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Balen govt to unveil 100 days achievement on Saturday

Kalopati

11 hours ago

Kathmandu. KATHMANDU — Prime Minister Balen Shah’s government is set to unveil the details of the government’s achievements on Saturday on the occasion of the completion of 100 days in office.

According to the Prime Minister’s Secretariat, the list of achievements of the government will be made public on July 5, which marks the completion of 100 days of the formation of the government. The timing of the program is yet to be finalized.

According to PM’s press and research expert Deepa Dahal, preparations are underway to present the overall details of the works carried out by the government in the last 100 days.

The government was formed under the leadership of Balen Shah on March 13 following the elections held after the Jenji movement. With the formation of the government, good governance, transparency and administrative reform were the main priorities and an action plan to be carried out within a hundred days was made public.

The government is preparing to include the formation of a commission to investigate the assets of high-ranking officials who have assumed power since 1992, scrapping 1,594 political appointments, dissolving the employees trade unions and free student union (FSU) of universities, resolving the problems related to the chief administrative officer of the local level, managing the employees with access to Singha Durbar and Kathmandu and cutting off non-legal transport facilities. g.

Similarly, initiatives to resolve cooperative problems, efforts to return government and public land, plan to reduce the number of ministries, reduction of unnecessary posts, improvement in service delivery, efforts to simplify administrative process, homework for amendment of more than hundred laws, intensification of investigation against corruption and financial crimes and implementation of online system for transfer of employees for the first time will also be presented as achievements.

However, some of the government’s decisions and steps have also been criticized. The government has been criticized for its efforts to evict landless squatters without providing an alternative, for exerting pressure on industrialists and businessmen without adequate evidence, for filing cases against opposition leaders and cadres on the basis of political vendetta, for increasing taxes in the education sector, for not being effective in controlling inflation, and for failing to bring concrete relief programmes for the working class.

 

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