Sunday, April 12th, 2026

Constitution does not give residual power to PM: Senior advocate Shakya



KATHMANDU: Senior advocate Purnaman Shakya, who was selected as the amicus curiae, said that Nepal’s Constitution does not give any residual rights to anyone, including the Prime Minister.

Giving his opinion in the Supreme Court’s Constitutional Bench hearing the issue of dissolution of the House of Representatives, Shakya said that the constitution of Nepal does not envision a government with unlimited powers.

Shakya asked whether the prime minister has residual powers citing that Nepal was suffering from the residual rights of the king in the past. He argued that the prime minister did not have the right to exercise the rights that have not been provisioned by the constitution.

Publish Date : 18 February 2021 17:03 PM

Customs evasion goods worth over Rs 2.1 million seized in Baitadi

BAITADI: Illegal goods worth over Rs 2.1 million have been

One worker dies, another injured as brick kiln wall collapses in Dang

DANG: A construction worker died after a wall of a

NC to elect Parliamentary Party leader on April 17

KATHMANDU: The Nepali Congress (NC) is set to elect the

Youth arrested with 19 kg of marijuana

SIRAHA: A youth has been arrested with 19 kilograms of

Minister Chaudhary stresses biodiversity conservation

KATHMANDU: Minister for Forest and Environment Gita Chaudhary has underscored