The prime minister argues it’s impractical and unwise to increase the number of tigers by endangering human lives.
Nepal has too many tigers and too much forest, according to the country’s leader. The offhand remarks by Prime Minister K.P.
By Abhaya Raj Joshi KATHMANDU — Nepal has long faced the challenge of balancing the development of infrastructure such as ...
The Muglin-Kathmandu road will remain closed for three hours daily from today. According to the Nagdhunga-Muglin Road Project ...
KATHMANDU -- Until the 1950s, Nepal's Kathmandu Valley was a place many had heard of but few had seen. That enigmatic image ...
Grocery shopping in Kathmandu has become more than just a routine task for parents—it is a battle against the unhealthy ...
Former President of Sri Lanka, Ranil Wickremesinghe is arriving Nepal on Saturday. RW... He is scheduled to come to Nepal for his personal visit, Ministry of Foreign Affairs Spokesperson Krishna ...
Seventeen years after the former Hindu kingdom became a secular state, Christians have a pathway to legal recognition.
Sagarmatha National Park authorities have declared war on noisy helicopters, but Nepal's powerful Civil Aviation Authority ...
Nepal’s government introduced a new Forest Act. The law laid the basis for the establishment of the Forest Development Fund ...
The Indian Embassy in Kathmandu on Saturday organised a meditation program at its premises to mark the inaugural World Meditation Day. Taking to X, the Indian Embassy in Nepal announced that the event ...