Court upholds press freedom

The Patan high court has issued an interim order instructing the government not to arrest journalist Dil Bhushan Pathak. The court had previously issued a short-term interim order, which has now been extended following a hearing from both parties. This means that the police cannot arrest Pathak until the final verdict is delivered in the case he has filed.

In another development, the Kathmandu district court has overturned an earlier order that had directed the removal of a news article from Bizmandu.com and Nepal Khabar. The decision came from a bench led by Judge Shyambihari Maurya, which rejected a petition for a restraining order filed by Santosh Narayan Shrestha, chairperson of the Securities Board of Nepal. With the petition dismissed, a previous order issued by Judge Pitambar Sharma requiring the removal of the news article has also been automatically annulled.

Alarming fertility gap in Nepal

Millions of people worldwide, including in Nepal, are unable to have the number of children they desire—not due to a lack of interest in parenthood, but because of growing economic and social constraints, according to the UNFPA’s 2025 State of World Population report titled “The Real Fertility Crisis: The Pursuit of Reproductive Agency in a Changing World.”

Based on data from 14 countries, including Nepal, the report finds that one in five people globally are not having the number of children they want. The reasons include high living costs, job insecurity, unaffordable housing and childcare, lack of reproductive health services, and concerns over global crises such as climate change and conflict.

In Nepal, despite a preference for two or more children, actual fertility has declined to two children per woman across all demographics. Provinces such as Bagmati and Gandaki, which are more urbanized, show a significant mismatch between desired and actual family size due to economic and social pressures. Labor migration, lack of affordable childcare, and gender norms also contribute to this gap. “Some people are prevented from parenthood while others are forced into it,” said Won Young Hong, UNFPA Representative in Nepal. “This is not about overpopulation or declining fertility—it’s about creating an enabling environment for reproductive choices.”

Globally, over 50 percent of survey respondents pointed to economic issues as key barriers to having children. In Nepal, urbanization, rising costs, and the absence of flexible work policies are making parenthood less feasible, especially for young couples. The report also notes a significant number of people over 50 saying they didn’t achieve their desired family size, and that in regions like Madhesh, many report having more children than planned—both signs of limited reproductive agency.

UNFPA identifies gender inequality as a core issue. In Nepal, caregiving duties fall mostly on women, while men often face stigma for playing nurturing roles. Lack of gender-friendly policies, such as parental leave and flexible work, perpetuate unequal parenting responsibilities.

“This is not just a women’s issue,” the report stresses. It highlights how young men, especially those with less education or economic security, are increasingly unpartnered and socially isolated, contributing to a growing global crisis of loneliness and fractured family structures.

Hanaa Singer-Hamdy, UN Resident Coordinator in Nepal, urged a shift from fear over fertility rates to empowering individual choice. “People need economic security and rights-based policies—not coercive measures,” she said.

Health Ministry Secretary Dilliram Sharma emphasized that Nepal’s focus should be on inclusive development through informed reproductive choices. National Planning Commission member Prof. Dr RP Bichha added that population policies should prioritize quality of life and youth productivity.

The report warns against coercive measures like fertility targets and cash incentives, advocating instead for policies that expand access to quality reproductive health services, paid parental leave, affordable childcare, and comprehensive sexuality education. As Nepal faces the prospect of one in five people being over 60 by 2071, UNFPA urges investments in gender-equal, choice-driven policies to secure its demographic future.

Court orders Rs 8m bail in cooperative fraud case

The Nawalparasi District Court has granted bail totaling Rs 8m to 12 officials of Palhi Multipurpose Cooperative Society in an embezzlement case. The accused include the cooperative’s chairperson, board members, and accounting staff allegedly involved in misappropriating savers’ funds.

The orders were issued on different dates by three separate benches of judges Keshav Prasad Adhikari, Hari Prasad Sharma, and Ramananda Prasad Adhikari, said Janaki Raman Yadav, the court registrar. 

Cooperative Chairperson Ramkishore Teli was ordered to post the bail amount of Rs 1.5m, while Vice-chairperson Nathu Mali and accounts coordinator Santaram Prasad Yadav were each directed to pay Rs 1m. Other board members including Suresh Prasad Chaudhary, Birendra Kumar Yadav, Ramsewak Chaudhary, Rabindra Pasi, Pramod Yadav, and Sugriva Tiwari were granted bail at Rs 500,000 each. Accounts committee members Janaki Devi Kurmi and Izhar Dhuniya, along with management member Ramanand Yadav, were ordered to pay Rs 500,000 each. 

Most of the accused have paid their bail in cash, while some submitted collateral. Meanwhile, three other accused, Kamala Devi Kahar and Sanjay Kurmi, and Munlal Yadav, remain wanted by authorities.

The scandal came to light when 1,041 depositors, mostly local farmers and laborers, were unable to withdraw their savings from the 1,376-member cooperative. The crisis emerged after years of delayed board elections and unaudited financial records, prompting an investigation that uncovered Rs 8.58m in missing funds. A formal case was filed on Feb 23. The court said that refunds to depositors will only be processed after establishing guilt through due process.

Gwarko Flyover to start from Friday

The Gwarko Overpass is planned to operate officially from Friday where Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli is scheduled to inaugurate the fly over. The Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport has informed that vehicles will be operated from the overpass with the inauguration. Last Saturday, the leadership of the Road Department, including Minister for Physical Infrastructure and Transport Devendra Dahal, had inspected the site and directed it to prepare for vehicle operation. Pradeep Bhandari, Senior Divisional Engineer of the Road Department, Quality, Research and Development Center, informed that preparations have been made for vehicle operation with the completion of the main structure of the overpass. The construction of the overpass was started in 2021.

Although the project was scheduled to be completed by Feb 2024, the deadline was extended several times. Bhandari informed that after the construction of the main structure, lane separators, lining, and traffic lights were completed, the vehicle operation is now in a state of readiness, Bhandari said. After the operation of this overpass, vehicles will not have to wait long at Gwarko and will be able to move around continuously.

The government had started the construction of an overpass at Gwarko Chowk to manage the heavy traffic on the Kathmandu Valley Ring Road. The first overpass was built at Gwarko Chowk among the three congested areas on the expanded road section from Koteshwor to Kalanki under the Ring Road Expansion Project. The overpass, which is 6 meters high and 455 meters long, has a ground clearance of 6 meters and a ramp of 180 meters on the right and 110 meters on the left for vehicles to board.

On 24 Feb 2022, Ashish-Samanantar Religare JV won the overpass contract for 176.88m through a national level competition. After it was not completed by the initial deadline, it was extended for two times. As per the said agreement, the 40-meter reconstruction of the overpass was postponed for another month. He said that the target of completing the Gwarko overpass by April 2025 was set, but the construction was postponed for another month due to rain. The overpass under construction at Gwarko Chowk in Lalitpur has been taken forward under the Engineering-Procurement and Construction (EPC) model. Under this model, there is a provision that the contractor company has to pay compensation if the construction is not completed within the specified period. The Road Department, Quality, Research and Development Center, which is paying compensation accordingly, has stated.

After the first extension of the deadline, the construction company had to complete the work by 23 Dec 2024. After that, a compensation of 0.05 percent of the contract cost must be paid for each day after that. It is said that the compensation amount will increase with the delay and will reach a maximum of 10 percent (after 2000 days).

The construction of the Gwarko overpass is expected to ease traffic on the Satdobato-Koteshwor road section of the ring road and the Mangal Bazar-Imadol-Lubu road section. However, it will not solve the traffic jams in the long term, says transportation expert Ashish Gajurel. Although the wide road will provide relief from the traffic jam problem for some time, he says that the problem of traffic jams will recur after the number of vehicles gradually increases.

As the number of vehicles is increasing day by day, the traffic problem is sure to arise again after some time. Traffic management has become a huge challenge in the Kathmandu Valley, where about 1.4m vehicles ply, in recent years. This problem, which has arisen due to the increasing number of vehicles, does not seem to be easily solved immediately. He says that public transport should be operated effectively to reduce traffic pressure. According to him, there are 6.5m registered vehicles in Nepal, where the number of public vehicles is less than 4 percent. 80 percent of the total number of vehicles are motorcycles. “If there is reliable public transport, consumers will change their mode of transport,” he said, “only this will prevent road jams in the long term.”