Nepal on Monday postponed local elections for a second time after failing to appease ethnic minority groups who threatened to boycott the polls. The elections were seen as a key step in a drawn-out peace process after a decade-long civil war which ended in 2006. They were the first local polls in 20 years. "The government has decided to postpone the second phase of the local polls for 10 days, hoping the agitating parties will also take part," senior government minister Ramesh Lekhak told AFP.
The elections were originally supposed to be held on one day. They were split into two rounds following threats of a boycott from the Madhesi, a minority group living along the border with India. The first round was held in mid-May in three of Nepal's seven provinces, with the remaining round scheduled for June 14. The Madhesi have long been demanding that Nepal's provincial boundaries be redrawn through an amendment to the constitution, and wanted the change pushed through before the local elections. The lowland people, seen by some in Nepal as more closely aligned to India, say the existing federal borders deprive them of fair political representation. "Our main demand was constitution amendment, not the postponement of the poll date," Laxman Lal Karna, the head of one of the largest Madhesi parties, told AFP.