Nepal Elections: Who is contesting and what is at stake?

Nepal prepares for national elections on March 5. Nearly 19 million voters will choose a new assembly. Key issues include corruption and job creation. Foreign relations with India and China are also important. Prominent contenders for prime minist...

AP
Nepal Election: Supporters of the Communist Party of Nepal
Nepal will hold a national election next month, ​its first since deadly youth-led anti-graft ​protests toppled the government of then-Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli ​in September.

As the Himalayan nation prepares for the March 5 polls, here is a look at the key contenders, and what is at stake.

THE VOTERS


Nearly 19 million of Nepal's 30 million people ‌are eligible to ⁠vote ⁠in the March 5 election for the 275-member assembly.

About one million of the voters - most of them ​youth - were added after last year's protests, which killed 77 people and injured more than ​2,000.

While direct contests will decide 165 seats, which means the person who gets the most votes will win, the rest will be filled through proportional representation, where seats ​are allocated to parties in proportion to their vote ⁠share.
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Election authorities ‌say 65 political parties are in the fray.

ISSUES AT STAKE

Apart ​from corruption, job ​creation is among the main issues, analysts say, with about ⁠a fifth of the population living in poverty, and high ​youth unemployment.

Ties with India and China, which border Nepal and ​are among its major trade partners, will also be a factor in the election as the landlocked nation negotiates a balance between the Asian powers.
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While India accounts for two-thirds of Nepal's international trade, China accounts for 14% and has also lent the country - among the world's poorest - more than $130 million, according to the World ‌Bank.

KEY CONTENDERS
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Rapper-turned-politician and former Kathmandu mayor Balendra Shah, 35, of the centrist Rastriya Swatantra Party is among the frontrunners for prime minister.

Facing ​him in the ​Jhapa 5 constituency ⁠is four-time prime minister Oli, 74, of the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist), vying for the top post again but facing an uphill battle to win back young voters ​who ousted him barely six months ago.

Other contenders include the centrist Nepali Congress party's 49-year-old Gagan Thapa and three-time prime minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, 71, who now leads the Nepali Communist Party.

Oli has been a liberal communist since the 1990s while Dahal led a bloody Maoist insurgency for a decade before joining mainstream politics in 2006.
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