Nepal Panel to Probe Property, Assets of Politicians and Officials

KATHMANDU, April 16 (Reuters) – ⁠Nepal’s ⁠new government, led by ⁠rapper-turned politician Balendra Shah, has set up a ​panel to investigate the property and assets of past and ‌present politicians and officials, ‌a move aimed at controlling corruption in the Himalayan ⁠nation.

Shah, ⁠35, became prime minister after his Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) ​scored a sweeping victory in the March 5 parliamentary election – the country’s first vote after the anti-graft ‘Gen Z” protests last September.

During ​his three-year stint as mayor of Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital city, ⁠Shah ⁠gained popularity for his ⁠fight ​against corruption and reformist credentials.

Sasmit Pokhrel, a cabinet spokesperson, said the ​five-member panel would ⁠be headed by Rajendra Kumar Bhandari, a retired Supreme Court judge.

“An impartial investigation will be carried out on the basis of evidence based on legal standards … Its report ⁠and recommendations will be implemented by concerned agencies of the ⁠government,” Pokhrel told reporters after a cabinet meeting late on Wednesday without mentioning the time frame given to the panel to complete work.

The probe is expected to cover hundreds of politicians and officials who held public offices after the popular movement that led to the abolition of the 239-year-old monarchy in 2008, analysts ⁠said.

The three-year-old RSP had made corruption control one of its major promises during the election and scored a comfortable victory over the parties that had dominated ​politics in the country for decadessuffered.

(Reporting by Gopal ​Sharma; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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