Kathmandu, April 27

Reena (name changed), a 22-year-old woman, feels bad that she does not menstruate.

Besides regular periods, her body parts are yet to develop fully. Reena was diagnosed with thalassaemia, an inherited haemoglobin disorder, 11 months after birth.

Girls normally menstruate from the age of 8 to 15.

But due to hormonal imbalance, Reenamenstruation cycle hasn&t started yet. &I feel so bad that I cannot conceive,& said Reena, a second year Bachelor level student.

Reena has been receiving blood transfusion once a week at Nepal thalassaemia Society. &I am under medication to extract iron from the blood.&

She was also diagnosed with Hepatitis C while undergoing blood transfusion.

&Sometimes, I get depressed with my life,& said Reena, adding that her condition had also affected her family. &My sister is also a carrier of thalassaemia.&

Reena wants to earn enough money to afford her medication but the treatment is too expensive.

&I spent Rs 100,000 only for the treatment of Hepatitis C, while Rs 15,000 to 20,000 is required for blood transfusion, tests and medication every three months for thalassaemia.&

Like Reena, Dipa KC from Dolakha, who resides in Jorpati was also diagnosed with thalassaemia.

She is a 22-year-old management student.

Though her menstruation cycle started when she reached 16, she is not sure about her future. &Every girl dreams of a happy married life with her partner and kids. However, we, thalassaemia patients, do no have the right to imagine such things,& Dipa added.

Due to social stigma, females with health problems face difficulties getting married.

&This is more so when a female is unable to give birth to a child due to health complications,& shared Durga Pathak, President of Nepal Thalassaemia Society.

About 4 per cent of the total population in the country are born with thalassaemia while among the total thalassaemia population, about 34 per cent are females.

&Compared with females having thalassaemia, males do not have any problem fathering a child while females can face complications while conceiving a child,& he said.

Our society is reluctant to accept the marriage of females with abnormal health conditions.

&Raising public awareness is important for a positive outlook towards people with health problems,&

Pathak said, adding, thalassaemia is less known among the public.

&Some of my friends call it blood cancer while some call it a communicable disease.

The worst thing is they want to maintain distance from me fearing they too will be infected,& shared Dipa KC. &We are already facing financial, physical and psychological problems.

Such behaviour adds to our trauma,& she said, adding, &We also have the right to live with dignity and right to health. We want free medication and treatment.&

But till date, there isn&t any policy for providing health services to people with thalassaemia, informed Pathak. &Bone marrow transplant, gene therapy, blood transfusion and medication are the only treatment options for people with thalassaemia.

These are very costly treatment measures, which requires government support,& said Dr Ranjit Mahat, a physician working with thalassaemia patients.

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Khula Manch freed of encroachment

An excavator demolishing illegal structures at Khula Manch in Kathmandu, on Saturday. Photos: RSS

Kathmandu, April 27

Following widespread criticism from various quarters over encroachment of public land, Nepal police with the support of Municipal Police of Kathmandu Metropolitan City vacated illegally built structures at Khula Manch today.

All 52 illegal stalls erected for commercial purpose at Khula Manch, were brought down. The task was undertaken under the leadership of Chief District Officer Ram Prasad Acharya of Kathmandu.

Jurisdiction of such structures was under the local body.

It is also learnt that the CDO took the initiative of ridding Khula Manch of illegal structures following a direct order from Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli last night.

Nepali Congress leader Bhimsen Das Pradhan told The Himalayan Times that without the PMorder, the task of bringing down those structures would not be accomplished within such a short time.

Mayor of KMC Bidhya Sundar Shakya was also present at the site. Shakya, however left the scene before the excavators were mobilised to demolish the illegal structures.

Earlier, a number of social activists and locals, after staging protest at Khula Manch, had submitted a memorandum to KMCDeputy Mayor Hari Prabha Khadgi demanding demolition of the illegal structures.

Apparently, the builder who was provided the contract to build Kathmandu View Tower at Old Bus Park, Ratna Park, had built the stalls to rent them out to private vendors.

The contractor, Jaleshwor Sochhanda Bkoi Builders Pvt Ltd, was provided the land for facilitating construction work at Old Bus Park on 6 April 2017.

The structures were built by encroaching 13.5 ropani public land.

The contractor was granted permission by KMC to build some fundamental structures at Khula Manch, such as a restaurant, a health facility, couple of toilets and two bus stands. Using the same loophole, the contractor had built the additional structures.

Meanwhile, Deputy Mayor Khadgi today got caught up in a difficult situation after angry owners whose shops were bulldozed demanded reimbursement for their loss.

Deputy Mayor Khadgi, who is also the head of the monitoring committee of the local body, had reached the site after the excavator had already cleared it.

Khadgi immediately caught the attention of mediapersons when she reached the site and started talking to shop owners.

Angry shop owners started shouting at her, demanding reimbursement. Some women were heard using abusive words and some even tried to attack her.

Khadgi was escorted to her vehicle by police personnel while shopkeepers followed her up to the vehicle. Khadgi, however was unharmed.

Khula Manch freed of encroachment

Shopkeepers left in a lurch after Kathmandu Metropolitan City bulldozed their stalls at Khula Manch in Kathmandu, on Saturday. Photos: RSS

Sources told THT that those shopkeepers had paid amounts ranging from Rs 500,000 to Rs 1.5 million to middlemen for securing the stalls. However, shopkeepers were reluctant to speak about the deal.

A woman who had just started a fancy store at a stall said, on condition of anonymity, that she had paid Rs 800,000 to some people to secure the place. She, however, said no paper work was involved in the deal. She claimed that all the shopkeepers had submitted money to a middleman to secure their stalls.

She also said the stall which was not larger than five feet by five feet was rented out to her at Rs 15,000 per month.

NC leader Pradhan demanded that the government must support shopkeepers if they had become victims of thugs.

Meanwhile, Deputy Mayor Khadgi told THT that she was unaffected by the abusive words hurled at her by the shopkeepers. &I stand by the rule of law, and will not retreat from my mission to clear the encroached area at Khula Manch,& She added.

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Kathmandu, April 27

President Bidya Devi Bhandari addressed the Leaders& Roundtable of the Second Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation in Beijing today.

Speaking on the theme of ‘Promoting Green and Sustainable Development to Implement the UN 2030 Agenda&, the president drew the attention of world leaders to the adverse impacts of climate change and emphasised the need to develop clean energy and low-carbon pathways of development through research-based solutions, said a press release issued by Embassy of Nepal in Beijing.

Expressing the view that realisation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development was possible only through enhanced cooperation among nations, President Bhandari stated that the objectives of development and prosperity as emphasised by the Belt and Road Initiative closely corresponded to the Sustainable Development Goals for achieving transformative, inclusive and equitable development outcomes.

The president said the Belt and Road Initiative was emerging as a key driver for poverty alleviation, employment generation, infrastructure building and industrial transformation.

She also expressed confidence that BRI would support the process of economic transformation in Nepal by expanding connectivity networks and supporting the countryeconomic integration into the global market.

The Second Belt and Road Forum concluded in Beijing today with the release of a joint communiqué titled ‘Belt and Road Cooperation: Shaping a Brighter Shared Future&. In the communiqué, leaders from participating countries expressed support for building on the progress made in developing economic corridors and economic and trade cooperation zones in various countries, including the Nepal-China Trans-Himalayan Multi-Dimensional Connectivity Network and Nepal-China cross-border railway.

The leaders vowed to support policies and activities that helped landlocked countries transform into land-linked ones, by strengthening connectivity and co-operation on transit arrangements and infrastructure.

They also highlighted the importance of special and differential treatment in international trade for developing countries and reaffirmed their commitment to the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Foreign Minister Pradeep Kumar Gyawali and Chief Minister of Province 3 Dor Mani Paudel and other officials were present on the occasion.

In the evening, President Bhandari attended a welcome reception hosted in her honour at the Embassy of Nepal by Ambassador Leela Mani Paudyal.

On behalf of the president, the foreign minister spoke on the importance of the first-ever state visit of the president of Nepal to China and expressed hope that the visit would add a new chapter in expanding and consolidating the already-warm and cordial ties and cooperative partnership between the two countries. He urged the Nepali community of China to contribute to the development of Nepal through their knowledge and skills.

Ambassador Paudyal delivered a welcome statement.

Members of the presidentdelegation and Nepali nationals from different walks of life living in China attended the event.

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