The underappreciated achievements of Nepali satire.

Basu Kshitij: CPN (Maoists), Nepali Congress and CPN (UML), and their respective slogans - people’s republic, democratic socialism and ‘people’s multi-party democracy’
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Abin Shrestha: A 238 year-old monarchy is checkmated by the April 2006 People’s Movement

Abin Shrestha: Post-election makeover

Vatsayan: Army man occupies editor’s chair: Nepal’s newsrooms under King Gyanendra’s censorship regime following his 1 February 2005 coup

Rajesh KC: Blessings for the times. “May you
vote soon, may you escape extortion and looting, may the government rescue you if kidnapped, may you get petrol”

Rajesh KC: Alternate fuel provided by Kathmandu’s street protests

Vatsayan: Schools countrywide were occupied by the armed forces or the Maoists during the insurgency

Vatsayan: Leaders play in the ‘National Cooperative Band’ leaving the Nepali citizen in the lurch

Rabin Sayami: The hammer is replaced by an axe and two khukuris, making the acronym for the CPN (Maoist)’s Young Communist League
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On 2 July 2009, the Delhi High Court delivered a landmark judgement reading down the archaic colonial era Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, thus decriminalising private same-sex relations between consenting adults. The reverberations across Southasia, make relevant a revisiting of Himal’s March 2008 issue: 'Circles of sexuality: the push for privilege, the danger of definition'. Read up on the legal status of homosexuality in the region and share in stories of sexuality, alternative identities and queer struggles for visibility and the cost of privacy. Also, find out how the yaysayers and the naysayers are reacting to the judgement.
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