FWEAN
expands reach to Jumla, empowering rural women
through entrepreneurship, by Golden Buda
(rep 30/12/2023)
Adding
insult to injury: Nepali women, children grapple
with statelessness : Many Nepali women and their
children are enduring the plight of
statelessness due to discriminatory politics and
government officials. Misogynistic laws,
procedural gaps, and the apathy of relevant
authorities contribute to the suppression of
their civil right to live a dignified life,
by Ajabi Poudel (ae 28/12/2023)
Nepali
women sexually abused abroad face hurdles
returning home, by Sita Neupane (kh
28/12/2023)
The
Karjahi Movement : Long forgotten stories of the
Tharu women of Dang who fought for, and won,
land rights 44 years ago, by Nisha Rai (nt
23/12/2023)
Towards
genuine gender equality in Nepal’s politics :
Despite the widely acknowledged principle that
societal development hinges upon the active
involvement of all its members, women
continually find themselves marginalized in the
decision-making process, by Dipti Ghimire
(nlt 20/12/2023) [The
participation of women is even greater if they
come from the Dalit, Muslim, Janajati or
Madheshi groups! For example, the number of
Dalit women is greater than that of Bahun men!
The disparity in participation is astronomical!]
Women's
Industrial Village in Panchkhal courts serious
controversy as govt neglects FWEAN (rep
13/12/2023)
By
the women, for the environment : Deego Nepal
champions sustainability through eco-friendly
products while empowering women, by Rukusha
Giri (kp 11/12/2023)
Number
of single women increases in Nepal, by
Pabitra Sunar (rep 25/11/2023)
Nepali
Women In Changed Media Landscape, by Tulasi
Acharya (rn 10/11/2023)
Women
entrepreneurs reveal success stories : These
businesswomen produce sanitary pads, make
stuffed dolls and run a dairy farm, by Sanju
Paudel (kp 30/10/2023)
Semiotics
Of The Term 'Cheli' By relegating women to
subservient roles through language, the society
inadvertently fosters a culture of inequality,
by Tulasi Acharya (rn 18/10/2023)
Improve
Women's Role In Decision-making, by Jeewan
Rimal (rn 23/09/2023)
Women's
participation in decision-making level pathetic
(rep 15/09/2023)
Educated
Women Victims Of Domestic Abuse,
by Upasana Rana (rn 10/09/2023)
Patriarchal
Nepal sees steep rise in female-headed
households : Agriculture Census 2021-22 report,
released on Thursday by National Statistics
Office, shows 32.4 percent, or 1.33 million,
households in the country are headed by women,
by Sangam Prasain (kp 08/09/2023) [This is far from being a
reason for the ruling machos to grant women
equal rights and participation!]
Women
need de jure, de facto rights to end
discrimination (ht 01/09/2023)
Single
women’s population rising markedly in Nepal :
Study shows nearly 1.2 million Nepali women
separated, divorced or became widows in a decade,
by Arjun Poudel (kp 21/08/2023)
Battling
Discrimination To Empower Women, by Sunil
Poudel (rn 18/08/2023)
iolence
against women in politics : By breaking down
barriers and fostering an enabling environment,
women can take their rightful place as catalysts
for change in various fields, including in
politics and decision-making, by Kabita
Pandey (ae 17/08/2023)
USAID
Urja Nepal concludes leadership and management
training for women : The programme was aimed at
assisting women leaders in advancing their
leadership skills, enhancing their professional
influence, and making effective business
decisions to accelerate Nepal's energy
transition (kp 29/07/2023)
Addressing
Population Issues : A Call For Gender Equality,
by Ramesh Kumar KC (rn 14/07/2023)
'Time-bound
programme needed to abolish dowry', by Ram
Kumar Kamat (ht 02/07/2023), Woman
and daughter found dead in Rautahat (ht
02/07/2023)
Recognise
Women’s Domestic Labour, by Bini Dahal (rn
30/06/2023)
First
conference on women shelters begins (ht
26/06/2023)
Female
participation in higher education : How Good Is
Good Enough?, by Bhim Prasad Subedi (rn
23/06/2023)
Female
mahout numbers grow as safaris get popular in
protected areas : Women mahouts are dedicated
and can handle challenging tasks easily, park
officials say, by Rupa Gahatraj (kp
19/06/2023)
Women
in Nepali society: An overview of Lichhavi era
and Vedic age : Women in the Licchavi era were
not just confined to the household works. They
were given an equal opportunity to contribute in
the society, by Shreena Nepal (nlt
17/06/2023)
Women
of Gorkha, Chitwan pursuing economic
independence through farming, by Sushil
Darnal (rn 09/06/2023)
With
men away in India for work, women fill void in
construction : Until a few years ago,
contractors would not hire women in construction
projects, but that has changed now since most
villages are almost devoid of men, by Tripti
Shahi (kp 03/06/2023)
Embrace
women’s diversity : The experiences of women of
historically marginalised groups aren’t
discussed, by Sangmo Yonjan-Tamang (kp
28/05/2023)
Women
working for daily wage to run houses
independently (rn 15/05/2023)
Perspective
On Nepali Women's Journey, by Sadhana Dahal
(rn 28/04/2023)
Code
of conduct: Only for women? It is important for
the state to realise that restrictive borders
and policing the so-called ‘dignity of Nepali
women’ is not the solution to existing problems,
by Swasti Gautam (kp 24/04/2023)
NWC
receives 42 percent complaints of mental
violence in nine months (ae 24/04/2023)
Behind
births of fewer girls than boys : Preference for
sons, which leads to female foeticide, is among
the suspected reasons, by Arjun Poudel (kp
02/04/2023) [Only males
are full Nepalis. This is what is written in the
constitution and laws and especially in the
minds of the patriarchal machos!]
onomic
Empowerment Of Women, by Namrata Sharma (rn
29/03/2023)
History
of women lawmakers : To ensure women’s rights,
their presence is necessary in Parliament and
the law-making process, by Khim Lal Devkota
(kp 22/03/2023)
Girls
who marry early face abuse and health issues,
by Anushka Nepal (ae 16/03/2023)
Violence
against women on the rise : Experts working in
women’s rights point out the patriarchal mindset
of people, taking the woman as second class
citizen, rise in reporting of the incidences and
use of various social media as some of the
causes for a rise in the number of cases of
violence against women, by Sabitri Dhakal
(ae 15/03/2023)
Once
sold in Kuwait, she still lives in pain back
home : Sanimaya’s tale represents countless
Nepali women who are taken to various Gulf
countries on visit visas and then are made to
work in virtual slavery, by Anup Ojha (kp
15/03/2023)
Women
Farmers in Nepal : Vanguard of Rural Economy,
by Kiran Mainali (rep 14/03/2023)
Behind
the mask of happiness : In many Nepali
households, men continue to make financial
decisions, including how women’s earnings are
spent, by Mimamsha Dhungel (kp 09/03/2023)
Long
fight against culture of rape and impunity :
Women know the battle for justice won’t be
easily won but refuse to give up. They vow to
speak up louder, by Anshrica Dewan (kp
08/03/2023)
Evolving
gender equations : Women should speak up for
justice notwithstanding concerns of family
reputation or social pressure, by Sushila
Karki (kp 08/03/2023)
Many
Achham parents favour boys over girls for
schooling : Parents don’t put much effort into
educating their daughters since they think that
girls will someday leave them and go with their
husbands, by Menuka Dhungana (kp 08/03/2023)
In
Nepal, farm women are becoming entrepreneurs :
Women are experiencing increased
responsibilities and workloads, especially in
situations where there is climate-driven out
migration of men and young people, by Subin
Adhikari (kp 08/03/2023)
Empowered
Nepali women : Things will change when men who
do not do dishes at home stop lecturing on
women’s empowerment, by Sujeev Shakya (kp
07/03/2023)
Women’s
participation in state’s bodies being ensured:
Speaker Ghimire (kh 07/03/2023) [With a few exceptions, the
women involved only play backstage roles! More
than the 33 per cent of women parliamentarians
prescribed by the constitution are not involved
anyway. In the Council of Ministers and other
institutions, not even this is achieved!]
The
women connecting Nepal : From Mechi to Mahakali
(and rivers in between) women engineers overcome
hurdles to make Nepal more accessible, by
Sahina Shrestha (nlt 03/03/2023)
Beset
by poverty at home, Banke women face horror
abroad : Several debt-ridden Nepali women who
illegally visited Gulf nations for jobs are in
captivity and crying for help, by Rupa
Gahatraj (kp 03/03/2023)
Calls
grow for gender equality in foreign jobs m: The
restrictive policies over the years, regarding
labour mobility of women, have made them
vulnerable to trafficking and forced labour,
observers say, by Pawan Pandey (kp
28/02/2023)
Period
Kaa Kura: Promoting period positivity, by
Parushka Khadka (ae 22/02/2023)
When
will women lead big political parties?
Bibeksheel Sajha recently elected Samikchya
Baskota as party chief while Ranjita Shrestha
heads another new party, the Nagarik Unmukti
Party, by Purushottam Poudel (kp 21/02/2023)
Helping
women in business : Women entrepreneurs
lack technical knowledge to expand their
business operations, by Roshee
Lamichhane (kp 20/02/2023)
Lack
of infrastructure shattering women’s dream to
pursue career in sports (kh 08/02/2023)
Landmark
bill to boost women candidacy in polls :
Election Commission is drafting a bill to
increase women’s candidacy in all three tiers of
government by a third, by Binod Ghimire (kp
02/02/2023), Hope
amid despair : The proposed bill to field more
directly elected women candidates is a silver
lining (kp 03/02/2023)
Trap
of trafficking: How women and girls are lured
into trafficking by their own relatives :
According to police, a significant number of
girls sold into brothels are trafficked by their
own family members or acquaintances, by
Sushmita Aryal (nlt 30/01/2023)
Post-menopause
healthcare : As the population continues to age,
support for middle-aged women has become crucial,
by Dushala Adhikari (kp 30/01/2023)
Rural
women turning self-reliant (kh 18/01/2023)
Women
representation still remains bare minimum,
by Arpana Adhikari (rn 25/12/2022)
Early
marriage traps disadvantaged girls in poverty
cycle : A multisectoral approach is needed to
understand and eradicate this multifaceted
social evil, say experts, by Arjun Poudel
(kp 15/12/2022)
Combating
violence against women in politics : We should
realise that a threat to women in politics is a
threat to our entire democracy, by Sagoon
Bhetwal (kp 13/12/2022)
Women
should not be
denied legal
rights: CEC
Thapaliya
(kh 09/12/2022)) [But they
are. The
participation in
the electoral
system and the
treatment of
women by the
political
parties and
their macho
leaders are
prime examples!]
Nepali
women packing a punch : Nepal occupies a
respectable 16th position among the 133
countries regarding the proportion of elected
seats held by women, by Khim Lal Devkota (kp
02/11/2022) [This
comparison is misleading! The high percentage of
women is based on legal regulations.
Responsibility is still withheld from women
today. Moreover, the legal regulations are
increasingly undermined by the leading male
politicians!]
UN
CEDAW concerned about dire situation of women's
rights, gender equality (ht 31/10/2022)
Dangers
of blindly following traditions without
questioning : The four Vedas do not state that a
woman’s body is impure or a woman cannot perform
poojas during menstruation. Prohibiting women
from entering temples and castigating them is
against the teachings of Vedas, by Ruchi
Dhital (nlt 14/10/2022)
Limited
number of women candidacies recorded under FPTP
(kh 10/10/2022)
Affirmative
inaction : Party patriarchy sidelines women
aspirants to office, and gives bare minimum
representation (nt 09/09/2022), The
power to have a say in her-story : As the
November elections approach, Nepal’s
male-dominated parties are loath to let women
contest, by Shristi Karki (nt 09/09/2022)
Teej
is changing: What does it mean to today’s Nepali
women? Once viewed as a celebration of
patriarchy in the name of culture, modernity,
money, freedom and women’s rights have come to
define what Teej should be and should not be,
by Shrutika Raut (nlt 30/08/2022), “Women
need economic empowerment and social security”
(kh 30/08/2022)
A
viral dance step ruffles feathers among Nepalis,
mostly men, on social media : A group of Nepali
women upload a video enacting a viral dance
move. Moral police online accuse them of
stepping out of line, by Aakriti Ghimire (kp
28/08/2022)
School
education boosts self-confidence of adult women
(kh 24/08/2022)
Menstrual
cups are gaining currency, albeit slowly : They
are reusable after cleaning, and a sustainable
option to pads and tampons. But opinion among
Nepali women is divided over convenience, by
Aakriti Ghimire (kp 20/08/2022)
Voices
grow for fair representation of women as major
elections near : Women leaders complain parties
field fewer women for direct election. Experts
blame the patriarchal mindset, by Nishan
Khatiwada (kp 13/08/2022)
How
some restaurants are working to normalise
menstruation : Eateries are offering sanitary
products for free. Experts and users call it a
good initiative towards dismantling period
stigma and stress replicating it in other places,
by Aakriti Ghimire (kp 11/08/2022)
Rs
28.8 million plus revenue exempted as women
register land plots in their names (rep
05/08/2022)
MPs
demand 50 per cent FPTP tickets for women,
by Ram Kumar Kamat (ht 02/08/2022)
Employing
dhami-jhankri to promote dignified menstruation
: Faith healers commit to ensuring dignity of
menstruators in Sudurpaschim and Karnali, by
Aakriti Ghimire (kp 27/07/2022)
Youngest
female electric bus driver aims to achieve
inclusivity : Nisha Chaulagain, the youngest
female driver of Sajha Yatayat e-buses, says she
joined Sajha to break through into a
male-dominated profession and out of her love
for driving, by Anup Ojha (kp 21/07/2022)
Rafting
provides women river guides opportunities to
grow (rep 19/07/2022)
Women
still no more than eye candies on big screen,
by Anushka Nepal (ae 14/07/2022)
A
blueprint for political empowerment of Nepali
women : Male politicians in dominant
positions should face the reality that women in
Nepal have no equal opportunities to contest the
elections, by Simone Galimberti (nlt
09/07/2022)
Public
scrutiny of emotions : The flawed notion of a
woman weaponising her tears precludes any
appreciation of her as a human, by Avasna
Pandey (kp 04/07/2022)
How
heat waves hit women farmers : Heat waves are
concerning from a gender perspective, as
research in Nepal, India and Bangladesh shows,
by Heather Randell and Emily M L Southard (kp
30/06/2022)
Biopolitics
In Women’s Marital Age, by Namrata Sharma
(rn 22/06/2022)
‘Low-quality
sanitary pads have health impacts on women’ :
Bring a national program for free,
biodegradables and reusable pads to all the
women and girls in the communities and schools:
MHM PA nlt 19/06/2022)
Patriarchy
blamed for suffering of mothers, kids (ht
18/06/2022)
The
burdens of a Nepali woman : Women are still seen
as subservient figures everywhere they go.
Meanwhile, patriarchy has gone beyond being a
belief system and become a way of life for many
of us, by Anushka Nepal (ae 16/06/2022)
Strides
In Women Empowerment, by Dev Raj Dahal (rn
11/06/2022)
Call
to address issues of urban poor women more
sensitively (ht 07/06/2022)
Singh
becomes first non-technical female officer in
Nepal Police to become AIG (rep 07/06/2022)
Women
in Balambu band together for a common cause :
Misa Pucha, a 250-member women's group, was
established to arm women with the skills to
become financially independent, socially adept
and confident in their everyday life, by
Rajani Shrestha (kp 26/05/2022)
Female
riders in ride-hailing services are rare in
Nepal : Compulsion to perform household chores,
safety concerns, and lack of dignity of work
keep female riders from joining such platforms,
by Aakriti Ghimire (kp 19/05/2022)
Uphold
Women’s Constitutional Rights, by Namrata
Sharma (rn 18/05/2022)
Why
aren’t more women selected as
candidates? Patriarchy alone is not a
sufficient explanation for the lack of
women in candidate selection for the
recently held local elections, by
Seira Tamang (rec 16/05/2022)
Implications
of low women representation in local polls,
by Neelam Dhanuse (rep 12/05/2022)
Women
leaders from across the political spectrum say
they feel constrained : Their representation in
local elections has been trimmed but they cannot
speak up. Female politicians say the fight will
continue though, by Aakriti Ghimire (kp
30/04/2022)
Supreme
Court set to decide today on petition on women’s
representation in local governments : Deadline
given to political parties to file nominations
for the May 13 local level elections ends today,
by Binod Ghimire (kp 25/04/2022)
Patriarchy
plagues the lives of young girls in Siraha :
When one girl acts beyond the traditional norms,
all other girls in the village face the
consequences—their education is discontinued and
they are married off, by Aakriti Ghimire (kp
18/04/2022)
Dalit
women were elected in numbers. But have they
been empowered? Despite holding posts,
experience as decision makers was not
encouraging as discrimination continued, they
say, by Tika R Pradhan and Binod Ghimire (kp
16/04/2022)
The
women left behind : When Nepali men migrated as
warriors or workers, the women they left behind
helped empower the country, by Sonia Awale
(nt 15/04/2022)
Let
Women Lead Local Levels, by Namrata Sharma
(rn 13/04/2022), Women
in politics : One can have all the rules and yet
find a million ways to sidestep them (kp
14/04/2022)
Men
make financial decisions despite rising female
literacy, experts say : Women panellists
highlight the challenges faced by women in being
financially independent at a programme entitled
Nirvik Nari, by Krishana Prasain (kp
12/04/2022), Nirvik
Nari: An event celebrating women : Panellists
describe the challenges women face at both
social and policy levels (kp 12/04/2022)
Around
500 women and children rescued from Nepalgunj
border point (rep 08/04/2022)
Alliance
politics may trim women’s representation in
local governments : As coalition partners plan
to fight May 13 polls in alliance, observers
wonder if the inclusion idea is at stake, by
Binod Ghimire (kp 04/04/2022)
Women
Prove Leadership Mettle, by Mukti Rijal (kp
24/03/2022)
Women
Equality Still A Distant Dream!, by
Saudamini Chalise (rn 21/03/2022)
Women’s
representation and intersectional (un)inclusion,
by Kalpana Jha (rec 17/03/2022)
Minister
Regmi informs global community on Nepal’s
efforts on women empowerment (kh 15/03/2022)
[Improvements yes, but
the reality is different. In the constitution,
laws and society, equality between women and men
is still a long way off!]
Time
for Nepali women to stand higher : With local
elections coming up, we must double down on our
efforts to create equal opportunities for Nepali
women to lead, by Nicola Pollitt (ae
10/03/2022)
The
burden of womanhood in Nepal : From making
household chores women’s sole preserve to buying
and selling women into prostitution, there are
covert and overt ways in which women are being
exploited and treated as inferior to men, by
Cilla Khatry (ae 10/03/2022)
Mountain
women’s problems are taller than the mountains,
by Upendra Lamichhane (rep 09/03/2022)
Women
look for a human economy— equal for all :
Problems ranging from managing cash, paying
workers, rent and repaying loans caused distress
to women during Covid-19 pandemic, forcing many
to quit entrepreneurship, by Krishana
Prasain (kp 08/03/2022), Covid-induced
shift to digital has enabled women-led
businesses to survive and thrive : Despite the
challenges of accessibility, affordability and
applicability faced by women-led enterprises,
organisations have worked to overcome those
obstacles, by Aakriti Ghimire (kp
08/03/2022)
Looking
back at Nepal’s feminist movement – and looking
forward : Nepal’s mainstream feminist movement
must go beyond class, caste, and gender to
embrace intersectionality and encompass
diversity in all its forms, say feminists,
by Prasansha Rimal (rec 08/03/2022)
#BreaktheBias:
Sustainable development is not possible without
gender equality : The people in power have a
very crucial role to play in creating an
enabling environment for gender equality and
social inclusion, by Rupa Pandey (nlt
08/03/2022)
#BreaktheBias:
We need to continuously speak up for equal
participation of women : The development sector
has been working to ensure gender inclusion and
equity in Nepal, by Ratna Shrestha (nlt
08/03/2022)
Can
Nepal elections change its male-stream politics?
This May, vote for women leaders and minority
groups and make our local governments more
inclusive and less tokenistic, by Aditi
Adhikari (nt 04/03/2022)
Girls
just want to have fun : Project to train young
Nepali girls to be sports coaches paves the way
for future leaders, by Aria Parasai (nt
04/03/2022)
Why
(some) women are shunning traditional marriage :
There is still a stigma attached to singlehood,
particularly when it comes to women. But that
too will change as more women become independent
and Nepali society opens up, by Priyanjali
Karn (ae 03/03/2022)
Few
women in federal, provincial executive bodies :
Nepal has constitutionally assured 33 percent
women representation in all governmental bodies,
but the provision’s implementation remain poor,
by Pratik Ghimire (ae 03/03/2022)
Monitoring
disparities in gender : It is the informal
sector that we need to watch to measure the
depth of the law’s penetration (kp
03/03/2022)
Commercial
farming empowers women from a Musahar community
in Siraha : Self-employed women from the
community are now able to send their children to
school, by Bharat Jargha Magar (kp
27/02/2022)
Number
of women borrowers soars after pandemic : A
record 80,061 women entrepreneurs borrowed
Rs73.85 billion in concessional loans from banks
in the first six months of the fiscal year, data
shows, by Krishana Prasain (kp 12/02/2022)
Alcohol
use a driving cause behind domestic violence in
Makawanpur : Although most victims of domestic
violence choose to settle their cases out of
court, more women are coming forward with
complaints against their perpetrators these
days, police say, by Pratap Bista (kp
09/02/2022)
Sex
trade flourishing in and around Nepalgunj
(rep 04/02/2022)
Women
light the World (kh 01/802/2022)
Girls
in Pipalgaun deprived of education : There are
more than 30 girls of school-going age in
Pipalgaun, a Dalit settlement in Achham, and
none of them goes to school as the parents want
them at home to help run the household, by
Menuka Dhungana (kp 31/01/2022)
Despite
constitutional provision, women in Nepal
struggle to get their rightful share of
ancestral property : Although the constitution
states that women are equally entitled to have
their share of ancestral property, the law's
implementation has been sketchy, by Anushka
Nepal (nlt 24/01/2022)
Trek
to Kalapathar to advocate for climate justice :
The event aims to highlight the effects of
climate change, especially in the Himalayan
region, and advocate for climate justice
(nlt 18/01/2022)
Despite
constitutional mandate, women’s representation
in Nepali politics remains minimal, by
Anushka Nepal (nlt 07/01/2022)
90
percent employed women are working informally in
Nepal : Women informal sector workers share a
disproportionate burden of unpaid care work and
family responsibilities that limit their job
opportunities, by Aakriti Ghimire (kp
07/01/2022)
Over
9,000 crimes against women in five months
(ht 02/01/2022)
Stop
Downplaying Street Harassment, by Ameesha
Rayamajhi (rep 31/12/2021)
Anti-Chhaupadi
campaign in Achham losing steam : Neither the
police administration nor the local units and
local people are showing interest in effectively
implementing the campaign, women say, by
Menuka Dhungana (kp 29/12/2021)
All
kinds of discriminations against women will be
ended: Minister Regmi (rep 24/12/2021) [For this, the constitution
would first have to be amended!]
Climate
change : How it impacts women more, by
Jocelyn Timperley (ht 13/12/2021)
For
the women, by the women : On the occasion of '16
Days of Activism against Gender-based Violence',
four women across Nepal, who have been
relentlessly fighting to end gender violence,
share their experiences, by Pinki Sris Rana
(kp 10/12/2021)
All
in a day’s work : Rejina Basnet finds her job as
a ticket collector, something considered men’s
province until a few years ago, rewarding, which
she says earns her livelihood and respect,
by Anup Ojha (kp 09/12/2021)
How
menstrual stigma intersects with violence
against women : Confining women and young girls
to small sheds for three or more days and
keeping surveillance on their daily mobility is
a form of violence against women, by Jyotika
Rimal (nlt 08/12/2021)
‘Women
Violence - From Womb To Tomb’ On Display (rn
04/12/2021)
Vow
against VAW : As Nepal marks 16 days of activism
against gender-based violence, Ruby Khan makes
an impassioned plea for justice from her sit-in
near Singha Darbar, by Ruby Khan (nt
03/12/2021)
Saving
one Nepali mother at a time : Dhiru Bista has
had 12 pregnancies since she got married at 15,
she almost did not make it this time, by
Aruna Uprety (03/12/2021)
Entertainment
as decent work: Give it recognition, dignity,
by Aarzoo Parajuli (ht 18/11/2021)
Women’s
Attraction To Judiciary Rising, by Kalika
Khadka (rn 16/11/2021)
Charimaya
Tamang: ‘Who will wipe out the tears of
trafficking survivors if I start crying myself?’
From survivor to savior: Charimaya Tamang
continues to turn around the lives of
trafficking survivors in Nepal, by Anushka
Nepal (nlt 15/11/2021)
Lachchhas
making a comeback : Once worn only by married
women, lachchhas have recently become a popular
hair accessory among young unmarried women,
by Pinki Sris Rana (kp 02/11/2021)
Women
and water : Water scarcity and gender inequity
predate the climate emergency but global warming
has added to the burden of Nepali women (nt
29/10/2021)
Misogyny
in Nepal: Little acts, big consequences, by
Cilla Khatry (ae 02/11/2021)
Women
take pills to delay periods. But many are not
aware of the side effects : The deeply ingrained
notions of ‘impurity’ around menstruation are
forcing women to pop pills so that they
are socially acceptable during festivals and
rituals, by Aakriti Ghimire (kp 26/10/2021)
[A consequence of the
discriminatory attitude of the medieval
patriarchal society of Nepal!]
Women
carry body to the pyre (kh 23/10/2021) [What sounds like a normality
not worth mentioning is a great revolution in
arch-patriarchal Nepal!]
Feel
angry? Read this : Archaic patriarchal beliefs
will persist for years but you can't let
negative emotions consume you, by Anjana
Rajbhandary (nt 22/10/2021)
‘Sati
system was the manifestation of structural and
cultural violence inflicted on women’,
interview with Sujit Mainali (nlt 12/10/2021)
Mother
of daughters honoured (kh 06/10/2021)
Into
the World of Tax-free and Stigma-free Period,
by Monika Shrestha (rep 06/10/2021)
A
country where victimization of vulnerable women
in the name of practicing witchcraft is still
rampant : In Nepal, there’s still no let up in
cases of violence based on witchcraft
accusations, despite the fact that the country’s
law has criminalized it, by Anushka Nepal
(nlt 04/10/2021)
The
cost of being a menstruating individual, by
Rose Singh (rep 29/09/2021)
Social
Beliefs On Menstruation Take Tolls On Youths’
Mental Health, by Smita Adhikari (rn
24/09/2021)
'No
changes made in the tax imposed on sanitary pads
in new budget' (rep 24/09/2021), "Do
not impose tax on my period" (Photo feature)
(rep 24/09/2021), Women
and activists see red over pink tax : The
government last fiscal year collected Rs342.31
million in revenue from imports of
sanitary napkins. Calls grow to ensure easy
accessibility of menstrual hygiene products,
by Krishana Prasain and Aakriti Ghimire ( kp
25/09/2021)
Menstrual
Cycle in Nepal: Curse to Celebration, by
Smriti Ranabhat (rep 19/09/2021)
Enhancing
women’s access to finance : As a first step, we
need to identify the actual needs and study
international practices, by Shreya Subedi
(kp 06/09/2021)
The
systemic silencing of stories of harassment
: Stories of abuse and harassment at
educational institutions continue to emerge
but there are few consequences for the
perpetrators, by Kabita Bahing (rec
03/09/2021)
Nepal’s
unequal marriages : Men cheat and get away with
it, while women are blamed for shaming the
family, by Arjana Rajbhandary (nt
27/08/2021)
Born
unequal, treated unequally : The world treats
people differently based on sex and it starts as
soon as the gender of the fetus can be
identified, by Balmukunda Regmi (ae
26/08/2021)
Women
still face witchcraft charges in Sunsari :
Rights activists say most of the victims of such
allegations are women from marginalised
communities, by Sumnim a Chamling (kp
14/08/2021)
Menstrual
cup conversations, by Shristi Shakya (rec
10/08/2021)
Instances
of VAW far from declining yet, by Sabina
Karki (kh 04/08/2021)
The
pandemic has disproportionately affected sex
workersSex workers who want to quit the
profession are now finding it more challenging
to do so in the midst of a pandemic, by
Tsering Ngodup Lama (kp 04/08/2021)
Coping
with patriarchy : Tracking the struggle of women
in a Nepali clan across four generations, by
Bhumi Ghimiré (nt 30/07/2021)
Why
should women accept patriarchal norms?, by
Cilla Khatry (ae 29/07/2021)
'One
in four teen girls miss school during
menstruation' (ht 22/07/2021), Girls'
absenteeism : There is a long way to go before
we totally end school absenteeism during the
menstruation period (ht 23/07/2021)
Towards
safer births : Superstitions and discriminatory
customs continue to deny women their basic
rights (kp 21/07/2021)
In
Kalikot, gender discrimination begins at birth :
Despite efforts from social organisations and
local authorities to raise awareness on gender
discrimination, prejudices against girls are
still prevalent, by Tularam Pandey (kp
19/07/2021)
Mansplaining,
misogyny, and trolling on Clubhouse, by
Nirvana Bhandary (rec 24/06/2021)
Right
to bodily autonomy under threat, say activists
(ht 07/06/2021)
Badi
women urge government to legalise sex work
(ht 07/06/2021)
Women
treated as second class in Nepali films: Study
(kh 05/06/2021) [see corresponding research
report]
New
provisions issued to empower women (ht
28/05/2021)
The
subtle art of misogyny: Time to break free of it,
by Supriya Pudasainy (ht 27/05/2021)
How
are we failing our daughters? Parents have the
biggest role to play in taking care of the
mental health of their children, by Rojisha
Shahi Thakuri (kp 23/05/2021)
So
what does it take to be a modern Buhari? Tales
of a Modern Buhari, an anonymous feminist
account on Instagram, has become a safe space
for urban Nepali women to share their
experiences of being a woman in a patriarchal
society, by Srizu Bajracharya (kp
01/05/2021)
Gender
inclusive public spaces : Thoughtful design is
the key, by Niharika Mathema (ht 23/04/2021)
Six
Nepali women scale Mt Annapurna, by Arpana
Ale Magar (ht 17/04/2021)
How
a conversation around the length of one’s hair
exposed the toxic environment of a Kathmandu
school: A number of former and current students
at St Mary’s School say the institution reeks
of toxicity, with many suffering through
years of harassment, queerphobia, and
humiliation, by Ankit Khadgi and Samiksha
Baral (kp 13/04/2021)
Women’s
unpaid care work : Let’s recognise it, by
Bandana Rana (ht 13/04/2021)
Shamed
for bleeding : Nepali women still have to deal
with period shame, by Anjana Rajbhandary (nt
09/04/2021)
Still
spoken in whispers : The obstacles of opening up
about menstrual experiences : A woman’s
menstrual cycle is the most normal reality of
her life, but menstruation health and hygiene
are still treated as a taboo subject, by
Srizu Bajracharya (kp 01/04/2021)
Pandemic
Puts Women On Receiving End, by Namrata
Sharma (rn 31/03/2021)
Empowering
women farmers : Agricultural mechanisation is
the key, by Pratigya Silwal and Subha Khanal
(ht 25/03/2021)
My
body, my rights : There is growing evidence that
the Covid-19 economic recession has led to
increased vulnerabilities, by Christian
Manhart and Eunsong Kim (kp 24/03/2021)
Paradigm
shift to the menstrual cup : This budding
product is far better than other menstrual
products, by Kribina Pathak (kp 19/03/2021)
“The
goal is empowerment and independence of women”,
Supreme Court Justice Sapana Pradhan Malla on the
struggle ahead for Nepal’s feminist movement
(interview) (nt 19/03/2021)
Let
women lead : Men must be part of the equation
but women must be prepared and assert themselves,
by Simone Galimberti (rep 16/03/2021)
Why
participation isn’t enough : Women’s
participation in decision making may
not mean they are truly empowered, by Sahara
Basnet (kp 15/03/2021)
Making
the country safe for women : Many times people
who have been raped feel it was their fault and
they end up feeling disgusted for something
which was not their fault at all, by Nilima
Adhikari (rep 10/03/2021)
Harassment,
misogyny still all too common for women : The
law has ensured women’s representation in
the political sphere but attitudes have
not changed, by Samiksha Baral (kp
08/03/2021)
Our
right to move : Restrictive policies have only
served to delegitimise women’s free movement,
by Neha Choudhary and Sandhya Sitoula (kp
08/03/2021)
‘What
I do today will make things better for women
tomorrow’ : Quietly and away from the limelight,
across the country women are working on
behalf of women to make society more equitable
and just for them, by Srizu Bajracharya (kp
08(03/2021)
Women
entrepreneurs struggle to recover from pandemic
: Around 15 percent of women-run businesses
collapsed while others are operating only
partially, insiders say, by Krishana Prasain
(kp 08/03/2021)
Enterprising
women of Tarai : They have been training, they
have been starting businesses and 80 brides of
the community are in the process of a big
venture—they are planning a cooperative, by
Pallav Ranjan (ae 05/03/2021)
Vagina
conversations : Vagina could be a metaphor for
'womxn', but not all womxn identify with the
vagina, by Pratibha Tuladhar (nt 05/03/2021)
Holding
up the whole sky in Jumla : The mayor of
Chandanath Municpality and her deputy prove that
elected women leaders are more accountable,
by Monika Deupala (nt 05/03/2021)
Menstrual
hygiene campaign benefits girl students in
Mangalsen, by Menuka Dhungana (kp
01/03/2021)
Narrow
the gap : Although the constitution has not
discriminated its citizens based on gender, the
laws need to be amended to see this in practice
(ht 26/02/2021) [The
constitution, too, discriminates against women,
for example with regard to citizenship law!]
Curtailing
women’s liberty : The rule proposed by
Department of Immigration tries to force the
patriarchal vision of society onto women through
the fabric of legislation. This policy is based
on classification of sex, by Niyati Adhikari
(rep 24/02/2021)
Manifestation
of misogyny : If the government really wants to
‘protect’ women it needs to make the country
safe from violence, prejudices, practices and
laws that harm and humiliate women, by
Grishma Bista (rep 22/02/2021)
How
proposed immigration policy on women is deeply
flawed : Limiting women’s education, employment
and movement hinders their economic empowerment
and freedom thereby perpetuating their
dependency on men, by Tara Kanel (rep
18/02/2021)
Life
With Dignity A Must, by Namrata Sharma (rn
17/02/2021)
History
of female (im)mobility in Nepal : Immigration
Dept proposal is just the latest proof of a
misogynist, bungling bureaucracy, by Upasana
Khadka (nt 12/02/2021), Nepal’s
‘inferior’ women : Nepal is still a highly
patriarchal society that looks upon women as
second-class citizens (ae 12/02/2021), ‘Women’s
March’ in Kathmandu to demand an end to violence
against women and impunity : People from various
walks of life are participating in the march
from Basantapur to Singha Durbar gate (kp
12/02/2021), ‘Justice,
justice, justice’ : Fed up with inaction, women
march to demand end to impunity, by Samiksha
Baral (kp 13/02/2021), Hundreds
rally in capital for women’s rights (ht
13/02/2021)
How
Can Our Girls Be Safe?, by Namrata Sharma
(rn 10/02/2021)
Why
women should be given equal rights in
citizenship : Nepal’s sovereignty will be
stronger if we empower our women and children
and weaker if we disenfranchise the children of
Nepali mothers. A nation that treats its
citizens unequally is doomed from within, by
Riti Prasai (rep 09/02/2021)
Teenage
girl found dead in Baitadi forest : The girl’s
family suspects that she was murdered and have
demanded authorities to arrest the perpetrators,
by Tripti Shahi (kp 06/02/2021), Bhagirathi
Bhatta murder case: Six arrested for
interrogation (kh 06/02/2021)
Let’s
raise our voice : This is a time to unite and
educate every person to speak out against gender
violence, by Sachina Paudel (kp 31/01/2021)
Female
priest appointed at Annapurna Narayan Temple in
Kathmandu’s Ason (rep 29/01/2021), Newly
ordained female priest sees the recognition as
sign of changing times, by Anup Ojha (kp
02/02/2021))
When
women are not paid : Until and unless Nepali
women are relieved of their burden of unpaid
domestic works, gender equality in workforce
will remain a mirage and the goal of women
empowerment elusive, by Roshani Giri (rn
05/01/2021)
Entrenched
Bias Against Females, by Nishtha Shrestha
(rn 15/12/2020)
New
year gift: Women national football players to
get same salary as men : The decision by All
Nepal Football Association means women’s
pay will see an almost three-fold increase
starting January, by Prajwal Oli (kp
11/12/2020) [This is not
a gift, but a fundamental right that is
generally denied to women worldwide!]
Synonym
of a woman is “helpless,” says a government
textbook, and Facebook users are outraged
(rep 07/12/2020)
15,748
Women In Security Bodies Rise To Ranks For
Leadership, by Purushottam P Khatri (rn
06/12/2020)
Addressing
Rights To Safe Abortion, by Shyam P Lohani
(rn 06/12/2020)
Women
leaders set example for rest of Nepal : Imagine
if this women-led municipality in the Tarai was
upscaled nationwide, by Laxmi Basnet (nt
04/12/2020)
Women’s
contributions to development : Modernism and
globalisation are impacting Nepal’s social and
economic scenarios, by Greta Rana (kp
29/11/2020)
Remove
the ‘luxury tax’ to overcome period
poverty in Nepal : Nepal should stop charging
value added tax on menstrual products to make
them more affordable, by Jesselina Rana and
Shubhangi Rana (kp 18/11/2020)
Pandemic
disproportionately affects women, girls (ht
01/11/2020)
बुहारी
: लैंगिक विभेदको जीवन्त तस्बिर , by Ghambar
Nepali (Nayan Patrika 30/10/2020)
Patriarchal
Mind-Set Impedes Women Empowerment, by
Niyati Adhikari (rn 03/10/2020)
COVID-19
has taken heavy toll on women's entrepreneurship
in Nepal (rep 18/09/2020)
Access
to formal jobs more restricted for women (ht
11/09/2020)
Covid-19
stops women entrepreneurs in their tracksThey
are involved in sectors such as tourism, food
service, agriculture and manufacturing
enterprises that require daily transactions to
stay afloat, by Aditi Aryal (kp 07/09/2020)
Period
poverty in the time of a pandemic : For the past
five months, sanitary napkins haven’t reached
many remote villages, forcing girls to go back
to using unhygienic methods, according to a
study, by Elisha Shrestha (kp 02/09/2020)
Respect
For Nepali Women Leaders, by Namrata Sharma
(rn 02/09/2020)
Gender
inequality in education has widened during the
pandemic : With families struggling financially,
girls cannot focus on their studies. They have
to help out in household chores and do not
always have access to technology for remote
learning, by Elisha Shrestha (kp 26/08/2020)
Menstrual
huts: You demolish one, we’ll build another: In
Surkhet district alone, around 2,000
menstruation huts were demolished. But with the
end of the campaign, menstruation huts are
resurfacing, by Lalit Bahadur Budha and
Hiknat Bahaduur Nepali (ae 14/08/2020) [Ram, Ram, says the PM!]
Kathmandu
starts drive to provide sanitary pads to
students of all community schools in city: A
total of 14,810 girls will benefit from the
scheme, for which the city has released Rs 14.9
million to all its wards, by Anup Ojha (kp
07/08/2020)
No
To Gender Based Violence, by Namrata Sharma
(rn 29/07/2020)
Women
from Chepang community demand skill-oriented
training (ht 29/07/2020)
More
women journalists losing their jobs due to
coronavirus pandemic (ht 28/07/2020)
Ending
Widows’ Woes, by Mahima Devkota (rn
27/07/2020)
Pandemic
has once again thrown light on plights of Nepali
women migrant workers: Blanket ban on women from
migrating overseas for employment has only
encouraged labour trafficking and exploitation,
labour migration experts and rights groups say,
by Elisha Shrestha (kp 16/07/2020)
Women
rights organisations urge Human Rights Council
to take up issue of women’s equality in
citizenship rights: National Women Coalition has
called for a revision in the constitution to
redress discriminatory citizenship law, by
Binod Ghimire (kp 12/07/2020), Institutionalising
discrimination: A society that treats its sons
and daughters differently will never achieve
prosperity, by Bina Jha (kp 12/07/2020)
Women
politicians go unheard when they speak out but
are ostracised if they oppose party narrative:
The trials of Sarita Giri illustrate just how
difficult it is for outspoken women to have a
career in Nepali politics, politicians and
activists say, by Aditi Aryal (kp
10/07/2020)
Imagining
a motherland: Gender and nationalism; The
boundaries set by the nation, state, families
and societies often do not allow a woman to
become a citizen. This leads to women not
becoming the part of the nation but just a
national embodiment, by Swasti Gautam (rep
09/07/2020)
Exploitation
risk for women migrant workers has increased
during pandemic, labour migration experts and
rights activists say: They have urged the
government to protect vulnerable women migrant
workers and ensure their wages and other legal
rights, by Chandan Kumar Mandal (kp
05/07/2020)
Time
To Have Boldness On Feminism, by Namrata
Sharma (rn 01/07/2020)
From
farming to female empowerment: Formalising the
production process could improve working
conditions for women, by M Niaz Asadullah
(kp 30/06/2020)
Women’s
rights groups call for safe, dignified
repatriation and reintegration of returnee
female migrant workers: They have demanded that
the government allow registration of illegally
migrated women workers with the Foreign
Employment Board and ensure the rights of
returnee women migrant workers, by Chandan
Kumar Mandal (kp 19/06/2020)
Married
daughter entitled to inherit parental property:
SC, by Ram Kumar Kamat (ht 12/06/2020)
Skirting
the issue: On paper, Nepal has made some
important strides towards gender equality and
inclusion. Yet, in reality, the situation is far
from perfect, by Deepak Thapa (kp
11/06/2020)
A
shadow pandemic: With the lockdown grabbing all
attention, domestic violence against women is
often overlooked, by Nilima Adhikari (kp
07/06/2020)
Easing
the lockdown and its impact on women: For women
in Nepal, easing of the lockdown has potential
to further compound pre-existing gender
inequalities based on caste, class, geographical
location and various religious conventions and
beliefs, by Swasti Gautam (rep 06/06/2020)
Farming
falls on women's shoulders: But their work and
contributions tend to be invisible to
policymakers and academics, by Subarna Malla
Singh (kp 31/05/2020)
Periods
don’t pause for pandemics: Only by understanding
menstruation as a biological necessity can
society tackle the real problem, which is poor
menstrual hygiene, by Subidha Parajuli (kp
29/05/2020)
Revised
regulation in Security Allowance Act hangs
single helpless women out to dry: The new
regulation issued by the Department of National
ID and Civil Registration to exclude single
women below 60 years of age from receiving the
Helpless Single Woman Allowance, by Ramesh
Kumar Paudel (kp 29/05/2020)
Involving
men in eliminating taboos surrounding
menstruation: As menstrual stigmas have largely
been put in place and supported by men, their
participation in uprooting these taboos is
critical, gender rights activists say, by
Elisha Shrestha (kp 28/05/2020)
Shedding
light: It is disturbing that pages propagating
rape, misogyny, paedophilia and the invasion of
privacy exist (kp 08/05/2020)
For
Nepali women, rampant objectification and
sexualisation on the internet: One community on
Reddit with more than 4,500 members has been
sexualising, objectifying and humiliating women
with photos taken from their social media
accounts, by Aditi Aryal (kp 07/05/2020)
‘Women
are the most vulnerable right now’: As the
nation-wide lockdown extends, Lily Thapa talks
about how mass starvation could become as big a
crisis as Covid-19 in Nepal and how her
nonprofit has provided more than 10,000 meals to
low-income families (kp 07/05/2020)
(interview)
Agricultural
Feminisation In Nepal, by Namrata Sharma (rn
06/05/2020)
Extended
lockdown brings many women entrepreneurs to the
brink of failure: Women entrepreneurs are
engaged in agriculture, handicraft, hospitality
and other service sectors, by Krishana
Prasain (kp 04/05/2020)
For
many women, working from home has meant working
while doing the housework: During the lockdown,
women are having to work shifts from home
alongside unpaid housework, coupled with the
anxiety of losing their jobs if their
performance is subpar, by Aditi Aryal (kp
02/04/2020)
Women
and the media: While newsrooms have come a long
way, they must do more to become truly inclusive,
by Narayan P. Ghimire (kp 24/03/2020)
Women
invisible: Let's have more women on televised
discussions, in newspaper interviews and on
debate panels, by Andrea Upadhya (kp
19/03/2020)
Financially
free abroad, socially constrained at home: Women
migrants acquire expertise and financial
independence abroad but on return, they find
themselves trapped in a social order that does
not value their talent, by Elisha Shrestha
(kp 12/03/2020)
Women
have numerical strength in local units, but
little say: Gender pay gap runs deep in all
kinds of profession in Makwanpur, women leaders
say, by Pratap Bista (kp 09/03/2020)
Women’s
status: Figures speak for themselves, by
Chanda Chaudhary (ht 09/03/2020)
Nepali
women are unequal by law: Nepal is still lagging
far behind international human rights standards
concerning equal rights to citizenship, by
Jesselina Rana (kp 08/03/2020)
Empowerment
vs Commodification: While Nepal is heading
toward institutionalizing the federal democratic
republic, re-conceptualizing women empowerment
appears a vital task, by Mohan Nepali (rep
08/03/2020)
Women
journalists bring diverse perspectives, but
their presence in newsrooms remains sparse: It’s
time for the Nepali media to reflect on gender
inequality in newsrooms and act to reverse the
imbalance, women journalists say, by Srizu
Bajracharya (kp 08/03/2020)
Justice
and gender equality in the age of #MeToo: It is
only a matter of time before the men hiding
behind their title and power are unveiled and
brought to justice, by Sakun Gajurel (kp
08/03/2020)
No
More Misogyny, by Prativa Subedi (rn
08/03/2020)
Celebrating
the heroes: This Women’s Day, let’s celebrate
our everyday local women, our mothers, sisters,
maids, colleagues or common everyday women who
can be our heroes and inspire us, by Ushma
Rebel (rep 08/03/2020))
Caste-based
domestic violence against women rife in Rolpa,
by Dinesh Subedi (rep 08/03/2020)
There
are more women in politics, but few and far
between at decision-making level: Despite
inclusion refrain, there is a huge
underrepresentation of females in Nepali
political parties and state organs, by
Elisha Shrestha (kp 08/03/2020)
Female
guides juggle work and home, by Shusma
Barali (nt 06/03/2020)
All-male
panels are on their way out, but women’s
representation remains tokenistic: Instead of
acknowledging that women have valuable
contributions to make, they are often limited to
women-specific panels or are placed as
moderators, by Elisha Shrestha (kp
23/02/2020)
Students
are missing classes as schools fail to
distribute sanitary pads: In May 2019, President
Bidya Devi Bhandari had announced that sanitary
pads would be distributed to girls in community
schools for free from the beginning of the
current fiscal year, by, by Pratap Bista (kp
16/02/2020)
‘Herstory’
repeats itself: The misogynic politics of all
political parties mustered to make women the
political underdogs of Nepal, by Chandra
Bhadra (kp 13/02/2020)
Darchula
women tailor their way towards financial
independence: Most women are engaged in
tailoring businesses that have enabled them to
support themselves and their families, by
Manoj Badu (kp 05/02/2020)
Majhi
women build integrated settlement, by Dhruba
Dangal (rep 01/02/2020)
Who
will save Nepal’s poor new mothers? … a
government plan, or God?, by Rojita Adhikari
(nt 31/01/2020)
The
real reason women are less likely to seek cancer
treatment: Health literacy: Even women who know
the risks of cancer are hesitant to go to the
doctor, research has shown, by Elisha
Shrestha (kp 30/01/2020)
Women’s
concerns won’t be addressed unless they are at
the decision-making level, interview with
Binda Pandey, NCP (kp 27/01/2020)
Issue
Of Women’s Empowerment, by Kundan Aryal (rn
24/01/2020)
Women
at work, by Anweiti Upadhyay (rep
24/01/2020)
Women
Leadership At Local Level, by Mukti Rijal
(rn 23/01/2020)
Let
women rise (rep 22/01/2020)
Underage
mothers regret early marriage, by Mukti
Narayan Neupane (rep 21/01/2020)
Tipping
point on menstrual banishment in Nepal: It is
when local women take the lead to end the
practice that it is most effective, by Marty
Logan (nt 17/01/2020)
Young
girls taking one step at a time to fight
menstrual banishment: Although complete
eradication of the practice seems like a far cry
at the moment, various anti-Chhaupadi campaigns
launched by young women have paved a way to
fight against the practice, by Tularam
Pandey (kp 15/01/2020)
Widows
in Nepal still need to fight for their property
right: Despite legal provisions that ensure
widows’ rights to the property of their
husbands, implementation has been impeded by
societal norms and customs, by Elisha
Shrestha (kp 15/01/2020)
For
Nepali women seeking work in the Gulf, new
routes and old risks: Despite restrictions from
traveling to the Gulf countries, desperate
Nepali women are falling into traps of
trafficking agents who are exploiting new routes
to take them out of the country, by Parbat
Portel (kp 04/01/2020)
Changing
lives of Nepali women: Microfinance is
shattering the glass ceiling placed over women
by a patriarchal society. No longer confined,
women are dispelling gender norms. No longer
afraid, they are taking back right to be
independent, by Quah Wei Vei (rep
01/01/2020)
In
Achham, nineteen percent of women give birth
before 20: Despite many campaigns and efforts,
child marriage is still rampant in the district,
by Menuka Dhungana (kp 26/12/2019)
No
help at home for women migrants who come back
with babies: When women migrants get pregnant
out of wedlock, they are generally evicted from
their destination countries and come back to
stigma at home, by Elisha Shrestha (kp
25/12/2019)
Senior
citizens, single women and people with
disabilities deprived of social security
allowance in Siraha: They have been protesting
in front of the Bhagawanpur Rural Municipality
office for the past two days, by Bharat
Jarghamagar (kp 19/12/2019)
Bank
accounts for daughters in Karnali (ht
18/12/2019)
Everything
you need to know about Chhaupadi, the taboo
ritual of banishing women to period huts: Legal
actions and social campaigns have failed to make
people in Nepal’s remote western regions
understand the urgency of abolishing the deadly
tradition, by Elisha Shrestha (kp
12/12/2019)
Female
deputy speakers of various provinces complain of
being given rights, but no responsibilit: The
task of the deputy speaker is to run the house
in the speaker’s absence but the position
doesn’t allow one to take decisions
independently, by Pratiksha Kafle (kp
11/12/2019)
Nepali
women say they are not just ‘cheli’ but
individuals in their own right: Many have
protested the media’s use of the word ‘cheli’ to
refer to women athletes, arguing that it is
patronising and demeaning, by Ankit Khadgi
(kp 10/12/2019)
In
Janakpur, a traditional Mithila folk dance is helping
shape women’s identities: The folk dance, Jhijhiya,
has been economically empowering women of the Musahar
community, by Srizu Bajracharya (kp 10/12/2019)
Government
aims to achieve gender equality by 2030 (ht
09/10/2019)
Women
in climate hot spots face challenges adapting:
Migration of men, poverty and poor working
conditions diminish women’s power to act, by
Marty Logan (nt 06/12/2019)
“Menstruation
is not private business, it is everyone’s
business”: Nepali activists mark 8 December as
the Day for Dignified Menstruation, by Reeti
K.C. (nt 06/12/2019)
In
Achham, domestic abuse is driving women to
depression: Every week, the Bayalpata Hospital,
which has a dedicated mental health bureau, sees
over a hundred women suffering from depression,
doctors say, by Menuka Dhungana (kp
28/11/2019)
Meet
the women goldsmiths of Dharan: A few women
artisans are breaking the mould by pursuing a
profession that is predominantly considered a
man’s job, by Sumnima Chamling (kp
28/11/2019)
Women
shouldn't be forced to wear the sari in formal
settings: If women's clothes had pockets in
them, they wouldn't have to face difficult
situations, by Sabitri Gautam (kp
26/11/2019)
Our
songs from the forest: Finding freedom from
menstrual taboos in the lap of nature, by
Uma Bista (kp 23/11/2019)
Women
go abroad for work and return duped and abused:
There is no data on women who go abroad for
employment, but the trend is on the rise in
Rupandehi, according to an association of women
migrants, by Amrita Anmol (kp 17/11/2019)
1000
Women Entrepreneurs Seminar next week (ht
16/11/2019)
‘Beti
Bachau-Beti Padhau’ campaign fails to take off
this year in the absence of employees: Under the
scheme, which is often referred to as a pet
project of Chief Minister of Province-2, Lal
Babu Raut, every newborn girl is to be insured
across all eight districts in the province,
by Santosh Singh (kp 14/11/2019)
Anupama
Khunjeli: Women should have the confidence to
demand what we want: Nepal’s first female CEO of
a commercial bank talks about how her
institution is encouraging women entrepreneurs
and how women need to prioritise their careers,
by Pranaya SJB Rana (kp 20/10/2019)
Time
for celebration: While Nepali women continue to
face numerous obstacles in everyday life,
celebrations are in order to honor the
achievements that have been made so far, by
Katie Morris (rep 20/10/2019)
In
the far-west, dozens of women lose their lives
while fetching fodder every year: In the last
three years, 41 people have died while fetching
fodder in hills—of them, six were men and 35
women, by Basanta Pratap Singh (kp
20/10/2019)
Women
face unequal vulnerabilities during disasters:
The phenomenon of male out-migration alters how
women are affected during natural catastrophes,
by Shristi Shakya (kp 03/10/2019)
Dashain
is a time for celebration—but just for men:
Gender biases are more visible during festivals,
with household and kitchen chores assigned
solely to the women of the house, by Srizu
Bajracharya (kp 03/10/209)
Online
violence against women in Nepal on the rise:
Nearly 70 percent of the 353 cases filed at the
cybercrime bureau in the last two months were
online abuse directed towards women, by
Shuvam Dhungana (kp 01/10/2019)
Married
as children, women in Bajhang are abused,
abandoned and killing themselves: The majority
of marriages in the district are still between
underage children, which often leads to polygamy
and gender-based violence, by Basanta Pratap
Singh (kp 26/09/2019)
The
unending horror of gender-based violence: Unless
we question the very fabric of our social norms
and destroy them one by one, nothing will ever
change, by Pooja Pant (kp 26/09/2019)
Meet
Dang’s barefoot Dungli: Dungli Chaudhary says
she vowed never to wear slippers when her
request for one was turned down by her in-laws
decades ago, by Durgalal KC (kp 26/09/2019)
District
girls paint, write and scrawl for equal rights:
From crayons to coloured-water balloons, these
young Nepali girls are being encouraged to
express themselves, by Alisha Sijapati (kp
25/09/2019)
Hey
men, women don’t want to be told to be like a
woman: Nepali women still grapple with sexist
language and expressions that most men easily
dismiss, by Srizu Bajracharya (kp
18/09/2019)
Menstruation:
Let’s not make it taboo, by Sharmila
Ranabhat (ht 17/09/2019)
Women's
battle for citizenship continues: The new
proposals regarding the Citizenship Amendment
Bill still treat women as second-class citizens
(kp 16/09/2019)
Girls
just wanna have fun on Teej, but men won’t let
them: Nepali internet is divided over how Nepali
women should celebrate Teej, by Bhrikuti Rai
and June Karkee (kp 04/09/2019)
Teej
and the changing definition of womanhood: With
the expansion of urbanisation, migration and
economic opportunities, women will continue to
resist subordination, by Mira Mishra (kp
30/08/2019)
Celebrating
#Womenhumanitarians: In the aftermath of
disasters, women’s specific humanitarian needs
are often not adequately identified nor
responded to. Women and other minorities face
further marginalization during disasters, by
Indu Ghimire and Valerie Julliand (rep 19/08/2019)
Women
actively working as paralegal practitioners in
Dhankuta: Women are catching up to men and are
surpassing them in the quality of work they
produce at the office, by Ramesh Chandra
Adhikari (kp 18/08/2019)
Worldwide
women’s activist: Bandana Rana has risen from
local campaigner to a policy-making role on
gender rights at the UN, by Sewa Bhattarai
(nt 16/08/2019)
Need
for presenting progress of Nepali women stressed
(ht (ht 15/08/2019), Civil
society, gender rights activists call on govt to
present consolidated reports (rep
15/08/2019)
Gender
stereotypes: Hamper social inclusion, by
Bina Jha (ht 02/08/2019)
Away
from a society that judges, Nepali women are
turning to Facebook for help: Thousands of
Nepali women have joined closed—and
secret—Facebook groups in search of solidarity,
friendship and safe space, by Bhrikuti Rai
(kp 29/07/2019)
Women
workers in construction sector continue to
experience exploitation on several fronts: The
workers are formally organising against unequal
pay, workplace safety, and workplace harassment,
and this is helping them protect their rights,
recent study concludes, by Chandan Kumar
Mandal(kp 26/07/2019)
How
government bureaucracy killed a new mother: Goma
Osti needed an airlift from Nuwakot to Kathmandu
after postpartum complications. But a
labyrinthine bureaucracy delayed her treatment
by four hours—and took her life, by Arjun
Poudel (kp 26/07/2019)
Nepal
has more female DJs than ever, but the crowd’s
attitude remains the same: Female DJs encounter
teasing, obscene gestures and unwanted touching
from the crowds they perform for, but they’re
not quitting, by Sneha Dahal (kp 24/07/2019)
A
day with the only female driver of Sajha
Yatayat: Many appreciate Harmita Shrestha’s
work, calling it a step ahead for women
empowerment, but in a ‘man’s world’ days aren’t
always that easy, she says, by Anup Ojha (kp
18/07/2019)
The
dismissal of gender equality: Although the
government does have social inclusion
provisions, they are largely ignored or
purposefully ridiculed, by Deepak Thapa (kp
11/07/2019)
Despite
visibility, societal acceptance remains
difficult for LGBTIQ community: Many queer
individuals still hesitate to come out publicly
because they are afraid of stigma and
discrimination, by Shikha Neupane and Diya
Tijal (kp 30/06/2019)
Single
women still face social discrimination, by
Sabitri Dhakal (kp 25/06/2019)
Political
violence: Missing the gender lens, by Susan
Risal (ht 25/06/2019)
Why
do we encourage women to give up their
careers?We, as a society, never question the
added responsibility we so often place on women,
by Madhukar Upadhya (kp 21/06/2019)
CBS
report brings to fore huge gender pay gap:
Nepali women earn 29 per cent less than equally
educated men, by Sujan Dhungana (ht
20/06/2019)
Women
hold up more than half the sky: The road to the
last district in Nepal without one is being
built almost entirely by women, by Achyutraj
Bhandari (nt 14/06/2019)
Wider
world for women: Nepali women are taking on the
Solo Woman Travel Challenge to break barriers
and discover their country, by Sewa
Bhattarai (nt 14/06/2019)
Household
chores: Every citizen’s responsibility, by
Sangita Chalise (ht 12/03/2019)
Girls
who fightLearning self-defence helps girls feel
secure, empowered and confident, by Kusum KC
(kp 09/06/2019)
Breaking
the glass ceiling: The participation of women in
Nepal’s info-tech sector is still very low but
the future holds promise, by Asmod Karki (kp
01/06/2019)
Having
The Period Of Dignity, by Prativa Subedi (rn
31/05/2019)
In
educated and elite circles, a different kind of
‘period huts’: Young Nepali women living in
cities may not be banished to sheds, but many of
them are forced to adhere to a long list of
menstrual restrictions, by Tsering D Gurung
(kp 28/05/2019), Meet
Nepal’s ‘Pad Man’ who is challenging menstrual
taboos: Not content with selling reusable
sanitary pads, Gyan Maharjan visits communities
and schools in Lalitpur, teaching girls, boys
and teachers about menstrual hygiene, by
Anup Ojha (kp 28/05/2019)
Naugadh
women are learning to become economically
independent amid exodus of men: Around 176 women
were trained in vegetable farming, hosiery
making and Allo (Himalayan nettle) production,
by Manoj Badu (kp 28/05(2019)
Mothers’
groups uplift women and create social awareness
in rural parts of Baitadi: These groups have
also been actively championing causes to create
a safe and equitable society for women, by
Tripti Shahi (kp 27/05/2019)
This
is how society and state continue to fail rape
survivors: Many survivors have their lives
uprooted, and are forced to relocate, live away
from their family and friends, and start
fresh in an unfamiliar setting, by
Tsering D Gurung (kp 25/05/2019)
Sherpa
widows scale Mt Everest to inspire single women
(ht 24/05/2019)
Say
no to dowry: Don’t make it a status symbol,
by Sangita Chalise (ht 24/05/2019)
Who
runs this bank? Women.Tripureshwor office of
Agriculture Development Bank is one among its
three branches staffed entirely by women, by
Abani Malla (kp 19/05/2019)
Sex
and society: A society that expects women to be
virgin until the day they get married and
expects these women to become sex slaves will
never know the impact women have in changing
history, by Ushma Rebel (rep 19/05/2019)
Nepali
women abroad: Effective policies should be
created to make life easier for women migrant
workers, by Prabha Poudel (kp 19/05/2019)
Allure
toward tailoring growing in Humla women, by
Janak Bahadur Shahi (rep 15/05/2019)
Why
aren’t there more women in IT? Nepal is part of
a global trend in technology—there are vastly
fewer women in tech than men, by Prajesh SJB
Rana (kp 14/05/2019)
Failed
marriages blamed for two women’s suicides by
Ritesh Tripathi (rep 14/05/2019)
Joint
land ownership campaign leads to rise in number
of women land owners in Baitadi, by Tripti
Shahi (kp 12/05/2019)
Majority
of girls in Achham district out of school system,
by Menuka Dhungana (kp 06/05/2019)
Rural
municipality provides public speaking training
for women, by Kishan Sangeet Nepali (kp
06/05/2019)
Nepal’s
indecision
on same-sex marriage leaves couples in limbo:
Nepal acknowledged rights for LGBTIQ community
over a decade ago, but same-sex couples who want
to tie the knot continue to face hurdles, by
Asmita Manandhar and Alisha Sijapati (kp
04/05/2019)
Only
22 percent of working-age women are employed in
Nepal: There is also gender pay gap and it must
close, experts say, by Prithvi Man Shrestha
(kp 02/05/2019)
‘65
pc cases of violence against women occur inside
home’ (ht 02/05/2019) [see WOREC
Nepal report]
Women’s
empowerment: Still an uphill task, by Kokila
Khadka KC (ht 01/05/2019)
Voices
of women being heard in Dadeldhura, by Panta
(kp 29/04/2019)
Beauty
for what purpose? Miss Nepal may provide a
platform for many women, but it cannot claim to
be a source of empowerment, by Shrijana
Singh Yonjan (kp 16/04/2019)
Don’t
compete, cooperate: The savings and credit
concept has proven to be an effective tool to
empower women, by Prativa Subedi (kp
14/04/2019)
Women
groups in Kailali empower rural women, by
Ganesh Chaudhary (kp 11/04/2019)
Is
Nepal’s
progressive trans rights movement bracing for a
setback? LGBTIQ community expresses reservations
about provisions in the citizenship bill which,
according to them, can result in further
discrimination against sexual minorities, by
Asmita Manandhar (kp 31/03/2019)
Women
in remote Achham village taking lead roles,
by Menuka Dhungana (kp 24/03/2019)
Citizenship
bill
clause on sex change certification alarms LGBT
community: Sexual minorities fear losing hard
won victories if officials approve
amendment demanding a ‘proof’ of sex change in
the citizenship bill, by Bhrikuti Rai (kp
18/03/2019), Right
to choose: A citizenship amendment that demands
proof of gender reassignment is unfair to the
trans community (kp 19/03/2019)
Death
of
a transgender woman raises alarm among the trans
community in Kathmandu: Members of the LGBTI
community say the death of Junu Gurung is
the latest reminder of just how perilous
living as a trans person can be in Nepal, by
Tsering D Gurung (kp 12/03/2019)
Be
the change: Behavioural transformation is the
key to societal transformation, by Sujeev
Shakya (kp 12/03/2019)
He
for she: Men too have a responsibility in
ensuring gender equality in every field, by
Prakash Banjade (kp 10/03/2019)
In
Dhangadhi, women auto drivers are gaining
financial independence, by Mohan Budhayer
(kp 09/03/2019)
How
do
transwomen describe themselves? Women.Meet the
women who are defying media’s unrealistic body
imagesTranswomen shaping broader, inclusive
narrative to redefine womanhood, by Asmita
Manandhar (kp 08/03/2019)
Seeking
change: Women and girls should have autonomy
over their bodies, by Sivananthi
Thanenthiran (kp 01/03/2019), She
Decides Day: Speaking out for sexual rights,
by Sivananthi Thanenthiran (ht 01/03/2019)
The
silent
sufferers: Labor-intensive agriculture increases
women’s workload in the farms and the overworked
women farmers face many health issues, by
Ram Saran Tamang (rep 01/03/2019)
Nepali
women lag behind in economic empowerment (ht
01/03/2019)
Girls'
education still not a priority for Jumla
families, by DB Budha (rep 25/02/2019)
Concerns
of Nepali women to be presented at international
stage, by Nayak Paudel (kp 24/02/2019), Customs
trump law on issue of gender equality (kp
24/02/2019)
The
erasure of transwomen: Social constructions of
‘womanhood’ need to include all women, by
Rukshana Kapali (kp 19/02/2019)
We,
as
a society, have kept quiet on sexual harassment,
abuse and violence so far’: Issues of sexual
violence must be included in public discourses
to ensure equality for women (kp 19/02/2019)
Dalit
woman thrown out of house in Salyan, by
Biplav Maharjan (kp 17/02/2019)
Tharu
women are taking role of community chief in
Kailali, by Ganesh Chaudhary (kp 15/02/2019)
Women
run the fields: Agriculture in Nepal is
experiencing rapid feminisation - why isn’t
legislation catching up?, by Maina Dhital
(kp 03/02/2019)
Focus
beyond reserved seats, Dahal tells women (kp
01/02/2019) [Yes, they
are still ignored by all political parties
despite appropriate legal regulations!]
Remarriage
for single women still not an easy choice,
by Sher Bahadur Jero (rep 27/01/2019)
Rise
against
cybercrimes: Women are more susceptible to cyber
crime as perpetrator’s identity remains
anonymous and he may constantly threaten and
blackmail the victim by using different
identities, by Dikchya Raut (rep 20/01/2019)
On
identity: In Nepal, a woman’s identity is still
tied to their male kinfolk—first father, then
husband, by Bibhu Kuitel (kp 19/01/2019)
Madhesi
woman drives auto rickshaw for livelihood in
Janakpur, by Shahiman Rai (kp 17/01/2019)
Breaking
the
silence on #MeToo: Women’s silence in Nepal’s
feeble #MeToo movement has also to do with
illiteracy and socioeconomic disadvantages
majority of women face, by Gyanu BK (rep
06/01/2019)
Study
explores plight of Nepali female migrant workers
in Gulf countries (ht 06/01/2019)
Give
birth to a girl, get insurance of Rs 100,000: CM
Raut, by Madan Thakur (rep 30/12/2018)
Tharu
women becoming self-reliant thru farming (ht
30/12/2018)
Men
in business, women in socio-political affairs,
by DB Budha (rep 30/12/2018)
Expensive
periods: Why tax on pads?, by Pooja Bista
(ht 28/12/2018)
The
new trailblazers: It is important to open up
non-agricultural avenues for rural women, by
Khilendra Basnyat (kp 27/12/2018)
FWEAN
for creating enabling environment for women
entrepreneurship (rep 25/12/2018)
Chhaupadi-free
drive ineffective, by Menuka Dhungana (kp
22/12/2018)
Let
women work: Our society does not encourage women
to develop entrepreneurship skill even if they
are capable of doing so, by Kabi Adhikari
(rep 22/12/2018)
Combating
trafficking:
There are no urban centers, in and outside
Nepal, where Nepali women and girls may not have
been forcibly trafficked, by Nilam Sangroula
(rep 19/12/2018)
Women
labour migration: Causes and consequences,
by Jaya Shor Chapagain (ht 18/12/2018)
Experts
seek gender-responsive policies for safe
migration of women (rep 13/12/2018)
Returnee
women migrants starting their own businesses,
by Sarita Shrestha (rep 10/12/2018)
Staying
home during periods becoming normal in rural
Achham, by Khamma Khatri (rep 09/12/2018)
Madam
diplomat: Women should get more opportunities to
show their potential in the global arena, by
Illa Mainali (kp 06/12/2018)
Women
in
civil services up by 8 percent: In the fiscal
year 2017-18, at least 20,334 women held various
positions in government offices-making it 23
per-cent of the civil service. Government
records show there are 87,753 civil servants
across the country, by Prithvi Man Shrestha
(kp 08/11/2018), Let
them in: Active representation of women in
bureaucracy cannot be ignored anymore (kp
08/11/2018)
Educate
girls & women: For a prosperous community,
by Pushpa Priya (ht 07/11/2018)
#Theytoo:
Recent #MeToo accusations barely scratch the
surface of widespread hidden abuse of women in
Nepal, by Sewa Bhattarai (nt 02/11/2018)
Girl
child insurance scheme gains popularityThe
policy has reduced financial burden on parents:
Locals (ht 30/10/2018)
Deconstructing
#Metoonepal: Besides dismantling patriarchy, the
movement is also about creating safe spaces for
women, by Prakriti Yonzon (kp 29/10/2018)
Power,
consent, and my newsroom: Let’s hope that local
stories challenge the culture of complacency in
our workplaces, by Subina Shrestha (kp
17/10/2018)
Let
women
decide: It’s a long way for Nepali women to
freely choose their partners as they want, when
they want and how they want, pre-wedding or
post-divorce, by Ushma Rebel (rep
14/10/2018), My
struggle
with widowhood: A man marries another woman just
after completing 13 days of death rites of his
wife but a wife, when widowed, is doomed, by
Lily Thapa (rep 14/10/2018)
Parties
fail to represent 33 percent women: The issue of
women’s representation in the central committee
surfaced after the recently unified NCP failed
to assign roles to women in line with the legal
requirement, by Sanjeev Giri (kp 08/10/2018)
For
women, by women: Nepali women need to be unified
at the forefront to inspire any kind of change
in society, by Somy Paudyal (kp 07/10/2018)
Breeders
of machismo culture: Violence based on gender
has much to do with societal power structures,
by Bhawana Upadhyay (kp 01/10/2018)
Burning
shame: Gender-based violence flourishes because
of a misogynistic society (kp 27/09/2018)
Pushing
women
away: It is very difficult for women to access
information on safe migration. Many do not
realize the implications of being flown via
India or Nepal, by Ayushma Basnyat (rep
22/09/2018)
Women
and the welfare state: The second class
treatment that women feel they are getting
should be eliminated, by Kartika Yadav (kp
20/09/2018)
They
are citizens too: Gender equality was sacrificed
in the name of preserving social and cultural
values, by Bharati Silawal Giri (kp
14/09/2018)
Deconstructing
Nepali
womanhood: Nepali women are fighting against all
odds and breaking all forms of social barriers.
It is unfair to portray them as weak and
dependent, by Guneshwor Ojha (rep
12/09/2018)
Women
who drive, by Swasti Gautam (rep 31/08/2018)
Workshop
held to prepare report on women’s issues (ht
29/08/2018)
Unequal
society:
Many tend to think that our social structure
will break down if women are empowered
politically and infidelity will increase, by
David Kainee (rep 26/08/2018)
End
inequalities:
Children of Nepali women, irrespective of who
she is married to, should unquestionably be
entitled to citizenship by descent (ht
20/08/2018)
Nepal’s
suffragette moment, by Om Astha Rai (nt
17/08/2018)
Women
take over farming: Male out-migration and gender
norms driving feminisation of agriculture in
Madhes, by Krishna Kumar Sah (kp 16/08/2018)
Inevitability
Of Womenomics, by Kanhaiya Mathema (rn
16/08/2018)
Bill
to amend citizenship act: Ruling party lawmakers
object tweaks to law, by Tika R. Pradhan (kp
14/08/2018) [The male
Tagadhari politicians will take care that women
will never be equal to men!]
Invisible
citizen: It is imperative that the state
guarantee women’s entitlements as citizens
(kp 13/08/2018)
Gender,
nation, and women’s honour: Women’s bodies have
been instrumentalised to legitimise certain
groups’ political and business interests under
the pretext of nationalism, by Sangita Thebe
Limbu and Kalpana Jha (kp 10/08/2018)
Son
worshippers: It is sad when women have to
achieve recognition by having a male child
(kp 09/08/2018)
Women
in
cilvil service: Why we lag behind; While the
decision making executive positions are strictly
male arena, women officers often get lost in the
labyrinthine of the social and cultural gender
constructs, by Smita Poudel (rep 05/08/2018)
Women
in agriculture: Agriculture sector is being
feminised but their contribution is still
undervalued, by Arati Joshi (kp 02/08/2018)
Teaching
menstruation
to boys: We need to teach boys about
menstruation. Early interventions will instill
sense of responsibility in adolescent boys to
educate their peers, by Ayush Joshi (rep
14/07/2018)
Let
women rise: Economic and social empowerment will
help women emerge as leaders and policy-makers,
by Sarmila Bagale (rep 14/07/2018)
What
makes news: The media gives little coverage to
women’s issues regardless of their importance,
by Rashmila Prajapati (kp 08/07/2018)
Spotlight
on female trekking guides, by Manoj
Ghartimagar (rep 08/07/2018)
Participation
of Nepali Women in Politics, by Sarmila
Bagale (rn 27/06/2018)
Conflict-hit
women: Still far from justice, by Susan
Risal (ht 14/06/2018)
Women
and livestock: Let’s recognise their roles,
by Kedar Karki (ht 11/06/2018)
Untold
stories
of women: Untold stories of rural women need to
be told for change and for raising awareness
that women’s rights are human rights, by
Sabita Nakarmi (rep 03/06/2018)
Disproportionately
disadvantaged: Entrenched gender biases make
women more vulnerable to disasters and its
effects, by Jyotika Rimal (kp 20/05/2018)
Women
woes: Even as the importance of women in
agriculture in Nepal has increased, they
continue to be undervalued, by Kantilata
Thapa (kp 13/05/2018)
From
the fields: Women can add value to climate
change-friendly farming practices and
technologie, by Menila Kharel Dhungel (kp
06/05/2018)
Let
a
girl live: Why does our society only teach girls
how to behave, where to go, what to do and what
to wear? Why cannot we teach the boys to protect
independence of girls?, by Jyoti Sharma (rep
29/04/2018)
‘War,
disaster worsen women’s condition’ (kp
26/04/2018)
Menstruating
women, girls fear ‘invisible’ power (ht
23/04/2018)
Rethinking
society: Violence against women is not only a
female problem, it is also an issue of men,
by Milan Pandey (kp 15/04/2018)
Can
men
be feminists? If men want to understand feminism
and help the cause, they first need to analyse
the norms that inform their social identity,
by Sangita Thebe Limbu and Kalpana Jha (kp
13/04/2018)
Women
increasingly opting for divorce to end abusive
marriages (rep 11/04/2018)
Strengthening
Tamang women: Education and jobs will prevent
them from falling into the trap of human
traffickers, by Samaya Lama (kp 08/04/2018)
Women
demolishing Chhaupadi sheds in Achham, by
Khamma Khatri (rep 04/04/2018)
Girls
learn lessons on self-defence (kp
01/04/2018)
Women
enjoying economically independent lives in
Dhading, by Sarita Shrestha (rep 26/03/2018)
Teenage
pregnancy rates on the rise (ht 22/03/2018)
An
unresolved agenda: Current lawmakers have the
opportunity to end the discrimination faced by
women on citizenship rights, by Anjita
Parajuli (kp 20/03/2018)
Entertainment
industry workers seek respect (ht
17/03/2018)
Girls
of Badi community being deprived of school
education (ht 17/03/2018)
Should
we
still focus on woman farmers? The answer is yes,
because attitudes and practices at the policy
formulation and implementation level are still
gendered, by Gitta Shrestha (kp 16/03/2018)
A
woman on Women’s Day: No matter the ethnicity or
grouping, Nepali women face strange scenarios of
extreme prejudice, by Pramod Mishra (kp
15/03/2018)
VAW
and Women’s Empowerment, by Uttam Maharjan
(rn 15/03/2018)
Gender
equality: New Opportunities, by Pratik
Chhetri and Neha Malla (ht 13/03/2018)
In
pursuit of understanding: Many rural women do
not think that International Women’s Day is
relevant to them, by Prativa Subedi and
Juliette Josse (kp 11/03/2018), A
long way to go: There are many women whose
sufferings remain hidden, by Sulochana Nepal
(kp 11/03/2018)
Choosing
grace:
The strict customs that women have helped impose
on other women have been too perplexing for the
younger generations, by Anusha Thapa (rep
10/03/2018)
Women
to make Thalara Rural Municipality free of
inequity, by Basanta Pratap Singh (kp
09/03/2018)
Women
trained as masons build houses in Eklephant,
by Anish Tiwari (kp 09/03/2018), Fewer
women in quake rebuilding work says survey
(kp 10/03/2018)
An
unfinished agenda: We need to rethink the
influence gender biased mythology plays on our
treatment of women and girls, by Bhawana
Upadhyay (kp 08/03/2018)
Time
is now #PressforProgress, by Elisabeth von
Capeller, Veronica Cody, Vallerie Julliand,
Mashfee Shams and Alaina B. Teplitz (ht
08/03/2018), Gender
equality still a distant dream, by Bhim
Chapagain (rep 08/03/2018)
Hindu
custom of Chhaupadi: Kanchanpur continues to
isolate menstruating women in sheds (kp
03/03/2018)
Triple
burden of women: Conflicting gender norms,
by Anusha Ban (ht 02/03/2018)
Who
runs the world? Girls: Five generations of women
in a Kathmandu family underline the importance
of educating daughters, by Sahina Shrestha
(nt 02/03/2018)
Way
to emancipation: Many girls migrating from rural
to urban areas have become successful
beauticians, by Guneshwor Ojha (kp
25/02/2018)
Child
marriage taking toll on rural women's life,
by Jagat Khadka (rep 24/02/2018)
Making
room
for women: Women can be empowered through
creation of equal opportunities for leadership
at all levels of decision-making, by Sapana
Phuyal (kp 20/02/2018)
An
unequal
constitution: For all the years of debates and
discussions on constitutional issues, we could
not do justice to Nepali women, by Mohna
Ansari (kp 19/02/2018)
Women
and men: Greater efforts should be made towards
gender sensitisation to create a better society,
by Bina Jha (kp 11/02/2018)
Against
lingerie feminism: The question of women’s
empowerment and liberation should not be judged
by the clothes she wears, by Sangita Thebe
and Kalpana Jha (kp 04/02/2018)
A
different lens: How virtual experience of
swapped gender roles can change social
understanding, by Renaud Meyer and Kamal Raj
Sigdel (kp 28/01/2018)
Women
reluctant to work in forestry sector, by
Rupesh Acharya (ht 28/01/2018)
Practicing
care:
An everyday story; Unequal gender relations are
not limited to the household. In the workplace
and also in one’s social circle, women have to
do a greater share of the unpaid emotional and
care work but there is hardly any space to talk
about these things openly, by Dawa Sherpa
(kp 27/01/2018)
The
migrant wife, by Manita Raut (rep
27/01/2018)
Are
you a feminist? Why do most people not prefer to
be called as feminists? Is it because feminism
is a taboo?, by Bina Jha (rep 22/01/2018)
Bridging
the gender gap: Everyone should be given equal
opportunities so that they can be assets to the
nation building process, by Samaya Lama (kp
21/01/2018)
Pad
Power: Taiwanese activist leads village women to
embrace the beauty of the feminine cycle, by
Ziyu Lin (nt 19/01/2018), Removing
menstrual shame: The underlying problem for
Buddhist and Hindu women in Mustang who avoid
certain activities while menstruating is that
they believe their naturally functioning bodies
are shameful, by Clara Hare-Grogg (nt
19/01/2018)
‘Sahi
Ho!’ campaign launched (ht 18/01/2018)
Rautahat
rural women becoming self-reliant (ht
16/10/2018)
Continuous
isolation:
Changing a long-held tradition requires a more
comprehensive approach than legislation alone
can ever provide, by Navaraj Pudasaini (kp
14/01/2018) [on Chhaupadi]
Female
masons making their marks in reconstruction,
by Sarita Shrestha (rep 02/01/2018)
Shedding
veils
to shed tradition: Women in Siraha’s Jahadi
settlement find their voice as they defy the
practice of wearing ‘Ghumto’, by Bharat
Jarghamagar (kp 01/01/2018)
Male
chambers:
Only six of 165 candidates picked for House of
Representatives under FPTP are women, which
comes to a paltry 3.63 percent, by Meena
Bhatta (rep 24/12/2017)
Women
risking their lives in Achham in obsession for a
male child, by Khamma Khatri (rep
16/12/2017)
Pressed
into service: Massage parlours operating as
fronts for illegal activities give real ones a
bad name, by Ruku Pandey (kp 12/12/2017)
Women
still doing more household chores than men
(ht 02/12/2017)
Working
Women, by Sanjog Rai (nt 01/12/2017)
Better
safe than sorry, by Giri Bahadur Sunar (rep
27/11/2017)
Breaking
with tradition women perform final rites (ht
25/11/2017)
Space
of absence: Women and other marginalised gender
groups cannot afford to ignore
inaccessibility to fundamental rights, by
Archana Thapa (kp 24/11/2017)
Nilam’s
dream: Nilam’s activism against abuse has left
her ostracised by her own community as she
continues to try to convince Muslim, Dalit and
minority families to protect and educate their
girls, by Sonia Awale (nt 27/10/2017)
Makhamali
garlands turning Gundu women self-reliant,
by Anup Ojha (kp 19/10/2017)
Call
to ensure a better future for girls (ht
12/10/2017)
Being
a
girl: Although I see smile on the faces of
parents after the birth of their first child, a
girl, their disappointment is hard to conceal,
by Usha Pokharel (rep
07/10/23017)
My
body, sacred or profane? To remove the idea of
impurity associated with women's body during
menstruation, it is crucial to change how people
view the monthly cycle, by Pabitra Gurung
(rep 07/10/2017)
Strength
of a woman: Shortcomings with the microcredit
approach have to be addressed to fuel women’s
development, by Guneshwor Ojha (kp
22/09/2017)
At
21, Sita Sunar runs own furniture business,
by Kishan Sangit Nepali (rep 09/09/2017)
Number
of
women trek guides on rising trend, by Lal
Prasad Sharma (kp 04/09/2017)
Old
beliefs
die hard: The stigma surrounding menstruation
should be effectively challenged, by Bhawana
Upadhyay (kp 27/08/2017)
Just
victims?
Nepali women migrating out for work do also come
back with higher remit and non-exploitative
experiences, by Guneshwor Ojha (kp
25/08/2017)
Women
can
have it all: Achieving work-life balance often
seems to be an impossible goal, by Sushila
Nepal (kp 13/08/2018)
Gender-aware
policies
needed: Nepal can’t hope to graduate from its
LDC status without reaching out to the poor,
by Subhash Nepali (kp 06/08/2017)
Give
me a daughter, by Geeta Pandey (rep
05/08/2017)
Awakening
Urgency For Nepali Females, by Prem Khatry
(rn 01/08/2017), More
teeth
sought for NWC (ht 01/08/2017)
The
second
sex: Menstruation - a natural, physiological
cycle - should be destigmatised (kp
20/07/2017) [Why do you
not call male gender the second sex? Life is
given by women!]
Missing
daughters:
At the root of sex-selective abortion lies the
culture of preferring sons, by Anjita
Parajuli (kp 16/07/2017)
Rural
women
turning into entrepreneurs (ht 14/07/2017)
Poverty
forcing
women into migration: Report (kp
13/07/2017), Exodus:
Structural
barriers and discrimination in local labour
market drive women to work abroad (kp
14/07/2017)
Village
women
transform into clean energy entrepreneurs in Nepal
initiative: Empower Generation plans to expand the
number of female energy entrepreneurs to all 75
districts from the current 11 (kp 13/07/2017) [see
website]
Her
future
is our future: When a woman is free to make
choices about her life, her children, her family
and everybody else will benefit, by Giulia
Vallese (kp 11/07/2017), Women
empowerment:
Many barriers, by Prativa Subedi (ht
12/07/2017)
Women
Need
To Stand Up For Themselves, by Aditi Aryal
(sp 07/07/2017)
Women
at work: Women are praised for creating life but
never encouraged to build something for the
future, by Priyanka Chand (rep 03/07/2017)
Women
make
up majority of rights victims, shows study
(ht 01/07/2017)
Fair
Sex,
Unfair Deal: Women’s empowerment underpins
equal, just and peaceful societies (sp
23/06/2017)
War
on
words: Branding feminists as terrorists may be
libellous because ‘terrorist’ is a highly
politicised term, by Archana Thapa (kp
23/06/2017)
34
pc
women victimised by kin (ht 19/06/2017)
Girls
lag
despite outnumbering boys in exams, by Binod
Ghimire (kp 18/06/2017), Education
of
daughters: Disparity in SEE performance shows
that girls still have a long way to go (kp
19/06/2017)
Oh
boy,
women bleed! Only when mothers treat
menstruation as just another natural growth in
their children’s bodies, will little girls will
learn to accept their bodies and grow up to be
confident women, by Shradha Giri Bohora (kp
17/06/2017)
Voice
for
equality: Nepal’s Female Labor Force
Participation Rate is 80 percent. But women have
a long way to go achieve gender equality, by
Ayushma Basnyat (rep 13/06/2017)
Women
power:
Arming women with legal and constitutional
rights is inadequate without an attitudinal
change in society, by Apurba Bhattarai (kp
04/06/2017)
Colour
Code For Woman Only!, by Bhawana Pokhrel (rn
02/06/2017)
Thanka
art
proves a boon for illiterate woman, by
Rajkumar Parajuli (ht 01/06/2017)
Including
the
excluded: The real winners of the local
elections are not political parties, but women,
by Om Astha Rai (nt 26/05/2017), Federal
feminine
republic of Nepal (nt 26/05/2017)
Female
migrants
at higher risk of suicide (ht 11/05/2017)
Women
in
reconstruction: Rasuwa women are taking on new
roles to build back better, by Utsav Shakya
(kp 29/04/2017)
Woman
beaten
in captivity by husband, in-laws over dowry
(kp 28/04/2017)
Better
than
before? Women’s empowerment requires concrete
policies and their robust implementation (kp
28/04/2017)
President’s
Women
Empowerment Programme starts in 26 districts: It
aims to provide skill development training to
Dalit, indigenous and marginalised women, by
Samipa Khanal (kp 24/04/2017)
A
social syndrome: Gendered norms on childcare
have resulted in the construction of guilt in
women, by Anjam Singh (kp 23/04/2017)
Women’s
voices
enrich public life: Building strong gender equal
communities requires every individual citizen to
stand firmly in the political landscape, by
Valerie Julliand, Alaina B. Teplitz, Mashfee Binte
Shams, Rensje Teerink, W. Swarnalatha Pereira and
Ingrid Dahl-Madsen (kp 21/04/2017)
Women
in
politics: The way forward, by Ayush Joshi
(ht 19/04/2017)
Need
for
black feminism: Madhesi women face double
discrimination: one, as Madhesis and, two, as
women, by Kalpana Jha (kp 14/04/2017)
Most
women unaware of reservations, by Jitendra
Kumar Jha (rep 04/04/2017)
Female
turnout
disappoints EC: Women job aspirants account for
only 14pc of total 179,486 applicants, by
Manish Gautam (kp 02/04/2017)
Road
to
Inclusion: Progress in inducting women into
public service may be small, but in light of the
country’s dismal history of inclusivity, it is a
much welcome change, by Prithvi Man Shrestha
(kp 01/04/2017)
On
‘wine
feminists’: These are self-styled feminists who
are often found in conferences and parties in
Kathmandu, sipping their wine and talking about
women’s rights, by Shuvechha Ghimire (rep
01/04/2017)
Exploring
resilience:
Women are more vulnerable to climate change
because of their dependence on climate sensitive
sectors, by Prativa Sapkota (kp 31/03/2017)
When
women
win: The new constitution offers a valuable
opportunity to ensure that women and girls have
the same prospects in life as their male
counterparts, by Alaina B. Teplitz (rep
30/03/2017)
Blame
us
all, not just men: Continuing to castigate men
will only make gender polarisation more rigid,
by Seema Subedi (kp 28/03/2017)
Gender
equality:
The Nordic Model, by Kjell Tormod Pettersen
(rep 22/03/2017)
Khadka
addresses
UN’s CSW session (kp 17/03/2017) [??]
Booklet
on
women entitlements published: The booklet
contains information related to economic
benefits provided and initiatives taken by
various agencies for women (kp 16/03/2017)
Girls’
education:
Failed programme, by Chun Bahadur Gurung (ht
14/03/2017)
Mountain
women
The difference between a broken community and a
thriving one is the presence of women who are
valued, by Sunayana Basnet (kp 08/03/2017),
Bold
action now: In Nepal, while women work as much
as men, the gender wage gap is still in the
bottom half of the world ranking, by Valerie
Julliand (rep 08/03/2017), Is
women
empowerment just women employment? If this day
is to celebrate your and my achievements, then
it does not need to be marked in the calendar,
by Sambridhi Gyawali (rep 08/03/2017), Exemplary
Muslim sisters empowering women, by Kalendra
Sejuwal (rep 08/03/2017), Working
on
gender: We saw no representation of Himalayan
women in history or literature, nor in the
research and development sectors, by Chhaya
Vani Namchu and Menaka Hamal (rep 08/03/2017), Championing
their
cause: We need to be more proactive in
identifying true champions of women's economic
empowerment in Nepal and build a strong
coalition, by Gail Marzetti and Pukar Malla
(rep 08/03/2017), Women
continue
to face discrimination at home, workplace
(ht 08/03/2017), Women’s
role
critical for social advancement: Prez (kp
09/03/2017), #beboldforchange:
Things
are far from ideal for Nepali women, but the
fight for equal rights continues (kp
09/03/2017), Thank
you, men: Let’s acknowledge the role of good men
who help women with their personal and career
growth, by Rusha Giri (rep 09/03/2017), Empowering
women:
The most urgent task that lies ahead is to make
sure that women are treated equally in all
spheres of life (ht 09/03/2017)
From
safe
motherhood to safe womanhood: Nepali women
deserve to be recognised as complete human
beings and equal citizens, not just as mothers,
by Poonam Thapa (kp 07/03/2017)
The
purse
strings: Women have little control over household
finance despite being important earners, by Ashika
Sharma (kp 07/03/2017)
On
the
home front: Listen to the unheard voices of the
suffering wives of migrant workers left behind, by
Roni Pradhan (kp 07/03/2017)
The
curious case of unmarried mothers, by Anjali
Subedi (kp 03/03/2017)
Leave
no
one behind: Absorbing women into the labour
market by reinforcing traditional gender roles
is not empowering, by Sangita Thebe-Limbu
(nt 03/03/2017)
Women,
teenage
girls receive training to make sanitary pads,
by Agandhar Tiwari (kp 01/03/2017)
All
our
daughters: Where are Nepali women in the
metaphor of coffins, bakasko bimba, which
pervades pathologies of remittance reporting?,
by CK Lal (rep 27/02/2017)
Win-all
trade:
Women in Baglung, Parbat and Sindhuli districts
have greatly increased their income from export
of items made from allo, by Erica Prasai
(rep 27/02/2017)
Red
Tika
challenge takes internet by storm, by Anita
Shrestha (ht 21/02/2017)
From
a
guerilla fighter to humble Speaker, by
Onshari Gharti Magar (kp 18/02/2017), We
may
have come a long way, but there is much to
achieve: The feminist consciousness flourished
after the restoration of democracy in 1990 and
received ample focus during the
decade-long Maoist struggle followed by people’s
movement and constitution-writing process,
by Mohna Ansari (kp 18/02/2017), A
‘competent’ woman politician —a rhetorical
excuse? High time we asked whether all men
maintain the highest degree of competence,
by Pranika Koyu (kp 18/02/2017), Women
in
politics: Nepal is among the only 10 countries
in the world having a woman head of state,
by Binod Ghimire (kp 18/02/2017)
Feminism
in
the margins, a Madhesi perspective: Madhesi
women are not a topic of discussion, nor is
their contribution acknowledged in the national
discourse, by Rita Sah (kp 18/02/2017)
Questioning
the
Questions: Caste struggle against structural
minds: Let’s challenge the system by
re-imagining, redefining, re-narrating and
retelling our story, by Sarita Pariyar (kp
18/02/2017)
Representation
of
women: The Nepali media sector, in general,
suffers from patriarchy, by Sumina Rai Karki
(kp 18/02/2017)
The
scourge
of stereotype: Even though their workplace is
female dominated, the fact is that the most
popular gynecologist in our country is a male,
by Arpana Neopane (kp 18/02/2017)
Ladies
first:
Women now hold top management positions in
various organizations, by Sanjeev Giri (kp
18/02/2017)
Rootless:
By
birth
a woman belongs to her father’s clan, and then
she gets given to her husband’s. We forget who
our mothers and grandmothers are. Their blood
does not flow in our lineage, by Pooja Pant
(ht 18/02/2017)
Post
quake
rebuilding: Let women lead; With male members
away, women have started rebuilding their homes
destroyed by 2015 earthquakes on their own,
by Kriti Bhuju (rep 18/02/2017)
Nepali
women
row against tide of discrimination on tourist
lake (ht 16/02/2017)
Women
now do all the work in Jumla village, by DB
Buda (rep 08/02/2017)
For
some
women in need, Hatti Hatti has become a home
away from home and a wellspring for creativity,
by Abha Dhital (kp 04/02/2017)
Bill
proposes
grounds for divorce (ht 03/02/2017)
Periods
of
banishment: Women in western Nepal are starting
to refuse to be thrown out of the house once a
month, by Subeksha Poudel (nt 03/02/2017)
Women
learning
masonry for financial independence in Nuwakot,
by Jaya Ram Gautam (ht 30/01/2017)
All
in
the family: Girls are not safe even within their
own homes, especially in households dislocated
by the earthquake, by Sahina Shrestha (nt
27/01/2017)
Migrant
workers: Nepali women ahead of men in committing
suicide abroad, by Rudra Khadka (rep
24/01/2017)
Feminine
FM:
Women in radio stir a nationwide conversation,
by Emma Stolarski (nt 20/01/2017)
Inspiration
as
we rebuild: Venturing into masonry will improve
women’s income and help them challenge
traditional gender roles, by Pratibha
Tuladhar (kp 15/01/2017)
Gender
pay
gap: What we can learn from global practices to
reduce inequality in our workforce, by Tara
Kanel (kp 15/01/2017)
Stumbling
blocks:
Education and modernisation haven’t weakened
ingrained socio-sexual relationships, by
Anjita Parajuli (kp 10/01/2017)
Feminism
through
art: Artist Meena Kayastha’s Divine Debris draws
on her personal experience as a woman growing up
in Nepal watching other female figures around
her struggle with the limits imposed upon them,
by Sophia L. Pande (kp 08/01/2017)
Literacy
classes making women's life easier, by Arjun
Bhushal (rep 06/01/2017)
Female
contractor
busy building quake-hit village, by Harihar
Singh Rathour (kp 05/01/2017)
Celebrating
daughter's birth in Bajhang raises eyebrows,
by Jagat Khadka (rep 04/01/2017)
Women-friendly
agriculture:
Agriculture is being feminized in Nepal
following the rapid exodus of men, by
Bhairab Raj Kaini (rep 02/01/2017)
Modern
farming changing women's economic status, by
Arjun Bam (rep 10/12/2016)
Girls
are
the future: Women who have the opportunity to
speak up about challenges women and girls face
in Nepali society can help tackle stigma, by
Richard Morris and Gail Marzetti (rep 10/12/2016)
Unequal,
by law: When a girl or woman is viewed in
connection with a male figure, it creates an
unequal society, by Anjali Subedi (rep
06/12/2016)
#IWalkFreely:
Survey
reveals young women in Nepal are exposed to
greater dangers than just cat calls and wolf
whistles, by Asmita Gauchan (nt 02/12/2016)
Re-examining
value
of girls, by Jessica Rai (ht 26/11/2016)
Safe
education
for all: Structural inequalities and patriarchal
attitudes continue to affect women’s schooling,
by Renu Adhikari Rajbhandari (kp 25/11/2016)
Who
cares?
Women do the bulk of unpaid work in the
household cleaning, cooking, washing, collecting
firewood and caring for children and the elderly,
by Sangita Thebe-Limbu (nt 25/11/2016)
495
couples
in Okhaldhunga get joint land deeds, by
Kumbharaj Rai (kp 21/11/2016)
Where
are
all the women? An underlying reason for the low
representation of women in politics is a
patriarchal mindset that permeates political
life, by Avasna Pandey (kp 18/11/2016)
Social
stigma
related to sexual violence still rampant in
society (ht 17/11/2016)
Global
Gender
Gap Index 2016: Nepal fails to improve on 2015’s
place (kp 13/11/2016) [see Nepal
data
in report by World Economic Forum]
Women’s
health
declining from hard toil (ht 10/11/2016)
Women
and
climate change: Gender responsive adaptive
capacity in communities in rural Nepal is
important, by Sushmita Lama (kp 08/11/2016)
Onward,
nasty
women! Although we see and recognize casual and
subtle sexism around us everyday many of us
hesitate to stand up and protest, by Jigyasa
Sharma (rep 08/11/2016)
Muslim
community
stands against dowry, by Pawan Yadav (kp
07/11/2016)
NIC
urges
women to be aware of their rights (ht
05/11/2016), Women
yet to benefit from women-friendly policies,
by Tenzin Tsomo (rep 05/11/2016), Women
hesitant to report cases of sexual harassment,
by Gyanu Sapkota (rep 05/11/2016)
Diverse
experiences:
It is important to understand that empowerment
can take different forms for different women,
by Emma Karki (kp 21/10/2016)
Economic
progress:
Invest in 10-year-old girls, by Giulia
Vallese (ht 21/10/2016)
Love
of
reading increasing among local women in Kavre,
by Raj Kumar Parajuli (ht 17/10/2016)
Nepal
ranks
85th in opportunities for girls (kp
14/10/2016)
Filling
the gap: In the absence of men it’s the women
who are taking up the responsibility of
rebuilding houses in rural areas, by Ishwar
Rauniyar (rep 28/09/2016)
Girls
no brides: Around 37 percent Nepali girls are
married before they reach 18 and 10 percent
before they reach 15, by David Kainee (rep
22/09/2016)
SAsia
One
Billion Rising campaign gets underway: aunched
in 2013, One Billion Rising is a global movement
calling for action to end violence against women
and to protect women’s rights (kp
20/09/2016)
Working
women:
Women in entertainment sector need to be
protected and accorded dignity (kp
02/09/2016)
Power
to
women: Male politicians still do not believe
women to be as capable and deserving as
themselves, by Bineeta Gurung (nt
02/09/2016)
In
the
driving seat: Apart from proportionate
representation, women need to have rights to
grant citizenship as men do, by Shreejana
Shrestha (nt 02/09/2016)
Women
want
dignified, exploitation-free work (kp
31/08/2016)
Breaking
taboos
surrounding widowhood (kp 29/08/2016)
Quake-hit
girls
falling into trafficking trap: According to
Maiti Nepal, trafficking in the
earthquake-affected districts has increased
after the earthquakes (kp 02/08/2016)
Unkindest
cut:
The increasing frequency of artificial birth in
urban Nepal disempowers women, by Laxmi
Tamang (kp 31/07/2016)
Last
women
first: Widowed by the war, rendered homeless by
the earthquakes, Nepal’s conflict widows have
drawn the shortest straws and are grappling to
stay afloat, by Pratichya Dulal (kp
23/07/2017)
Autumn
of
the patriarchy: Social justice, development and
peace require Nepali women to be on equal terms
with Nepali men in all fields (nt
15/07/2016)
For
a
better today and tomorrow: The longer we take
time to invest in adolescent girls, the more
Nepal will miss opportunities for growth, by
Giulia Vallese (kp 10/07/2016), Call
for
investing in teenage girls (kp 12/07/2016)
Nepal
ranked
11th in skewed child sex ratio (ht
10/07/2016)
Women
still
waiting to rebuild homes and lives: Women
survivors of the earthquake struggle to cope
with grief, loneliness and government neglect,
by Shreejana Shrestha (nt 24/06/2016)
The
second
chapter: Survivors of trafficking help one
another rebuild their lives, by Tsering
Dolker Gurung (nt 24/06/2016)
Widow
woes:
Widows are discounted in statistics, neglected
by authorities and lost within the homogeneous
women population, by Sumeera Shrestha (kp
23/06/2016), Some
men
never changeTop male politicians are trying to
undo the rights given to women by the
constitution, by Asmita Verma (kp
24/06/2016), Widows
demand
economic empowerment (ht 24/06/2016)
The
reject
brides of Rupandehi: Young women who fell in the
snare of child marriage are being disowned by
their husbands and in-laws (kp 17/06/2016)
Female
migrant
Nepalis taking up jobs outside domestic confines,
by Roshan Sedhai (kp 05/06/2016)
Men,
women
and corruption: Is it women’s participation in
politics that is reducing corruption or is
higher corruption deterring women from entering
politics?, by Narayan Manandhar (kp
05/06/2016)
Periodic
blues, by Ayushma Basnyat (rep 03/06/2016)
Mobilising
women:
Women’s centres help empower women to claim
their rights and regain their footing, by
Ayesha Shakya (nt 03/06/2016)
Equal
but
unequal: Prez Bhandari, Speaker Magar should
clearly state support for women’s citizenship
rights (kp 31/05/2016)
Badi
women
demand security, by Kamal Panthi (kp
25/05/2016)
2
rape victims disowned by families (kp
25/05/2016)
Visiting
the
hinterland: Sometimes, I wonder how my life
would be if I was born as a girl in the Madhesi
community, by Jenisha Maharjan (kp
24/05/2016)
Growing
cases
of early motherhood a challenge in Madhes,
by Santosh Singh (rep 24/05/2016)
The
girl
story: Maya's story shows how to go beyond
describing the tough reality, to changing it,
by Anne-Brigitte Albrectsen (rep 18/05/2016)
Investing
in
women: The international framework on women's
rights has been an important instrument on the
road to gender equality, by Kirsten Geelan
(rep 11/05/2016)
Child
marriage,
abortion cases high in Dang: Some women found to
have undergone abortion up to six times in one
year before reaching the age of 20, by
Durgalal KC (kp 03/05/2016)
Poverty
and
gender: Households headed by females have a
lower poverty rate than those headed by males,
by Krishna Kumar Sah (kp 03/05/2016)
They
are
sufferers too: Women victims of sexual violence
during the Maoist conflict must get due priority,
by Neetu Pokharel and Som Niroula (kp 27/04/2016)
Women
victimized
by polygamy hesitate to go to court, by
Chhabilal Tiwari (rep 27/04/2016)
Invisible
work:
With changing gender relations, unpaid care work
should now be given the attention it deserves,
by Anjam Singh (kp 21/04/2016)
Tough
going:
Women politicians find themselves caught between
the devil and the deep blue sea, by Narayan
Manandhar (kp 17/04/2016)
Youths
demand
safe city for women (ht 17/04/2016)
‘Needs
of
women often overlooked in crisis’ (ht
11/04/2016)
Too
young
to marry: Political leaders must move to end
child marriage by considering it a national
issue, by Asmita Verma (kp 10/04/2016)
Breaking
taboo,
widows wear red (kp 10/04/2016)
A
Different Kind Of Aftershock For Nepali Girls,
by Azera Parveen Rahman (kp 05/04/2016)
Women
in
Dang: Age no bar for education, by Devendra
Basnet (rep 05/04/2016)
Gender
discrimination:
Kalikot villages celebrate birth of male child,
by Durgalal KC (kp 31/03/2016)
Women’s
day,
every day: Advancing the status of women is not
only the right thing to do, it is also the smart
thing to do, by Alaina B. Teplitz (kp
29/03/2016)
Nepal
hosts
its first girl summit in Kathmandu (ht
24/03/2016), Empower
women
thru education: Prince Harry (ht 24/03/2016)
Girls
are
the future: It is time to unlock the potential
of girls in Nepal and support their empowerment,
by Gail Marzetti (kp 23/03/2016)
Women
in
the woods: Nepal has a long way to go with
regard to achieving gender equality goals in
forestry, by Bhawana Upadhyay (kp
21/03/2016)
Meet
calls
for empowering women at grassroots level (kp
20/03/2016)
World
Women
Conference kicks off (kp 14/03/2016)
Stand-up
for
women: Men and women should be seen as two
wheels of the same cart, by Kajol Shah (kp
14/03/2016)
The
other
athletes: The country hardly remembers the names
of its female medallists, by Arun Budhathoki
(kp 13/03/2016)
Nepal
to
host Girl Summit (ht 11/03/2016)
Equality
in
true sense: Removing traditional barriers to
achieving gender parity needs greater priority
in Nepal (kp 08/03/2016), For
the
women: The mainstream women movement has a long
way to go before it can claim to represent ‘all
Nepali women’, by Subha Ghale (kp 08/03/2016), Nepal
still
needs to give women wider roles: UN; The UN
suggests the upcoming local elections need to be
shaped by women as both equal voters and as
candidates (kp 08/03/2016)
Yes,
they
can: In rural Nepal girls' attendance drops during
agricultural and festival seasons, they arrive at
school late tired due to work burdens, by Louise
C.F. Shah (rep 08/03/2016)
Land
of
our daughters: On the International Day of
Women, we salute the millions of women across
Nepal who will not have a holiday because they
are too busy feeding and raising their families
(nt 04/03/2016)
Our
version
of feminism, by Priyanka Gurung (rep
04/03/2016)
Teaching
the
write way: Activist challenges notion that
social service is solely for women, by
Michael Nishimura (nt 04/03/2016)
Taboo
no
more: Why is it so difficult for Nepali society
to embrace female sexuality?, by Ayesha
Shakya (nt 04/03/2016)
Child
marriage
still rampant: 50 pc women aged 20-49 years got
married before they were 18 (ht 28/02/2016)
The
awakening, by Shreejana Shrestha (rep
26/02/2016)
More
women
leaders sought in politics (kp 25/02/2016),
The
feminist
mystique: There is little recognition of the
great diversity of Nepali women even in this day
of identity politics, by Deepak Thapa (kp
25/02/2016), ‘New
forms
of violence emerging in society’ (ht
25/02/2016)
Miles
to
go: Nepal must bring policies to eliminate
gender disparities in our workplaces, by
Anta Yadav (rep 24/02/2016)
Plan
to
encourage menstruating girls to attend school,
by Maheshwor Chamling Rai (rep 08/02/2016)
Single
women
left in lurch after quake, by Rajendra
Manandhar (kp 04/01/2016)
Women
continue
to fall prey to lure of foreign jobs, by
Raju Adhikari (rep 02/02/2016)
Formalisation
per
se does not support Nepali women to expand and
ensure the sustainability of their business,
by Mirela Xheneti and Shova Thapa Karki (kp
27/01/2016)
Unreported
Lives:
One ride at a time, by Priyanka Gurung (rep
22/01/2016)
CEDAW:
Govt
runs six months past report submission deadline
(kp 19/01/2016), Sixth
shadow
report to be presented to CEDAW committee
(ht 19/01/2016)
Female
quake
victims deprived of identity cards: Manu
Humagain of National Women Council says the
government must reassess the number of
earthquake victims (kp 18/01/2016)
Ramechhap
women
tilling their fields (ht 18/01/2016)
Youth
and
gender: Unemployment is a significant impediment
to constructive participation of young people,
by Samira Paudel (kp 17/01/2016)
Beyond
the
city: Outside the Valley are women acting under
a wide spectrum of roles, yet they are not
benifiting from the wildly progressive trends of
the urban centres, by Lauren Peterson (kp
16/01/2016)
Suicide
rate
among Tarai women on rise: Report (kp
08/01/2016)
Faux
feminists:
Madheshi women pose no threat to national
sovereignty and yet they are denied citizenship
on the same pretext, by Kalpana Jha (rep
06/01/2016), Faux
divisions:
I was taken aback when a woman who claims to be
a feminist compared the ongoing blockade to a
rape, by Banita Khanal (rep 14/01/2016)
Social
change
through political empowerment? Nepal gets first
female President and Speaker of the Parliament
in 2015, by Ashok Dahal and Shreejana
Shrestha (rep 31/12/2015)
Women
rights
groups, FNJ censure Janaki Temple incident
(kp 21/12/2015)
Women
power:
Though Nepal’s female labour force is high in
the region, it hides a grim picture (kp
18/12/2015)
Public
Safety Is Every Woman’s Human Right, by
Rakhi Ghosh (rn 12/12/2015)
Equality
for
women still a far cry in Nepali media, says GMMP
report (ht 27/11/2015)
Chhaupadi
practice
still continues in Dailekh villages: Arjun Shahi
of Rakam in the district says VDC offices banned
the superstitious practice without proper
preparations, by Prakash Adhikari (kp
18/11/2015)
Case
for
quotas: As long as gender discrimination
persists in society women will continue to need
reservations, by Seema Subedi (kp
18/11/2015)
Still
second
sex: Despite the election of a female president,
Nepal needs to do a lot more to empower its
women, by Mira Kafle (kp 26/11/2015)
Not
by
chance: Bhandari's win has to be viewed in terms
of changes in Nepali social structure in the
past three decades, by Pranab Kharel (rep
04/11/2015)
Self-defence
training
boosts Valley women’s confidence, by
Pratichya Dulal (kp 02/11/2015), On
guard:
Self-defence classes and other efforts to curb
gender violence should go in tandem (kp
03/11/2015)
Celebrating
Nepal's Presidential Election: Female Power
Rising, by Prem Khatry (rn 03/11/2015)
Women
breaking
with tradition (ht 02/11/2015)
‘Prez
election
a morale-booster for all women’ (ht
02/11/2015)
Single
women
await reconstruction relief, by Pratichya
Dulal (kp 28/10/2015)
More
than
half the sky: Despite their hard work millions
of rural women are still socially disadvantaged,
by Bhawana Upadhyay (kp 25/10/2015)
Nepal
earthquake
continues to drive aftershocks through the lives
of women (ht 25/10/2015)
Early
marriage
taking toll on youths' health, future, by
Janak KC (rep 20/10/2015)
Gender-bender:
Everyone
should be allowed to behave the way they want to
regardless of their gender, by Paridhi
Acharya (kp 18/10/2015)
Women,
girls
not safe in open spaces: WHR (ht 17/10/2015)
The
right
to have rights: The new Constitution lays bare
misogynistic and patriarchal psyches that
usually hide behind nationalism, by Sangita
Thebe Limbu (nt 16/10/2015)
WWP
to
support informal sector women: Cabin
restaurants, massage parlours and dance bars
make up the core of the entertainment industry
and there are 13,000 women in the entertainment
business (kp 14/10/2015)
Pride
and
prejudice: Is treating women as second-class
citizens the only way to avert the possibility
of a geopolitical crisis?, by Sophia K.
Tamot (kp 14/10/2015)
Study:
Many
women feel unsafe at home (kp 12/10/2015)
Rage
against
the machine: The ‘linga’ is god and we must
continue to prostrate before it. We must
endlessly pray to it so that it rescues us from
our wretched existence, by Zahra (kp
03/10/2015)
Law
impedes
progress of women: Report (kp 26/09/2015)
The
unending
woes of women workers, by Roshan Sedhai (kp
19/09/2015)
Still
the
second sex: Women are being discriminated
against, raped, forced into prostitution in
foreign countries—but what are we going to do
about it?, by Abhinawa Devkota (kp
19/09/2015)
By
the
women: This year, let us celebrate Teej by
making a contribution to the quake-affected
women, by Mona Shrestha Adhikari (kp
13/09/2015)
A
small, well-lighted place: A group of single
women and widows have been attempting to procure
loans to start small businesses for themselves.
But because of onerous government provisions
they have been stymied in their efforts, by
Pratichya Dulal (kp 12/09/2015)
Double
jeopardy:
Upper caste people use their social, economic
and political power to silence the Dalit women,
by Giri Bahadur Sunar (rep 12/09/2015)
Not
a
Private Affair: Brides stumble upon a precarious
position in the house, because she is still a
new family family member and will be treated
like an outsider, by Sachi Mulmi (rep
11/09/2015)
Back
with
babies: Women migrant workers returning
penniless and with children face a double stigma
at home, by Rojita Adhikari (nt 11/09/2015)
Rescue
me
not: Family, society and culture tell women who
we are and how we need to be, and what we can
and cannot do, by Anjana Rajbhandary (nt
11/09/2015)
Single
women
‘left without access to relief: There are
498,606 single women in the country and it is
estimated that around 2,000 women lost their
husbands in the earthquake, by Pratichya
Dulal (kp 02/09/2015)
Through
the
barricades: Many Nepali women migrant workers overcome
seemingly insurmountable odds to make enough to start
out on their own upon their return home, by
Pratichya Dulal (kp 29/08/2015)
Marriage
registration:
Women must register in native district: Govt (kp
16/08/2015)
HIV
infected
and poverty ridden single women struggling hard to
survive, by Barun Paneru (rep 13/08/2015)
Civil
and
Criminal Codes to rid Jari (kp 12/08/2015)
Post
earthquake
concerns: Women facing family issues (kp
09/08/2015)
The
roti-beti
bette noire: The Madhesi woman is arguably the
most talked about individual in Nepali politics;
According to men, she has the power to change
Nepal’s demography all by herself, by
Darshan Karki (kp 08/08/2015)
Earthquake
victims:
Single women left to fend for themselves, by
Pratichya Dulal (kp 04/08/2015)
More
Kaski
women filing for divorce (ht 29/07/2015)
UNPF
works
for female quake victims (kp 26/07/2015)
Female
refugees
of Nepal’s earthquake: A new wave of
outmigration of Nepali women desperate to earn
cash to rebuild family homes, by Karma
Gurung (nt 24/07/2015)
Women
in
disaster: Needs of quake affected female victims
call for special attention (kp 17/07/2015)
Wrong
conversation:
The disaster retoric that emphasizes women's
suffering takes away focus from the dynamic role
women can play in rebuilding their communities,
by Kristen Zipperer (rep 11/07/2015)
Fear
the
future: Drafters of the constitution have
demonstrated myopia rather than long-term vision
for gender equality, by Pramod Mishra (kp
09/07/2015)
Native
aliens:
The message is clear: Men own this country;
Women had no place in Nepal in the past and they
will have no place in Nepal in the future,
by Anjali Subedi (rep 09/07/2015)
Women
entering
men’s work domain: Report (ht 06/07/2015)
Girl:
talk
period: More than 20% of girls miss school
during their period finds a new study, by
Anjana Rajbhandary (nt 03/07/2015)
Nepal’s
post-quake
should boost women: UN (kp 27/06/2015)
No
easy
way out: We cannot be ‘doing feminism’ without
addressing questions of racism and heterosexism
within the citizenship debate, by Kumud Rana
(kp 26/06/2015)
CDC
sub-panel
settles citizenship issue, by Prakash
Acharya (ht 17/06/2015) [The
male Bahun overlords as based on their
traditional Hindu thinking have decided that
women will remain second or third class citizens
under the new constitution, subordinate to male
persons! This issue is symbolic for what can be
expected from the consequences of the
16-point-agreement!!]
Single
women
struggling for survival in far-west region (ht
16/06/2015)
Service
centre
winning confidence of people (ht 16/06/2015)
Women
living
in tents learn to fend off sexual harassment
(kp 01/06/2015)
Conspiracy
of
silence: It is high time we began questioning,
debating, and discussing menstrual taboos more
publicly, by Mona Shrestha Adhikari (kp
28/05/2015)
Demand
for
rehabilitation of Badi women (kp 07/04/2015)
Nepali
Muslim
women: Forgotten and discriminated, by
Chunni Khatun (ht 03/04/2015)
Privileged
freedom:
Progressive families send girls abroad for
education so they come back and readjust to
traditional gender roles, by Anjana
Rajbhandary (nt 27/03/2015)
Educated
and
unemployed: More women are pursuing education
degrees, but it will be difficult to gainfully
engage them in work, by Deepak Thapa (kp
26/03/2015)
Daughters
as
traitors: By doing away with the ‘or’ provision
on citizenship, the state is seeking to
institute gender bias as a national policy,
by Anjita Parajuli (kp 17/03/2015)
Education
And Women In Nepal, by Shree Prasad Devkota
and Shiba Bagale (rn 15/03/2015)
Waiting
for
an epitaph: Today’s woman is freer than her
mother or grandmother, but her freedom is still
circumscribed, by Vishwendra Paswan and
Shakun Sherchand (kp 13/03/2015)
‘Mainstream’
feminism, by Seira Tamang (kp 11/03/2015)
Time
to
go big: Imagine a society where women
entrepreneurs export products to meet
international demand, by Mona Shrestha
Adhikari (kp 08/03/2015)
A
woman’s lot in Nepal, by Jamie McGoldrick
(ht 08/03/2015)
Three-fourths
of
the sky: Every day should be International
Women’s Day (nt 06/03/2015)
Standing
above
the crowd, by Ayesha Shakya (nt 06/03/2015)
Being
Nepali
or becoming Nepali? Nepal has one of the most
progressive laws on gay and lesbian rights, but
still treats its women as second-class citizens,
by Anjana Rajbhandary (nt 06/03/2015)
Living
in
fear: Women are taught to be fearful and
shameful for things they have no say in, by
Tsering Dolker (nt 6/03/2015)
All
about
the attitude: The Nepali government has already
created workplace policies that should help
women in the workplace; But unless the men who
run organisations willingly implement them,
working women will continue to be treated
unfairly, by Chahana Sigdel (kp 14/02/2015)
Women
facing
dowry torture from in-laws (ht 13/02/2015)
A
silent killer: Suicide among Nepali women aged
15-45 increased from 10 percent in 1998 to 16
percent in 2009; It is now leading cause of
death among Nepali women of reproductive age,
by Sabi Gurung (rep 07/02/2015)
Around
4,000
girls rescued every year (ht 03/02/2015)
Widowed
early,
young women come together to support each other,
by Kalendra Sejuwal (rep 26/01/2015)
Women's
Cooperatives A National Pride, by Thakur
Singh Tharu (rn 23/01/2015)
Trafficking
victims
shunned by own family: Most of the victims said
they were forced to take shelter at Maiti Nepal
after their families turn their backs on them,
by Mohan Budhair (kp 08/01/2015)
Businesses
lift
women out of poverty, by Thakur Singh Tharu
(kp 04/01/2015)
The
feminist
mystique: It is important to reiterate, even
after decades of global feminist activism, that
feminism does not translate to a hatred of men,
by Subecha Dahal (kp 04/01/2015)
Doubly
alienated:
Nepali women who work as domestic workers in the
Middle East and return home with babies conceived
through rape find it extremely difficult to
reintegrate into society, by Ransubba Gurung
(kp 03/01/2015)
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