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Protesters and police clash after Nepal rejects calls to revert back to a Hindu state

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Nepalese police stop Hindu activists as they try to break through a cordoned-off area near parliament during a protest demanding Nepal be declared a Hindu state in Kathmandu. Photo: AFP

Nepal’s Constituent Assembly rejected calls to revert the Himalayan nation back to a Hindu state during voting Monday on a draft of the country’s long-delayed new constitution, sparking violent protests.

Nepal was a Hindu nation for centuries when kings ruled, but has been a secular state since the monarchy was abolished in 2006.

More than two-thirds of members of the assembly, which began voting on the constitution draft on Sunday, voted against making Nepal a Hindu state again. The proposal needed the support of two-thirds of the members to be adopted.

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The proposal was pushed by the Rastirya Prajatantra Party Nepal, or National Democratic Party Nepal, which also wants the country to be a monarchy.

Nepalese police use a water cannon to disperse Hindu activists. Photo: AFP
Nepalese police use a water cannon to disperse Hindu activists. Photo: AFP
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Many people in Nepal, which has a Hindu majority, believe the kings were a reincarnation of the Hindu god Vishnu.

Following Monday’s vote, hundreds of Hindu protesters clashed outside the assembly hall with police, who fired water cannons and beat them with bamboo batons.

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