COMMENTARY: Who is “watching the watchdog” in Nepal?
[Facilitator’s note: Thank you to Narayan Manandhar, a freelance consultant with an interest in corruption and governance issues, for sharing his op-ed with us.]
“With the enactment of [Nepal’s] new anti-corruption law in 2002, the then-government… created a new watchdog agency called the National Vigilance Centre (NVC)…No one seems to have [had] the time to keep a vigil on the Vigilance Centre. The Centre has become more or less a transit point for acting secretaries. For nearly four years, the NVC chiefs did not even get to see their boss… The gradual attrition of fazil karmachari (surplus employees) has been carefully designed to empty the agency within 10-15 years… [Is] anybody watching this watchdog agency?”
Read Narayan’s full commentary in The Kathmandu Post.
“With the enactment of [Nepal’s] new anti-corruption law in 2002, the then-government… created a new watchdog agency called the National Vigilance Centre (NVC)…No one seems to have [had] the time to keep a vigil on the Vigilance Centre. The Centre has become more or less a transit point for acting secretaries. For nearly four years, the NVC chiefs did not even get to see their boss… The gradual attrition of fazil karmachari (surplus employees) has been carefully designed to empty the agency within 10-15 years… [Is] anybody watching this watchdog agency?”
Read Narayan’s full commentary in The Kathmandu Post.