Tuesday, July 17, 2012

A visit to Election Commission

Ballot boxes

Electronic Voting Machine
We got a chance to visit the Election Commission of Nepal recently. It was a different experience as I felt that it was the most well managed government office in the country. The building was clean and nice with the facility of lift, comfortable rest rooms, water, television and many more. The objective of our visit was to get the knowledge about election process. The history, process and tools used in election was the main focus.



Ballot papers
ballot papers


There were four stages of our enlightenment process inside the office. First was the mini museum where we got to see the historical materials used in election of the past and recent. Ballot boxes, ballot papers and even the electronic voting machine was one of the few things that we viewed.



materials used in elections

electoral materials used in constituent assembly election


Second stage was the screening of a documentary about the election history and process in Nepal. It included most of the historical events that occured in Neapl and were ultimately decided by the election process. It was well presented but still lacked some important stuffs.

Third stage was a  kind of test for us. We were given multiple choice and match the following type  question papers and there were four sections equipped with audio, video and touch screen tyoe resources that provided us with different information on the election and governance system of the country. We had to rotate in turns to all sections and fill those question papers. 



Voters List
We learnt pretty much about the election and its importance, types of governance and other stuffs related to the legislative, executive and judiciary of the country.

Fourth and the last stage was the real demonstration of a election process as it would take place during the election. There are two processes of casting votes, one is manual through the use of ballot box and papers and another is through the EVM(Electronic Voting Machine).
We voted through both the processes and observed the result. The result was the same but EVM was much more easier and faster than the traditional system.
It was very exciting as well as informative to us all.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Roads in kathmandu
The bus seen on the picture has one of its front tire deep down into the passage dug for the purpose of installing the sewage pipes.


This is a scene near baluwatar in Kathmandu, Nepal. The process of road widening in Kathmandu has caused many incidents like this and the work still goes slow and unmanaged as always. I hope the people of the city get a good result of all the dirt and mud they have stepped into and inhaled into their lungs when the work finally gets completed.


It has been a torture even to get out on these roads but every person has a hope that some day the road will be wide enough for all to move and the problem of traffic jam will be completed eradicated from this beautiful city of temples. May it be the beginning of what is called a developed city in the world. 

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Earthquake In Nepal

Almost all areas of Nepal felt the shake developed from a earthquake centered Sikkim-Nepal border which was measured 6.8 in Richter Scale. Till now the physical damage reported is not much as per the acale of the earthquake. There have been five casualties, three in kathmandu and 2 in dharan. The wall of British Embessy fell down due to the earthquake and killed three people injuring two more. Around 18 houses have been damaged in Sankhuwasava district and few others in nearby places. The details are yet to come. 
Map courtesy Google Maps 

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Teejako rahara aayo bariiilaiii

This evergreen song of the movie kanyadan has the original spirit of all nepali women no matter who they are and what they do. In todays context this song has become even more valuable beacause of the emergence of new voices in teej songs and the new songs from them are so disgusting and irrelevant to this great festival of hindus that those songs seem like a curse to our culture. So, to preserve the culture and tradition and the original theme of teej, songs like this should be made a vital part and the songs spreading vulgarity and nuisance only in the name of teej should be avoided. However, there are many songs these days also which carry the spirit of song which, of course should be encouraged and developed. Happy Teej to all the girls and women who are celebrating it with pure heart and respect. God bless us all.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Baburam Bhattarai - PM of Nepal

Today, 28th August, 2011, Nepal got its 35th Prime Minister. The hope is kindled by the name of Baburam Bhattarai as the Prime Minister of this beautiful country, Nepal. I say so because this is the time Nepalese people are expecting someone capable to lead the country and save it fromdevastation and put it in a position to compete with the developing world. I am sure most of the Nepalese think that Baburam Bhattarai is that person. He has dreams and aspirations like every patriot of this country to develop this country to its limits and give Nepalese people a lifestyle of the very best class of people in the world. More to that, he also has the capability to do so. He has proved himself once as the Finance Minister of Nepal but this time and this position is not the same. He has to walk through nails and pass through fires set by his own colleagues and the so called politicians of this country. But he must not fail because if he fails the country will fail, Nepal will fail. 



Thursday, August 25, 2011

10 things that make a great green city



By Jennifer Hattam, TreeHugger
1. Plentiful Parks
Park are the “lungs of the city,” architect Frederic Law Olmsted famously said about New York’s Central Park. From the 500-year-old Giardino della Guastalla in Milan to downtown Houston’s new Discovery Green, parks provide both a place for harried city residents to take a deep breath, relax, and connect with nature, and a cooling counter to the heat-island effect created by all that asphalt. (Not to mention a buffer against flooding.) Green space has even been shown to improve urbanites’ physical and mental health.
Discovery Green Park in Texas. Photo by erion.shehaj via Flickr.


2. Efficient Public Transportation
While commuters in Beijing, Dubai, and Lausanne, Switzerland, have shiny new metro systems to ride to work, transit authorities in Mexico City, Istanbul, and Los Angeles have cleared the way for buses by simply putting them in their own lanes. But whether they’re high-tech or humble, transit solutions that allow people to get around quickly and easily without a car are a key element to a green city.


3. Quality Public Space
Amid all the skyscrapers and busy roadways, a good green city has places that are built (or renovated) to human scale, places where people can safely walk and happily gather. Whether it’s New York’s High Line, a old railway bed converted into an aerial walkway, or a popular pedestrian-only street in Curitiba, Brazil, such places not only encourage getting around on foot, but reduce the need for large private dwellings by creating communal space for people to enjoy.
Streget pedestrian zone in Copenhagen. Photo by olgite via Flickr.

4. Bike Lanes
While the density of cities makes them great in theory for getting around by bike, heavy traffic (and angry drivers) can make cycling unpleasant and even dangerous without designated lanes. The most bike-friendly cities create separated bike paths, provide parking (and even solar-powered showers!), institute bike-sharing programs, and allow cyclists to bring their bikes on buses for longer trips.
Vancouver bike lane. Photo by theslowlane via Flickr.


5. High-Profile Green Buildings
Showcase developments that seek to be the biggest, tallest, fill-in-the-blank-iest green building may get flak for their aesthetics or be seen simply as “window dressing” for governments and corporations seeking some green cred. But as long as they’re not all a city’s doing, a prominent, striking eco-friendly structure such as the San Francisco Federal Building or the green roof on Chicago’s city hall provides a very visible symbol of green intentions and draws attention to the latest technologies.
Green roof on an EPA building in Denver. Photo by usepagov via Flickr.


6. Comprehensive Recycling and Composting Programs
Yes, recycling is the classic individual environmental act, but it’s not much good without someone to provide conveniently placed bins and reliable collection. The greenest city initiatives are going further than gathering cans and bottles, by adding electronics and food waste to the list of items recycled and composted, and by instituting larger-scale programs to recycle water for industrial use.
New recycling bins being distributed in San Francisco. Photo by ToastyKen via Flickr.

7. Mixed-Use and Infill Development
Good planning is key to a green city. While other metropolises sprawl further and further out, Hamburg, Germany, is renovating its obsolete harbor into a walkable mixed-use neighborhood with office, retail, and residential space, while Sacramento, California, is giving new life to old alleyways. Such projects “recycle” existing space that’s already woven into the urban fabric, making them easy to get to and get around.
Mixed-use development in Virginia. Photo by EPA Smart Growth via Flickr.


8. Green Leadership
Not every city official is going to be a “knight on a shining bicycle” like London Mayor Boris Johnson, who stopped an assault as he was cycling by. But government officials such as Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, former Austin Mayor Will Wynn, and the city council of Marburg, Germany, are heroes in their own right for cleaning up their cities’ sewer systems, promoting wind power and biodiesel, and making solar installations mandatory on new and renovated buildings. An active citizenry provides leadership from the ground up to prod or encourage politicians in the right direction.
Climate action in St. Paul, Minnesota. Photo by 350.org via Flickr.


9. Smart Energy Policies
Buying renewable energy and mandating efficiency measures are two ways a city can use its economic clout to help build a market for greener products while lowering its own environmental impact (and, often, operating costs). Phoenix, Arizona, for example, is boosting the amount of power it draws from renewable sources and constructing new city buildings to LEED standards, while San Francisco is building a big new solar array, Austin, Texas, is mandating home energy audits, and New York City is looking into offshore wind farms.
A solar array in Barcelona. Photo by laurenatclemson via Flickr.


10. Good Green Fun
Going green shouldn’t be all work and no play, and the best green cities celebrate their eco-friendly lifestyles with farmers’ markets full of tasty (and unusual) treats, bars and restaurants serving the best organic fare, intriguing exhibits by ecologically minded artists, and music festivals that offer bike valet parking and solar-powered stages.

Source

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Scoreboard-Nepal VS USA(U-19)






Nepal Under-19s vs United States of America Under-19s

at Limavady Cricket Club, Limavady

Nepal Under-19s won the toss and elected to bat first.

Nepal Under-19s won by 99 runs

Batting - Nepal Under-19s 1st inningsRunsB4's6'sS/R
Sagar Punc †Taylor b Ahmad190011.11
Fajlur Rahmanc & b Shahid26454057.78
Budayairst Taylor b Ahmad76945380.85
Baskota*c Joshi b Shahid270028.57
Pulami Magarlbw JS Sandhu16481033.33
Airee+c Sewdial b Shahid57673385.07
Vishvakarmac Suri b Ahmad9820112.5
K Karkib JS Sandhu451734264.71
Shrivastavavnot out6500120
B Karkirun out ( Taylor )01000
Karnnot out1100100
Extras (b 0, lb 7, w 16, nb 2, pen ) 25
Total(50.0 overs , 9 wickets )264   ( 5.28 runs per over)

Fall of wickets: 1 - 30 (Sagar Pun, 5.5), 2 - 45 (Fajlur Rahman, 10.3), 3 - 49 (Baskota, 12.4), 4 - 78 (Pulami Magar, 22.5), 5 - 191 (Budayair, 43.5), 6 - 203 (Vishvakarma, 45.2), 7 - 214 (Airee, 46.3), 8 - 262 (K Karki, 49.3), 9 - 262 (B Karki, 49.4)



Bowling - United States of America Under-19s 1st InningsOMRWNBWDE/R
Ahmad10.01443034.4
Mital Patel6.00390066.5
Shahid7.22323204.44
Abdulghani9.01420014.67
JS Sandhu7.01382015.43
GS Sandhu8.00380004.75
Suri2.402400110



Batting - United States of America Under-19s 1st inningsRunsB4's6'sS/R
Taylor+b Baskota52587189.66
Mirzalbw Karn01000
Joshilbw Karn01000
Sewdial*lbw K Karki4180022.22
Suric K Karki b Sagar Pun13420130.95
Ahmadb Vishvakarma38751250.67
JS Sandhuc Baskota b Vishvakarma08000
Abdulghanilbw Baskota21350360
GS Sandhunot out13211061.9
Shahidc Baskota b Vishvakarma02000
Mital Patelb Vishvakarma130033.33
Extras (b 3, lb 3, w 17, nb 0, pen ) 23
Total(44.1 overs , 10 wickets )165   ( 3.74 runs per over)

Fall of wickets: 1 - 2 (Mirza, 0.5), 2 - 2 (Joshi, 0.6), 3 - 15 (Sewdial, 5.4), 4 - 78 (Taylor, 20.1), 5 - 78 (Suri, 21.1), 6 - 81 (JS Sandhu, 24.3), 7 - 122 (Abdulghani, 36.6), 8 - 161 (Ahmad, 42.4), 9 - 161 (Shahid, 42.6), 10 - 165 (Mital Patel, 44.1)



Bowling - Nepal Under-19s 1st InningsOMRWNBWDE/R
Karn6.00252044.17
K Karki5.01191023.8
B Karki7.00320014.57
Baskota8.02212022.63
Sagar Pun6.01161022.67
Vishvakarma8.12244022.96
Shrivastavav4.00220025.5



SCORES BY ICC

Victory for Nepal..HURRAY