I chose to write about Nepal because I want to understand its history on a deeper level and contextualize an upcoming visit to Nepal later this year. I will be traveling to Kathmandu and Pokhara along with my wife, an American who lived in Nepal with her family between 1998 and 2004. I have heard my wife Cara and her friends refer to Nepal as an “undeveloping nation,” meaning that Nepal’s economy and standard of living are getting worse, not better. I have spent time in underdeveloped countries
The political condition of Nepal has always been unstable from a very long time. Regardless the end of hereditary and autocratic Rana regime, the country's political condition neither improved nor remained static. During the period of the then King Mahendra, constitutional provision was violated and the election was dismissed for almost a decade and this resulted into a power struggle between the King and the political parties. During that extent of time, the then King Mahendra declared a new constitution
The country of Nepal is located in Asia, right below China and over India. The size of the country is 56,827 miles squared. As of 2016, the population of Nepal is 28,978,100. The capital city of Nepal is Kathmandu. It is the largest city in the country and the most populated as it holds one twelfth of the country’s population. Kathmandu has a rich history which has lasted more than two thousand years. Kathmandu has a lot of art that can be seen anywhere from parks to street corners. The art
neighbours, except Bhutan, on the cross-border water issues. Given an atmosphere of mistrust, an upper riparian India has serious issues to resolve with lower riparian Pakistan and Bangladesh and, despite being lower riparian, with the upper riparian Nepal. This, however, does not mean that India is solely responsible for certain deadlocks, even though its share of responsibility may be larger than other countries which have their own physical limitations and political apprehensions. As elsewhere