Friday, March 20th, 2026

Press Council urges media to stay away from disinformation on candidates



KATHMANDU: The Press Council Nepal has urged all media and journalists to stay away from disinformation, blames, misleading information and character assassination of political parties and election candidates.

“Media can get fake news, disinformation and hate speech against political parties and poll candidates. They should always be aware and cautious not to give space for such stuffs or not to side with or go against political parties and election candidates,” according to a statement issued by the Council’s senior administrative officer and spokesperson Dipak Khanal in the context of the November 20 elections.

The Council appeals to all media, journalists, institutions working on media and social site users to follow the journalist code of conduct and their professional ethics, and avoid posting or disseminating any status or news reports that would seek votes for a particular party or a candidate contesting in the polls and assassinate their character, reads the statement.

The Council further urged the people to file complaints about such activities at the Council. It further said it had been closely observing whether or not the journalist code of conduct was being implemented, said Khanal.

Publish Date : 15 October 2022 07:09 AM

RSP begins discussions on potential Cabinet members

KATHMANDU: The Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) has begun internal discussions

Gold price drops Rs 7,800 per tola, falls below Rs 300,000

KATHMANDU: The price of gold in the domestic market fell

Final classification of Gen-Z protest injured set for April 3

KATHMANDU: The District Administration Office, Kathmandu, has issued a final

Why Iran is attacking Gulf energy infrastructure

Iran targeted energy facilities across West Asia on March 18,

RSP preparing to elect Balen Shah as parliamentary party leader ahead of PM swearing-in

KATHMANDU: The Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) is preparing to elect