this year, which raised the team’s international profile significantly. For a country where cricket was barely played a generation ago, having eight players in a European franchise league is a quiet revolution — and a reminder that Nepal’s soft power exports aren’t limited to Gurkha soldiers and Sherpa mountaineers (CricNepal).In Brief: A few more stories to close out a historic week.* Nepal’s football frustration continues. ANFA postponed the international friendly between Nepal and Hong Kong, scheduled for March 26 at Dasharath Stadium, after failing to secure permission from the National Sports Council to use the venue. The administrative dysfunction is becoming a pattern (Nepal News).* The measles outbreak in Baglung is still spreading — 126+ suspected cases since February, with schools closed and the infection spreading to neighbouring Nisikhola and Badigad municipalities. Nepal’s target of eliminating measles by 2026 is now in serious jeopardy (Kathmandu Post).* “Jaun Hai Pokhara” — a new tourism campaign by Hotel Association Nepal and the Nepal Tourism Board — launched in eastern Nepal to build a partnership with Koshi Province, linking religious and natural attractions across both regions (Nepal News).Until next week, stay connected! — The Nepali Diaspora Digest TeamLet’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • March 27 Countdown, Stranded Bodies in the Gulf & Snow Leopards on the Big Screen 20.03.2026 20min
    Namaste, diaspora family! Nepal is one week away from a new era. Balen Shah will be sworn in as prime minister on March 27, and the RSP is already assembling a lean cabinet after amending its charter to clear the legal path. Meanwhile, the NRNA wrapped up its 12th Global Conference with a new president and a 12-point declaration that puts diaspora voting rights and citizenship reform back on the agenda. But the Gulf crisis continues to grind: 22 bodies of deceased Nepali workers remain stranded abroad, over 2,000 labour permits are being denied daily, and fuel prices just jumped again — pushing Nepali households toward induction stoves at record speed. And in a week that desperately needed some beauty, Leonardo DiCaprio’s “Snow Leopard Sisters” premiered in Kathmandu, spotlighting Nepali conservation on the global stage. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceBalen Shah to Be Sworn in as PM on March 27The countdown to Nepal’s new government has a date. The Election Commission submitted the final results of all 275 House of Representatives seats to President Ramchandra Paudel on Wednesday, formally triggering the government formation process. Newly elected lawmakers will take their oath at Singha Durbar on March 26 at 2 p.m., after which RSP will elect Shah as parliamentary party leader and the President will appoint him under Article 76(1). The first parliamentary session is expected to begin March 30. To clear a technicality in the Political Parties Act, RSP amended Article 66 of its party charter this week to allow Shah — who is not yet a sitting MP — to be elected leader by the parliamentary caucus. Shah has signalled he wants a lean cabinet of around 15 ministers, with the party pledging not to exceed 18. Vice Presidents D.P. Aryal and Swarnim Wagle are among those being considered for key portfolios. With 182 seats, RSP will form the first single-party government since 1999 — no coalitions, no horse-trading (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post).Xi Jinping Book-Burning Sparks Diplomatic IncidentAn awkward diplomatic row erupted this week after hundreds of copies of Xi Jinping’s “The Governance of China” were burned at Manmohan Technical University in Morang district. The Chinese Embassy in Kathmandu lodged a formal protest through a note verbale to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, demanding swift action. The university insists the books — donated by the Chinese government — were destroyed inadvertently during a routine cleanup of termite-damaged materials. Nepal’s government formed a five-member investigation panel with 15 days to determine what happened, while the local Chief District Officer reportedly asked media outlets to delete viral video footage of the bonfire. The timing is especially sensitive: the incoming RSP government has signalled “balanced and dynamic diplomacy” with both India and China, promising to reposition Nepal from a “buffer state into a vibrant bridge.” How Kathmandu handles a symbolic slight to Beijing in its first diplomatic test will be closely watched across the region (Kathmandu Post, Reuters).In Brief: A few more political developments as the transition unfolds.* PM Karki under fire for last-minute appointments. The outgoing interim PM drew sharp criticism from RSP, Gen Z activists, and opposition parties after appointing her personal secretary Adarsha Shrestha as NTNC chairperson and nominating Home Minister Om Prakash Aryal to the Upper House — moves critics say defeat the purpose of the September 2025 protests that brought her to power. A writ petition challenging Aryal’s nomination is now before the Supreme Court (Kathmandu Post).* RSP’s 57 proportional representation candidates are finalized, with the Election Commission distributing certificates to all 110 PR lawmakers. The breakdown: 17 Khas Arya, 16 indigenous nationalities, 8 Dalit, 4 Tharu, and 3 Muslim — fulfilling constitutional inclusion requirements (Nepal Press).* Dhanusha-1 remains the sole unresolved constituency after RSP candidate Kishori Sah was disqualified for appearing on the Credit Information Bureau blacklist. The case is before the Supreme Court (Himalayan Times).🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationNRNA’s 12th Global Conference — New Leadership, Big DemandsThe Non-Resident Nepali Association elected Dr. Hem Raj Sharma as its new president by consensus at the 12th Global Conference in Kathmandu this week, with rival candidate Rabin Bajracharya withdrawing to preserve unity and accepting a vice-president role. Of 4,286 registered delegates, over 400 attended physically, with the rest joining online under the theme “Our Unity, Base for Prosperity.” The conference concluded with a 12-point Kathmandu Declaration that reads like a wishlist the diaspora has been drafting for decades: meaningful NRN citizenship reform, diaspora voting rights, simplified banking and investment channels, dignified labour protections for the 1.8 million Nepali workers in the Middle East, and priority investment in hydropower, agriculture, tourism, and IT. Outgoing president Binod Kunwar didn’t sugarcoat it, telling delegates that NRN citizenship currently offers “fewer practical benefits than a simple membership card.” Senior Advocate Radheshyam Adhikari described a “legal deadlock” preventing implementation. The new leadership’s “Jumbo Team” — 23 vice presidents, a general secretary, plus youth and women’s coordinators — signals ambitious scope. Whether the incoming RSP government takes the Declaration seriously will be the real test (Kathmandu Post, Review Nepal).Gulf Crisis Week Three — Bodies Stranded, Permits Frozen, Workers in LimboThe human toll of the Gulf conflict is becoming harder to look away from. Twenty-two bodies of deceased Nepali migrant workers are now stranded across the region — 8 in the UAE, 7 in Kuwait, 7 in Saudi Arabia — despite embassies completing all repatriation paperwork. With Iran having attacked Dubai Airport three times since February 28 and commercial flights still severely disrupted, families are enduring waits of over a month, with transport costs running up to Rs 900,000 from Saudi Arabia. On the living side of the crisis, more than 2,000 workers are being denied labour permits every day. Some 20,500 with completed visa procedures cannot travel — 10,000 destined for the UAE, 5,500 for Saudi Arabia, 5,000 for Qatar. The government has resumed re-entry permits for seven countries (Saudi, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Yemen, Jordan, Turkey) but new worker permits remain frozen, and six countries — Israel, Lebanon, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Iran — sit in a permanent “Red Zone.” At the Gaddachauki border crossing in Kanchanpur, 200-250 workers who returned home to vote on March 5 are crossing back into India daily, heading to jobs in Uttarakhand, Mumbai, and Bangalore, expressing weary scepticism about whether any government will address the poverty that drives them abroad (Kathmandu Post, Kathmandu Post).In Brief: More diaspora updates from around the world.* US court greenlights TPS termination for Nepalis. The 9th Circuit reversed a lower court order that had blocked the Trump administration’s decision to end Temporary Protected Status, leaving at least 7,000 Nepali TPS holders facing deportation risk after living in the US for over two decades. Nine Nepalis were deported to Kathmandu on a chartered flight on March 6 (Kathmandu Post).* Nepali designers lit up New York Fashion Week. Kriti Mainali debuted her “Heritage of Nepal” collection featuring motifs inspired by Swayambhunath and the Himalayas, while Prabal Gurung showcased his “anichya” (impermanence) collection at Cipriani 25 Broadway — a reminder that Nepal’s creative diaspora is thriving even when the news is heavy (NepYork).* Nepal is among 75 countries hit by an ongoing US immigrant visa suspension since January 21, tied to public charge reviews. Family-based green card priority dates remain largely stagnant (NepYork).💸 Economy & DevelopmentFuel Crisis Reshapes Daily Life — Induction Stoves Fly Off ShelvesThe Gulf conflict has now reached into every Nepali kitchen. Nepal Oil Corporation raised petrol prices by Rs 15 per litre this week (now Rs 172) and diesel and kerosene by Rs 10, after crude hit $105.87 per barrel following Iran’s Strait of Hormuz closure. In the mountain districts of Kalikot and Jumla, panic buying triggered acute LPG shortages — authorities confiscated 6,377 hoarded cylinders from a single warehouse and imposed a Rs 300,000 fine. The government has rolled out fuel-saving directives across ministries, restricted official vehicle use, and is considering odd-even rules for private cars. Freight charges jumped Rs 5,000 per ton, construction materials are spiking (steel rods up from Rs 95 to Rs 105/kg, cement up Rs 25/bag), and economy-class flights to the US now cost Rs 300,000. But there’s a silver lining in the surge: induction stove imports hit 132,000 units, up from 111,600 the previous year, as households rush to switch to electric cooking. The government’s target of 25% electric stove adoption by 2030 was once aspirational — the oil crisis may just force it to happen (Kathmandu Post, Spotlight Nepal).ILO Warning — Nepal Could Lose 132,000 Jobs After LDC GraduationAs if the new government didn’t have enough on its plate, the International Labour Organization dropped a sobering report this week: Nepal’s graduation from Least Developed Country status in November 2026 could cost the economy nearly $1 billion and 132,000 jobs over five years, roughly half held by women, as trade preferences in textiles and apparel are withdrawn. The timing couldn’t be worse. Government revenue collection through eight months stands at just 50.49% of the Rs 1.48 trillion target, and capital expenditure is stuck at a dismal 19.24% of allocation. A World Bank report published the same week found that Nepal would need 41 years to complete its National Pride Projects at the current pace, with land acquisition alone running 150% over schedule and procurement timelines the longest in South Asia at 231 days. For an RSP government promising transformation, the bureaucratic machinery it inherits is moving at geological speed (Kathmandu Post, World Bank).In Brief: A few more economic signals worth tracking.* The Green Climate Fund approved $36.1 million (with co-financing totalling nearly $50 million) to protect 2.3 million people living near four high-risk glacial lakes — Thulagi, Lower Barun, Lumding Tsho, and Hongu 2 — from outburst floods. It’s the largest climate adaptation grant Nepal has received (UNDP).* Nepal became the 173rd member of the OECD Global Forum on Tax Transparency, a step toward controlling illicit financial flows and boosting investor confidence that the new government can build on (OECD).* The World Bank approved $85 million for the Greater Lumbini Area Development Project, spanning Rupandehi, Kapilvastu, and Nawalparasi for heritage conservation and tourism infrastructure — a boost for Nepal’s most important pilgrimage site (Nepal News).⭐ Social & Cultural‘Snow Leopard Sisters’ Premieres in Nepal — DiCaprio-Produced DocumentaryIn a week heavy with crisis, here’s something luminous. “Snow Leopard Sisters,” an award-winning documentary executive produced by Leonardo DiCaprio and Oscar-winning filmmaker Joanna Natasegara, had its Nepal premiere at Labim Mall in Lalitpur on Wednesday. Directed by Sonam Choeki Lama, Ben Ayers, and Andrew Lynch, the film follows conservationist Tshiring Lhamu Lama as she mentors 17-year-old Tenzin Bhuti Gurung in tracking endangered snow leopards across the high passes of Dolpa — one of the most remote landscapes on Earth. It’s a story of women leading conservation in a region where fewer than 500 snow leopards are estimated to survive in Nepal’s mountains. For Nepali environmental storytelling, this is a landmark: a homegrown story, shot in Nepal, with Nepali women at its centre, backed by one of the biggest names in global environmental advocacy. If you get a chance to see it, take it (OnlineKhabar).Two Protests, One Question — Will the New Government Deliver Accountability?Two movements are testing Nepal’s conscience this week, and both will land on Balen Shah’s desk the moment he takes office. Gen Z activists staged protests at Maitighar Mandala in Kathmandu and outside the District Administration Office in Chitwan, demanding the full release of the commission report investigating the September 2025 uprising that killed 77 people. The government has released only a synopsis, despite promising transparency. Separately, the nationwide protests over the killing of 16-year-old Inisa BK in Surkhet continue to build, with students, teachers, and activists rallying from Kakarbhitta to Kathmandu demanding stricter rape laws and justice for the four detained suspects. Inisa’s family met Home Minister Om Prakash Aryal, who assured them “perpetrators will face the full extent of the law.” Both movements share a core demand: that Nepal’s institutions stop deferring accountability. The RSP rode to power on exactly this promise. Now it has to keep it (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News).In Brief: A few more stories to close out the week.* Measles is spreading across Baglung. A total of 126 suspected cases have been reported since February 20, with schools closed and dozens of children hospitalised. Emergency vaccination campaigns have reached 4,617 people in Dhorpatan, with plans to vaccinate 7,000 more. Nepal had aimed to eliminate measles by 2026 — that target is now in jeopardy (Kathmandu Post).* US aid cuts are pushing girls toward child marriage. The termination of $329 million in funding forced closure of CARE’s UDAAN education initiative, putting over 307 girls in Madhesh and Lumbini provinces at risk. Emergency interventions helped 282 resume school, but the solution remains fragile (CARE).* Sujan Kakshapati won double gold at the Battle of Bavaria kung fu championship in Germany, scoring 23.02 in Chinese Creative Form and 22.58 in Traditional Form with Weapon against 1,200 participants from 10 nations. Quietly representing Nepal on the world stage (Nepal News).Until next week, stay connected! — The Nepali Diaspora Digest TeamLet’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Balen's Mandate, Half-Filled Cylinders & A Country Between Hope and Fire 13.03.2026 19min
    Namaste, diaspora family! What a week to be Nepali. The final election count is in and it’s official: Balendra “Balen” Shah’s Rastriya Swatantra Party has won 182 seats, an unprecedented single-party majority that obliterated Nepal’s political establishment. At 35, Balen is set to become the youngest prime minister in modern Nepali history. But while Kathmandu celebrates, the Gulf crisis grinds into its second week with 1.7 million Nepali workers caught in the crossfire, flights only just resuming, and cooking gas now being rationed back home. And in Surkhet, the brutal killing of a 16-year-old girl has ignited nationwide protests demanding justice. Let’s get into all of it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceRSP’s 182-Seat Landslide — The Final CountThe numbers are now official, and they are staggering. The Rastriya Swatantra Party has won 182 of 275 seats in Nepal’s House of Representatives, 125 through first-past-the-post and 57 through proportional representation. It is the most dominant electoral performance since 1959, just two seats short of the two-thirds supermajority threshold of 184. The Nepali Congress was reduced to 38 seats, its worst result in history, with party president Gagan Thapa losing his own Kathmandu-4 constituency. CPN-UML fared even worse: 25 seats, with KP Sharma Oli defeated 68,348 to 18,734 in Jhapa-5, a seat he had held for most of his career. The Nepali Communist Party under Pushpa Kamal Dahal managed just 17 seats. RSP’s 47.8% proportional vote share is the highest recorded since the mixed-member system was introduced in 2008. Nepal’s three-decade-old political establishment didn’t just lose — it collapsed (Al Jazeera, Wikipedia).Balen Shah: Nepal’s PM-Designate at 35Balendra Shah, rapper, civil engineer, former Kathmandu mayor, is now Nepal’s prime minister-designate and, at 35, will be the country’s youngest leader in modern history and the first PM to rise directly from the Madheshi youth movement. His journey from hip-hop artist (”Sadak Balak,” “Balidan”) to Time magazine’s Top 100 Emerging Leaders to the steps of Singha Durbar is the kind of story that doesn’t happen in Nepali politics — until it did. Shah won his engineering degrees, cleaned up Kathmandu as an independent mayor from 2022, and then channelled the fury of the September 2025 Gen Z protests into a party that barely existed four years ago. Under Nepal’s constitutional process, parties must now submit proportional representation nominees before parliament is formally summoned by the president. With 182 seats, RSP can govern comfortably alone and would need just two allies or crossbenchers for constitutional amendments. No coalitions, no horse-trading. The question facing Balen and his largely inexperienced caucus is whether they can deliver on the ten-point agreement that started all of this (Time, CFR).In Brief: A few more developments from a historic political week.* The old guard is in crisis. The Nepali Congress has called a central committee meeting to review its worst-ever result, while CPN-UML has yet to formally assess its own collapse. Three decades of establishment dominance ended in a single night (NPR).* Election expense reports are trickling in. Rabi Lamichhane declared total spending of just Rs 989,987, while the Election Commission has given all candidates and parties 35 days to submit their accounts or face legal action.* 149,000 temporary election police recruited for March 5 are being discharged by March 12, as the country transitions from election mode to government formation.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationTwo Weeks of War — 1.7 Million Nepalis in the GulfThe US-Iran-Israel conflict has now entered its second week, and while bombs may not be falling on Nepali workers, the disruption to their lives, and Nepal’s lifeline, is immense. Foreign Minister Balananda Sharma told parliament this week that the situation “does not warrant immediate mass evacuation” of the 1.7 million Nepalis officially registered across Gulf states (MoFA estimates the real number, including informal workers, could be as high as 3 million), but the government has launched an emergency registration portal that 100,000 workers have already used. Nepal Airlines evacuated 272 citizens from Dubai on special flights, and MoFA is exploring Saudi Arabia as an alternate route home for those stranded in the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait. Flights to the Gulf, suspended for 12 days after the February 28 strikes, have partially resumed, with Air Arabia, Fly Dubai, and Himalaya Airlines running limited services. But Dubai International Airport will close entirely from March 16 to 28 for repair of strike damage. The aviation crisis is the worst since COVID-19: Kathmandu’s international flights dropped 65% overnight, with 129 cancellations costing more than Rs 21 million daily (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News).21 Nepalis Rescued from Cambodia’s Scam FactoriesIn a very different kind of diaspora crisis, 21 Nepali citizens trafficked to Cambodia were repatriated on Friday after being lured by organised criminal gangs promising lucrative jobs. Instead, they were forced to work in illegally operated online scam centres and casinos in Bavet city, near the Vietnamese border, without valid visas. The rescue was coordinated by the Nepal Embassy in Bangkok and the NRNA chapter in Cambodia, following a Cambodian police raid on January 28 that detained over 2,000 foreign nationals, including 30 Nepalis. The embassy has urged any remaining stranded Nepalis in Cambodia to contact the mission for free travel permits. The case is a stark reminder that while the Gulf crisis dominates headlines, trafficking networks continue to exploit Nepali workers across Southeast Asia (Kathmandu Post, Himalayan Times).In Brief: More diaspora updates from a turbulent week.* The 12th NRNA World Conference is still on for March 14–16 in Kathmandu, themed “Our Unity, the Foundation for Prosperity,” though delegates from the Gulf may face travel complications with Dubai Airport shutting down and limited flight options (OnlineKhabar).* Nepalis in the Gulf may be able to return via Saudi Arabia, according to MoFA, which is exploring the kingdom as an alternative transit route for workers stranded by airspace closures (Kathmandu Post).* Qatar Airways has scheduled 143 relief flights to help move stranded passengers, while Nepal Airlines continues special evacuation services from Dubai.💸 Economy & DevelopmentOil Crisis Hits Home — Nepal Starts Rationing Cooking GasThe Gulf conflict has arrived in Nepali kitchens. Nepal Oil Corporation announced this week that it will sell half-filled 7.1 kg LPG cylinders at Rs 955 to manage surging demand driven by consumer hoarding. While NOC insists imports remain regular, the underlying supply picture is grim: the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil passes, has seen tanker traffic drop to a trickle. Brent crude spiked to $115 per barrel before falling to $93 after President Trump warned Iran against blocking the strait. Nepal is 100% dependent on India for fuel, and India imports over 80% of its crude from the Middle East. The dual shock that economists warned about last week is materialising: a potential remittance freeze if Gulf operations stay disrupted, and an energy price surge cascading through Nepal’s import-dependent economy. The IEA’s March report described the Hormuz shutdown as having “wiped out more oil supply than any crisis in history” (Spotlight Nepal, ANI).Next Year’s Budget Already Shrinking Before RSP Takes PowerBefore Balen Shah’s government even takes office, the fiscal straitjacket is tightening. The National Planning Commission set the FY2026/27 budget ceiling at Rs 1.89 trillion — a 4% decrease from the current year. Vice Chairman Dr. Prakash Shrestha attributed the cut to weak revenue growth and insufficient foreign aid mobilisation. Capital expenditure will come in under Rs 400 billion. The NPC has also proposed reducing recurrent expenditure from 39% to 36% of the total budget and excluding projects under Rs 30 million from the federal budget, a move that could curb the pork-barrel spending that has long defined Nepali budgets. For RSP, the message is clear: transformative change will have to be delivered within a shrinking fiscal envelope, at a time when oil prices are spiking and the Gulf conflict threatens the remittance flows that fund nearly 29% of GDP (Nepal News).In Brief: A few more numbers worth watching this week.* Remittances hit Rs 1.261 trillion in the first seven months of FY2025/26, a 39.8% year-on-year increase, but with 1.8 million Nepali workers in the conflict zone, economists warn that the growth streak may be about to break sharply (Nepal News).* Nepal’s electricity import tariff rises 1.5% from April. The Nepal-India Power Exchange Committee approved a rate of Rs 8.22 per unit for up to 350 megawatts of supply.* Sopan Pharmaceuticals launched a targeted IPO for migrant workers, believed to be the first offering specifically designed for the diaspora, signalling a growing recognition of NRN investment potential.⭐ Social & CulturalJustice for Inisa — A Nation Demands AnswersOn March 7, 16-year-old Inisa BK left her home in Birendranagar, Surkhet, at 6 a.m., telling her mother she was going to tuition classes. She was found unconscious and bleeding in Janajagaran Community Forest and died shortly after reaching hospital. The postmortem confirmed what her family feared: death from excessive bleeding caused by violent sexual assault. Four minors have been detained, including a 16-year-old suspect. Her father told reporters: “My world has been incinerated. It appears she was lured into the dense forest with false promises.” Inisa was a grade 11 science student who dreamed of becoming a doctor or an Army officer. In the days since, protests have erupted across Nepal, with students in Karnali Province and Kathmandu demanding justice, stricter rape laws, and systemic protection for women and girls. Her family has refused to receive the body, which remained at Karnali Provincial Hospital for five days, until justice is delivered. The case has become a lightning rod for anger over gender-based violence in a country where 33% of women aged 20–24 were married before 18 (Kathmandu Post, Khabarhub).Footballers Force ANFA’s Hand — A-Division League ReturnsNepal’s footballers took matters into their own hands this week — literally. On March 8, members of the Nepal Football Players Association padlocked the ANFA headquarters in Satdobato, Lalitpur, over three demands: restart the A-Division League (suspended for over 1,000 days), fund the player welfare account, and release outstanding prize money. ANFA condemned the action as “undisciplined and anarchic” and warned it could jeopardise international fixtures. But the players held firm — and it worked. By March 10, ANFA agreed to all three demands: the Sahid Smarak A-Division League will kick off on April 13, B and C Division leagues will be completed by mid-November, welfare fund deposits will begin, and prize money will be released in instalments. It was the second protest in four months. In November, players had hung their national medals on ANFA’s gates. The pattern is now familiar in Nepali institutions: those in charge only move when forced to (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News).In Brief: A few lighter, brighter notes to close the week.* Nepal will participate in the Cannes Film Festival for the first time. The Film Development Board and Nepal Tourism Board will share a dedicated stall at the 79th edition (May 12–23) to promote Nepali cinema and facilitate international collaborations (Ratopati).* 17,000 students in Humla received textbooks on the first day of school, a historic first for Nepal’s most remote district, where 141 community schools opened with materials ready for the first time ever (Nepal News).* Temperatures are climbing across Nepal, with Kathmandu hitting 25.4°C and Siraha reaching 31.1°C. Spring is here, and so is the heat.Until next week, stay connected! — The Nepali Diaspora Digest TeamLet’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Nepal Has Spoken: RSP's Landslide, A War in West Asia & 1.9 Million Nepalis in the Crossfire 06.03.2026 22min
    Namaste, diaspora family. There is no gentle way to ease into this week. On March 5, Nepal voted — and the people delivered a verdict so decisive it will be studied for decades. The Rastriya Swatantra Party, barely four years old, is heading for a two-thirds supermajority, sweeping Kathmandu and humbling every political giant in sight. Balen Shah is leading KP Sharma Oli by a 4-to-1 margin in Oli’s own stronghold. Meanwhile, a war has erupted in the Gulf: US-Israeli strikes on Iran triggered retaliatory attacks on airports across the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait — killing a 29-year-old Nepali security guard at Abu Dhabi airport and putting 1.9 million Nepali workers in immediate danger. The Strait of Hormuz has effectively shut down, oil prices have surged 35% in a single week, and Nepal’s entire remittance lifeline is at risk. This is a week that will define Nepal’s trajectory for years to come. Let’s get into it.🏛️ Politics & GovernanceRSP’s Historic Landslide — The Numbers So FarAs vote counting continues across Nepal, the scale of the Rastriya Swatantra Party’s victory is becoming clear and it is historic. RSP has won at least four FPTP seats and leads in over 105 of 165 constituencies, sweeping all 10 Kathmandu seats and 14 of 15 across the Valley. The Nepali Congress holds just two confirmed wins (Manang and Mustang) and leads in roughly 12 seats; CPN-UML leads in about 11 with no confirmed victories. RSP Vice President Dol Prasad Aryal told ANI the party expects 186 seats —surpassing the two-thirds threshold of 184 in the 275-member House. Independent analysts put the combined FPTP and PR total closer to 200. RSP is also dominating the proportional representation count, holding 59% of early PR tallies. Turnout was 58.07% — the lowest since 1991, but the message from those who did vote could not be louder (Kathmandu Post).Balen vs Oli — The Jhapa-5 VerdictThe most watched race in Nepal delivered perhaps its most symbolic result. In Jhapa-5 — the constituency KP Sharma Oli had won in every election except 2008 — Balendra “Balen” Shah leads the former prime minister 15,161 to 3,344, a staggering 4.5-to-1 margin. In 2022, Oli secured 54,319 votes here. The reversal is total. Across Kathmandu, Ranju Darshana won Kathmandu-1 with nearly double the votes of her nearest rival, becoming one of RSP’s first confirmed victors. Nepali Congress president Gagan Thapa, who positioned himself as the establishment’s generational answer to Balen, is trailing in Kathmandu-4 to RSP’s Pukar Bam. At 35, Balen Shah — rapper, civil engineer, former Kathmandu mayor is now almost certainly Nepal’s next Prime Minister, and he would be the youngest in the country’s history (Kathmandu Post, OnlineKhabar).What This Means — Government Formation, Foreign Policy & the Gen Z MandateIf RSP secures two-thirds of parliament, it would be only the second time in Nepal’s history that a single party commands such power and the first under the 2015 constitution. The implications are profound. RSP could govern alone without coalition partners, ending the era of 14 governments and 9 prime ministers since 2008. It could amend the constitution unilaterally a power that carries both promise and risk. On foreign policy, RSP has advocated “strategic autonomy,” positioning Nepal as a bridge rather than a buffer between India and China. Analysts at Chatham House note that left-wing representation in parliament will drop from roughly 60% to 35%, potentially reducing China’s strategic influence. India, which provided election aid and backed the democratic transition, may gain leverage. But the deeper story is generational: over 800,000 new voters registered for this election, two-thirds of them Gen Z. The September 2025 protests that killed 77 people and toppled Oli’s government have been validated at the ballot box. As the Atlantic Council observed, Nepal now joins Bangladesh in demonstrating that Gen Z protest energy can translate into decisive electoral power. The question now is whether a politically inexperienced party can deliver on the ten-point agreement that started it all (ORF).In Brief: A few more things from the election trail this week.* Election Day was largely peaceful — 339,000 security personnel were deployed across 23,112 polling centres and international observers from ANFREL commended the exercise as “conducted in a peaceful and orderly environment,” though only 39% of polling stations had accessibility ramps.* Code of conduct violations were rampant in the campaign period — observers found social media misinformation surging to unprecedented levels, but the Election Commission fined only two candidates despite examining roughly 100 cases.* Holi fell just three days before polling — celebrations at Basantapur and across the country proceeded under strict election code restrictions, with mass musical events banned and 68 additional checkpoints deployed in Kathmandu Valley to prevent violations.🌍 Diaspora & Globalisation1.9 Million Nepalis in the Crossfire — Iran War Hits Nepal’s Gulf LifelineOn February 28, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran — Operation Epic Fury — deploying over 50,000 troops and striking more than 1,700 targets. Supreme Leader Khamenei was killed in an Israeli airstrike on his Tehran compound. Iran retaliated with drones and ballistic missiles across the Gulf: Abu Dhabi’s Zayed International Airport was struck, Dubai airport damaged, 65 missiles and 12 drones launched at Qatar, and Kuwait intercepted 97 ballistic missiles and 283 drones. Among the casualties was Diwas Shrestha, 29, from Gorkha — a security guard at Abu Dhabi airport killed when an Iranian drone struck the facility. He had been preparing to marry on his next visit home. Nepal’s government suspended labour permits for 12 countries, launched an emergency registration portal, and began evacuating stranded workers — 150 from Iraq’s Erbil airport, 90 in transit in Kuwait, 36 Hajj pilgrims stuck in Jeddah, and 80 more in Dubai. Interim PM Sushila Karki spoke with Qatar’s PM, who assured equal protection for Nepal’s 357,913 workers in the country. But with 1.9 million Nepalis across the Gulf and airspace closures spreading, the full scale of the crisis is only beginning to emerge (Kathmandu Post).Nepal’s Remittance Lifeline Under ThreatThe economic ripple effects of the Gulf conflict are already hitting Nepal. Approximately 41% of Nepal’s remittances — Rs 422 billion in the first half of this fiscal year alone — flow from the Middle East, and remittances account for 28.6% of GDP. The Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil passes, has effectively shut down: tanker traffic dropped 70% before ceasing entirely, and major shipping lines Maersk, CMA CGM, and Hapag-Lloyd have all suspended transits. Brent crude surged to $92.69 per barrel, and US crude posted its biggest weekly gain in futures history — up 35.63%. Nepal Oil Corporation has assured the public of 13 days of petroleum stocks and says Indian Oil Corporation will maintain supply, but Nepal depends entirely on India for fuel, and India imports over 80% of its crude from the Middle East. Economists warn of a dual shock: a remittance freeze if Gulf operations remain disrupted, and a fuel price surge that could cascade through every sector of Nepal’s import-dependent economy (Kathmandu Post, Nepal News).In Brief: Some important diaspora updates beyond the Gulf crisis.* Record 95 Nepalis were deported from the US on February 27 in the largest single deportation flight in history — 92 men and 3 women who had entered via the Mexico border after paying smugglers $60,000–$75,000 each (NepYork).* TPS termination reinstated — the US Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals on February 9 allowed the Trump administration’s TPS termination to proceed, putting over 7,000 Nepalis who have lived lawfully in the US for over a decade at immediate risk of deportation.* The NRNA World Conference is still on for March 14–16 in Kathmandu, themed “Our Unity, the Foundation for Prosperity” — though Gulf airspace closures may complicate travel for delegates from the Middle East (OnlineKhabar).💸 Economy & DevelopmentGulf Conflict Threatens Nepal’s Fragile Economic RecoveryBeyond the immediate human toll, the West Asia conflict is threatening several pillars of Nepal’s economy simultaneously. The CWC League 2 tri-series — Nepal vs UAE vs Oman — scheduled for March 10 in Kathmandu has been postponed indefinitely after UAE and Oman teams couldn’t travel due to airspace closures, hitting Nepal’s cricket tourism aspirations. At ITB Berlin, the world’s largest tourism fair, Nepal Tourism Board CEO Deepak Raj Joshi and his team were stranded in Doha after their Qatar Airways flight landed just before Hamad International Airport shut down — a colleague read his statement at the Nepal pavilion instead. The pattern is clear: from remittances to fuel to tourism to cricket, the Gulf crisis is touching every corner of Nepal’s economic life, and there’s no indication it will resolve quickly.IMF’s Final $43.2 Million Tranche — Board Approval Still PendingThe IMF reached a staff-level agreement on the seventh and final review of Nepal’s Extended Credit Facility on February 20, clearing the way for approximately $43.2 million — bringing the programme total to $384.4 million. But the fine print remains sobering: growth is pegged at 3–3.5%, non-performing loans have risen to 5.4%, and the IMF has flagged that Nepal Rastra Bank Act amendments must be submitted to parliament for programme completion. In a notable first, the IMF also launched a governance and corruption diagnostic — a signal of the fund’s concern about institutional weaknesses. Board approval is pending, and the incoming RSP government will inherit both the funds and the conditions attached to them (myRepublica).In Brief: A few more economic developments worth watching.* World Bank approved $50 million for Nepal’s Digital Transformation Project — covering a citizen service portal, social registry, digital wallets, and land administration digitization, co-financed with ADB for an additional $40 million.* NRB directed banks to stay open during the Holi holidays and election day to ensure uninterrupted financial services during an unprecedented overlap of festivals, public holidays, and polling.* Forex reserves sit at a record $22.47 billion — covering 21.4 months of merchandise imports — but the paradox persists: banking deposits grew Rs 417 billion while private credit increased only Rs 197 billion. The money is coming in; it’s still not going anywhere productive.⭐ Social & CulturalSamba Update — Fundraiser Smashed, But Aspetar Access Now UncertainLast week, Nepal rallied behind women’s football captain Sabitra Bhandari “Samba” after ANFA stepped back from supporting her surgery. The response was extraordinary: Rs 14 million raised domestically and NZ$52,000 internationally within 24 hours, smashing her NZ$135,000 target for revision ACL surgery at Qatar’s Aspetar Orthopaedic Hospital. But this week brought a cruel complication: with Qatari airspace closed following Iranian retaliatory strikes, and EASA advising airlines not to operate in the airspace of Qatar, UAE, and a dozen other countries, access to Aspetar is currently impossible by air. No reporting has directly linked the Gulf conflict to Samba’s surgical timeline, but the logistics are self-evidently challenging. For a player who has already battled ANFA’s indifference, the waiting continues (Kathmandu Post, Friends of Football NZ).Nepal’s Children Demand Change Ahead of PollsDays before Nepal voted, 125 children from six provinces presented their own manifesto to political parties — a quiet but powerful intervention organised by Save the Children. Their demands cut to the heart of Nepal’s unfinished social agenda: end child marriage (33% of women aged 20–24 were married before 18), guarantee free and inclusive education, provide accessible mental health services for children traumatised by the Gen Z protests that killed at least 50 people including three children, and act on air pollution. With over 900,000 first-time voters registering for this election, many of them just aged out of childhood themselves, the children’s manifesto is a reminder that the generation behind Gen Z is watching too — and they have their own demands for the government RSP is about to form.In Brief: A few lighter notes to close out an extraordinary week.* CWC League 2 tri-series postponed — Nepal’s cricket showdown against UAE and Oman, set for March 10, was shelved indefinitely after Gulf airspace closures prevented the visiting teams from travelling.* Holi at Basantapur brought its usual explosion of colour to Kathmandu, but this year’s celebrations were hemmed in by election code restrictions — no mass music events, no party-branded T-shirts, and 68 extra checkpoints to make sure.* Nepal at ITB Berlin — the country’s tourism pavilion went ahead at the world’s biggest tourism fair despite the NTB CEO being stranded in Doha, a metaphor for the resilience and improvisation that defined this entire week.Until next week, stay connected! — The Nepali Diaspora Digest TeamLet’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Six Days Out: A Rapper, A Rebel & A Veteran Walk Into an Election 28.02.2026 15min
    Namaste, diaspora family! We are now less than a week away from what might be the most consequential election in Nepal’s recent history. On March 5, nearly 19 million voters will decide between a former rapper, the fresh face of Nepal’s oldest party, and a communist veteran determined to reclaim power. Away from the campaign trail, Nepal’s economy continues its strange paradox of record-breaking remittances alongside sluggish growth — and in one of the week’s most heartwarming stories, Nepal rallied behind its women’s football captain when the system let her down. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationNRNA World Conference Locked In for March 14–16 in KathmanduJust nine days after the election, thousands of Non-Resident Nepalis will converge on Kathmandu for the 12th NRNA World Conference. A high-level organising committee has been formed under Foreign Minister Balananda Sharma, with the theme “Our Unity, the Foundation for Prosperity.” The three-day programme will tackle the Non-Resident Nepali Act, joint investment opportunities, tourism and health sector collaboration, and — notably — the participation of women, youth, and second-generation NRNs. The government has also proposed conducting NRNA leadership elections via an online system for the first time, a move that could significantly widen participation for diaspora members who can’t travel to Nepal. With a new government likely being formed in the same week, the timing couldn’t be more politically charged — or more important for shaping diaspora policy under whatever administration emerges (OnlineKhabar).US Immigration Squeeze Tightens: Smuggling Ring, Visa Pause & Document FraudIt’s been a grim stretch for Nepalis navigating the US immigration system. Two Nepali nationals were charged in a $7 million scheme to smuggle more than 250 migrants into the United States, while separately, seven were arrested for forging educational documents to obtain green cards through the Diversity Visa lottery (NepYork). Meanwhile, the March 2026 US Visa Bulletin confirms Nepal remains among 75 countries facing an ongoing suspension of immigrant visa processing — family-based green cards are stable on paper but effectively inaccessible (NepYork). These cases underscore a painful pattern: as legal pathways narrow, desperation drives people toward increasingly risky alternatives.In Brief:* Deportation numbers keep climbing — 585 Nepalis have now been deported since Trump’s second term began, with January 2026 recording a record 101 deportees in a single month. Most had entered via the Mexico border after paying smugglers $60,000–$75,000 each (Kathmandu Post).* UK work visas drop 19% — work visas issued to foreign nationals in the UK fell to 168,000 by December 2025 under stricter immigration policies — a trend likely to affect Nepali workers seeking opportunities in Britain (Nepal News).* British Gorkhali Cricket League gets new backing — Bridge International became the main sponsor of the BGCL in the UK, the only 40-over format league for the Nepali diaspora in Britain, now entering its sixth season (Nepal News).🏛️ Politics & GovernanceSix Days to Go: Balen, Thapa & Oli in Nepal’s Most Watched ElectionNepal’s March 5 parliamentary election — the first since the Gen Z protests toppled KP Sharma Oli’s government last September — is shaping up to be a genuine three-way race. Over 3,400 candidates are contesting 275 seats, with more than 1,000 under the age of 40. The marquee showdown is in Jhapa-5, where Balendra “Balen” Shah, 35, the rapper-turned-Kathmandu-mayor who resigned to run for parliament, is challenging Oli directly in the veteran’s traditional stronghold. Balen represents the Rastriya Swatantra Party, which came fourth in 2022 but has since surged in popularity. Meanwhile, Gagan Thapa, 49, mounted a rebellion within the Nepali Congress to secure the party presidency and is now its PM candidate — offering a generational refresh within Nepal’s oldest democratic party. Oli’s CPN-UML is banking on a stability message: steady policies, economic focus, no more chaos. With 18.9 million registered voters and 339,000 security personnel deployed, this is the biggest democratic exercise Nepal has seen in years (Washington Post).The Machine Behind March 5: Bans, Ballots & All-Female Polling CentresThe sheer logistics of Nepal’s election are staggering — and this week, the machinery went live. Ballot papers and materials have been delivered to all 75 districts, with 221,000 election staff deployed across 23,112 polling centres. A nationwide alcohol ban kicked in Friday midnight and won’t lift until results are declared; all private vehicles will be suspended from March 4 midnight through election day. In a quiet but significant move, polling centres in Kavrepalanchok and Lamjung will be managed entirely by female staff — 38 women appointed as polling officers in Syangja alone. Meanwhile, police arrested 42 people across the country for attempting to boycott the election, and the government accepted a $4 million cash grant from China to help fund the exercise — a decision that raised eyebrows given the geopolitical sensitivities of accepting election funding from a neighbouring power (Nepal News).In Brief:* Campaign tensions bubble — UML supporters burned rival election flags, and a group of UML activists were reported to have assaulted schoolchildren for ringing a bell — the RSP’s election symbol — as a rally passed. Police said they were “verifying” the incident (Farsight Nepal).* Cabinet forms Gen Z Council — the government announced the creation of a formal Gen Z Council, a direct response to the youth uprising that triggered this election (Nepal News).* The establishment fights back — a Foreign Policy analysis warns that Nepal’s three dominant parties are consolidating to counter newcomers, with analyst J.B. Biswokarma noting: “These leaders have been in power 30 years and now worry that’s being challenged.”💸 Economy & DevelopmentIMF Signs Off on Final $43.2 Million Tranche — But Flags RisksAn IMF team led by Sarwat Jahan wrapped up a two-week mission in Kathmandu on February 20, reaching staff-level agreement on the seventh and final review under Nepal’s Extended Credit Facility. Once the Executive Board approves, Nepal will receive approximately $43.2 million, bringing the programme total to $384.4 million. But the fine print is sobering: growth for FY2025/26 is pegged at just 3–3.5%, well below potential, with protest-related damages and political uncertainty weighing heavily. Non-performing loans have risen to 5.4% and may climb further after the ongoing Loan Portfolio Review. The IMF flagged the need for Nepal Rastra Bank Act amendments to be submitted to parliament as essential for completing the programme (myRepublica).Record Remittances, Record Reserves — But Where’s the Growth?Nepal’s economic paradox deepened this week. Remittance inflows hit Rs 1.62 trillion in the first six months of FY2025/26 — a staggering 39.1% increase year-on-year. Foreign exchange reserves surged to a record $22.47 billion, covering 21.4 months of merchandise imports. But rather than signalling economic strength, economists point out that the swelling reserves reflect more Nepalis leaving for work abroad while domestic consumption and investment remain flat. Inflation sits at 1.63% — a two-decade low that speaks more to weak demand than price stability. Banking deposits grew Rs 417 billion, but private credit increased only Rs 197 billion. The money is coming in; it’s just not going anywhere productive (Kathmandu Post).In Brief:* NRB opens the credit taps — Nepal Rastra Bank’s midterm monetary policy review adds tourism, IT, and export-oriented industries to the preferential credit framework, aiming to push lending toward productive sectors (Nepal News).* Chitwan tourism takes an election hit — hotel occupancy in Sauraha has dropped from 80% to 50% during what should be peak season, with business owners blaming election uncertainty for deterring international travellers (Nepal News).* EV imports surge — Nepal brought in 5,894 electric vehicles worth Rs 13.8 billion in the first seven months of FY2025/26, as the country pushes toward its goal of 90% EV private vehicle sales by 2030 (Nepal News).⭐ Social & CulturalNepal Rallies Behind Samba: Rs 14 Million Raised in 24 HoursWhen Nepal’s women’s football captain Sabitra Bhandari “Samba” tore her ACL graft during her Wellington Phoenix debut in January, she turned to the All Nepal Football Association for help. ANFA stepped back. So on February 24, Samba launched a public fundraiser — and Nepal responded. Within 24 hours, supporters raised Rs 14 million domestically and NZ$52,000 through international platforms, smashing her NZ$135,000 target for surgery at Qatar’s Aspetar Orthopaedic Hospital. “After even ANFA, which I considered my guardian, stepped back, it is now you supporters who are by my side,” she wrote. Wellington Phoenix contributed their full insurance payout, and the Nepali Congress provided Rs 500,000. The outpouring was extraordinary — but the episode has rightly drawn criticism of ANFA for abandoning its biggest women’s football star when she needed them most (Friends of Football NZ).2,300 Nepalis Leave for Work Every Day — And the Youth Want ChangeA striking Foreign Policy deep dive published this week put a number on Nepal’s brain drain that’s hard to ignore: approximately 2,300 Nepalis leave the country for foreign work every single day, youth unemployment sits at 20.8%, and Nepal ranks 109 of 182 countries on the Corruption Perceptions Index. Nearly 4 million voters aged 18–24 will cast ballots for the first time on March 5 — many of them radicalised by the September protests that killed 77 people. Gen Z Front activist Rakshya Bam captured the mood: “New parties listen to critics and correct course, unlike old guards.” Whether that idealism survives contact with Nepal’s political establishment is the question hanging over March 5 — and for the millions of young Nepalis watching from abroad, the answer will determine whether they ever come home (Foreign Policy).In Brief:* Women’s cricket returns empty-handed — Nepal’s women’s team came home from the Asia Cup Rising Stars in Thailand without a win, despite half-centuries from captain Puja Mahato and Samjhana Khadka. Between Samba’s ANFA abandonment and this, it’s been a tough stretch that highlights how much more investment women’s sport in Nepal needs (Nepal News).* Kathmandu maps 509 ancient place names — Kathmandu Metropolitan City identified 509 historic location names across 10 wards and plans to install information boards, a quiet effort to preserve heritage amid rapid urbanisation (Nepal News).* Tour de Thakurdwara rolls out — over 250 cyclists from Nepal and India took part in the 2026 cycling festival organised by Nepalgunj Cycling Club, promoting tourism, healthy lifestyles, and environmental conservation (Nepal News).Until next week, stay connected! — The Nepali Diaspora Digest TeamLet’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net
  • Forged Stamps, Fake Promises & One Real Fight in Jhapa 21.02.2026 20min
    Namaste, diaspora family! With just thirteen days to go before Nepal’s historic March 5 election, this week delivered drama on every front. The generational showdown between Balen Shah and KP Sharma Oli in Jhapa-5 is now the race everyone is watching — including Nepalis calling home from abroad. Meanwhile, a US court dealt a blow to over 7,000 Nepali TPS holders, hundreds of our community in Portugal face a heartbreaking legal crisis, and our cricketers finally got the win they deserved — beating Scotland to end a 12-year World Cup drought. It’s been a big week. Let’s get into it.🌍 Diaspora & GlobalisationUS Court Greenlights TPS Termination — 7,000+ Nepalis Face Deportation Risk — Kathmandu Post — A Ninth Circuit panel cleared the Trump administration to end Temporary Protected Status for Nepali nationals, putting over 7,000 TPS holders at deportation risk. Combined with 553 deportations in 2025 and a planned charter flight, this is a seismic shift for the US Nepali community that demands urgent awareness.From Forged Stamps to a New Embassy: Nepal’s Portugal Moment — Kathmandu Post (fraud) / Kathmandu Post (embassy) — This week handed Nepal’s Portugal community both a crisis and a cause for hope in the same breath. Between 1,250 and 2,000 Nepali workers now face deportation and possible imprisonment after Portugal’s immigration agency discovered forged authentication stamps on police clearance certificates — forgeries that emerged during a 10-month gap when consular services were simply unavailable. On the very same day the story broke, Nepal formally inaugurated its embassy chancery in Lisbon, with Foreign Secretary Amrit Bahadur Rai and Portugal’s Secretary of State jointly presiding. For the estimated 40,000+ Nepalis in Portugal, the timing is bittersweet: a proper embassy at last, but thousands already caught in a trap that a functioning consulate might have prevented.Briefs:* Nine Nepali Workers Killed in Meghalaya Illegal Coal Mine Explosion — India Today NE* “Nepal’s Voters Are Migrating” — Workers Leave for the Gulf Just as Election Nears — Nepali Times* First-Person: NRN Citizenship Process Still “Convoluted” Despite Legal Provisions — Nepali Times🏛️ Politics & GovernanceThe Defining Showdown: Balen Shah (35) vs. KP Sharma Oli (73) in Jhapa-5 — AFP / Japan Times — Rapper-turned-mayor Balendra “Balen” Shah resigned his Kathmandu mayoralty to challenge former PM Oli on his home turf of Jhapa-5, a seat Oli has held since 1991. This race has become the symbolic fulcrum of the entire election — a direct generational clash between the old political order and the Gen Z-driven reset, with diaspora communities passionately engaged from abroad.Official Campaign Launches with 18.9 Million Voters and 3,400+ Candidates — Dhaka Tribune — The Election Commission’s formal campaign period opened February 16, with voting set for March 5. Some 837,000 newly registered youth voters join the rolls, and 30% of candidates are under 40. No overseas or out-of-constituency voting was implemented, leaving millions of migrant workers disenfranchised once again.Briefs:* Ex-King Gyanendra Calls for Election Postponement After Mass Airport Rally — Kathmandu Post* RSP Manifesto Promises Dual Citizenship, Directly Elected Executive, Rupee Peg Review — myRepublica* Nepali Congress Unveils “Pratigya Patra” Manifesto in Janakpur Under New Leader Gagan Thapa — Kathmandu Post* RPP Manifesto Calls for Restoring Monarchy and Scrapping Federal Provinces — myRepublica💸 Economy & DevelopmentSix Global Lenders Unite for Nepal’s Largest-Ever Deal: $2.32 Billion Dudhkoshi Hydropower Project — Kathmandu Post — ADB, World Bank, AIIB, EIB, OFID, and SFD have jointly committed $2.32 billion to build the 670MW Dudhkoshi Storage Hydroelectric Project — Nepal’s largest-ever infrastructure deal. The project will feature a 220-metre dam and 13.3km tunnel, with financial close targeted for September 2026, marking a historic vote of confidence in Nepal’s energy future.Nepal Removes FDI Cap on Automatic Approval Route, Opening Door to Unlimited Investment — Rising Nepal Daily — The government scrapped the Rs 500 million ceiling on foreign direct investment through the automatic online route, allowing unlimited investment across 102 business areas. FDI commitments in the first seven months of FY2025/26 already surged 50% year-on-year to Rs 40.28 billion, dominated by the ICT sector — directly relevant to NRN investors looking to enter Nepal’s market.Briefs:* IMF Projects Nepal Growth at Just 3–3.5%, Completes Seventh ECF Review — Mirage News* Forex Reserves Hit Record $22.47 Billion as Remittances Surge 39% to $7.5 Billion — Rising Nepal Daily* Gen Z Protest Damage Assessed at Rs 84 Billion; Ministry Seeks NRN Contributions to Rebuild — Khabarhub⭐ Social & CulturalNepal Beat Scotland for First T20 World Cup Win in 12 Years — Airee Seals Historic Redemption — Kathmandu Post — Dipendra Singh Airee’s unbeaten 50 off 23 balls led Nepal to a 7-wicket victory over Scotland on February 17, ending a 12-year T20 World Cup win drought. After the heartbreak of losing to England by just 4 runs and being stunned by Italy, the Scotland win gave the diaspora a moment of pure joy — and prompted India’s R. Ashwin to publicly call for Test nations to offer Nepal bilateral series.Over a Million Devotees Flood Pashupatinath for Maha Shivaratri — myRepublica — Maha Shivaratri on February 15 drew over one million devotees to Pashupatinath Temple, with all four gates opening at 2AM and approximately 4,000 sadhus — including naga sadhus from India — gathering for the night-long rituals. February 15 also marked Nepal’s 263rd Army Day. For the diaspora, Shivaratri is one of the most emotionally resonant festivals of the year, connecting communities abroad to family traditions of fasting and devotion.Briefs:* “Underdogs to Contenders” — Nepal Cricket Now Seeks Tangible Backing After World Cup Run — Kathmandu Post* US Indo-Pacific Commander Visits Nepal, Signals Continued Strategic Engagement — Khabarhub* China’s Xi Tells Nepal He Won’t Take Sides in Lipulekh Border Dispute with India — Nepal NewsUntil next week, stay connected! — The Nepali Diaspora Digest TeamLet’s connectEnjoying this issue? 📩 Share it with a friend & let’s keep Nepalis worldwide in the loop! Got thoughts? Hit reply—we’re all ears! Or let us know what you think via our Feedback form or follow us on Facebook | LinkedInP.S. Got a story or issue you’d like us to cover next week? Drop us a reply — we’re building this space together.About Nepali Diaspora Digest:The Nepali Diaspora Digest connects the global Nepali community with curated news, insights, and stories that matter most. Join us as we celebrate and explore the diverse voices and achievements of Nepalis worldwide.Partner shout outbelayat.uk: helping Nepalis connect in the UK on jobs, housing, events and finding local Nepali owned businesses This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nepalidiaspora.net

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