KATHMANDU: The leader of Nepal´s largest Communist party was sworn in as prime minister Thursday, two months after leading his party to a thumping victory in landmark elections billed as a turning point for the impoverished Himalayan nation. K.P. Sharma Oli will head the first government elected under a new national constitution that cements Nepal´s transformation from Hindu monarchy to a federal republic 11 years after the end of a brutal Maoist insurgency. An alliance of Oli´s main Communist party and the former Maoist rebels trounced the incumbent Nepali Congress party in last year´s polls, winning a strong majority in both houses of parliament and six of the seven provincial assemblies. The Communist leader was sworn in as prime minister by President Bidya Bhandari on Thursday afternoon. Nepal´s post-war charter sets out a sweeping overhaul of the political system, devolving significant power from the centre to the seven provinces. But the handover of power after last year´s polls was delayed by disagreements over how the new election rules in the constitution should be implemented.
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That compares with 3,770 for the same period last year and 4,162 for 2022, the previous record high