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Nepal
This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

Nepal to apologise to ‘untouchable’ Dalits for first time

Nepal has banned caste discrimination, yet many Dalits still live in poverty. Can a formal state apology inspire change?

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A Dalit woman sits with a child in Humla district, in Nepal’s remote northwest. Photo: AFP
Bibek Bhandari

As a child, Saraswati Nepali was not allowed to drink from the same water jar as her classmates.

When she was thirsty, she had to walk the 20 minutes home and back: the cost of being born a Dalit in a society that deemed her “untouchable”.

Now, Nepal’s new government says it is finally ready to acknowledge that injustice.
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Prime Minister Balendra Shah’s administration announced on Sunday that the state would, for the first time, offer a formal apology to the Dalit community.
Balendra Shah is sworn in as Nepal’s prime minister during a ceremony in Kathmandu on Friday. Photo: Xinhua
Balendra Shah is sworn in as Nepal’s prime minister during a ceremony in Kathmandu on Friday. Photo: Xinhua

It also pledged to roll out a reform programme within two weeks aimed at laying the groundwork for inclusive rehabilitation, historical reconciliation and social justice as part of the government’s 100-day governance overhaul action plan.

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