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Nepal
AsiaSouth Asia

Nepal goes to the polls for historic vote, hoping to end years of political turbulence

Voting was temporarily suspended in three polling centres after an explosive device was found at one and acid was sprinkled on ballot boxes at two others

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A Nepali voter shows her marked finger after casting a ballot at a polling station. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Millions of Nepalis headed to the polls on Sunday for a historic election billed as a turning point for the impoverished Himalayan nation, hoping to end the ruinous instability that has plagued the country since the end of a bloody civil war a decade ago.

The two-phase elections for national and provincial parliaments are the first under a new post-war constitution born out of a peace deal that ended the 10-year Maoist insurgency in 2006 and set the country on a path from monarchy to democracy.

It took nine years after the end of the conflict for the new charter to be agreed as a series of brittle coalition governments bickered over the country’s future as a federal democratic state.

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Many hope that the elections, which will establish the country’s first provincial assemblies, will bring an end to political turbulence and limit the impact of the horse-trading in Kathmandu on much needed development in the rest of the country.

Polling stations in Chautara, a town east of Kathmandu, were still busy mid afternoon with lines of voters waiting in the bright sun to cast their ballots.

It is hard to hope for change, but I am still voting
Keshab Nath Upadhayay, voter

“It is hard to hope for change, but I am still voting,” said 78-year-old Keshab Nath Upadhayay as he leaned heavily on a walking stick.

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