Upendra_Yadav

Upendra Yadav

Upendra Yadav

Minister of Health and Population of Nepal


Upendra Yadav (Nepali: उपेन्द्र यादव; born 12 November 1960) is a Nepalese politician who is currently Deputy Prime Minister of Nepal and also served as the chairman of the People's Socialist Party, Nepal from 2020 until 2023.[2]

Quick Facts Honourable, Deputy Prime Minister of Nepal ...

He is currently the Deputy Prime Minister of Nepal and Minister of Health and Population. [3][4] He also served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Dahal cabinet from 2008 to 2009 and in the Khanal cabinet in 2011.[5][6] Yadav lost an election in 2022, being defeated by Janamat Party chair CK Raut in Saptari 2 with a margin of 18,000 votes.[7][8]

Early life and education

Yadav was born in Bhagwatpur, Saptari to Dhanilal Yadav and Phudani Devi Yadav on 12 November 1960.[citation needed] He grew up in Madhuwan and completed his SLC examinations there in 1975. He completed his bachelor's degree in mathematics from Hattisar College in Dharan and his master's degree in law at Mahendra Morang Adarsh Multiple Campus in Biratnagar.[9][10]

Political career

Yadav was involved in protests against the panchayat system as far back as 1975. He was involved in the 1979 student protests and was arrested in Biratnagar and was imprisoned for fourth months.[11] He was also arrested in 1985 at Kathmandu and imprisoned for a year for participating in a Satyagraha organized by Nepali Congress. Yadav joined the CPN (Unified Marxist–Leninist) in 1991 and contested for the House of Representatives from Sunsari 4 in the same year. He gained 8,672 votes but finished a distant second. He served as the district leader of Sunsari and Morang district during his time in the party. He resigned from the party in 1997.[9][10]

Madheshi Jana Adhikar Forum: 1997–2015

He founded the Madheshi Jana Adhikar Forum in the mid-1990s along with Nepali Congress leader Jay Prakash Gupta as a non-governmental organization that advocated for Madheshi rights.[12] After leaving CPN (UML) Yadav had become an alternate central committee member of CPN (Maoist).[13] In February 2004 Yadav was arrested in New Delhi along with Maoist party members Matrika Yadav and Mohan Baidya. He was released after two months while the others were handed over to Nepalese authorities in 2006.[11][14]

Madhesh movement

He was again arrested on 16 January 2007 in Kathmandu along with MP Amaresh Kumar Singh and a dozen others after they burned copies of the Interim Constitution of Nepal, 2007 after it did not address the issue of federalism and greater political representation from the Terai in the parliament and the constituent assembly.[15][16] Following mass protests and indefinite strikes in the Terai region organized by his party, the government agreed to amend the interim constitution and on 12 April 2007, Nepal was turned into a federal republic.[17]

Constituent Assembly

He registered the organization as a political party on 26 April 2007 to contest the constituent assembly elections.[18] He was elected to the 1st Nepalese Constituent Assembly from Sunsari 5 at the 2008 elections. He served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs in a coalition government with the CPN (Maoist) from August 2008 to May 2009 and again in a coalition government with CPN (Unified Marxist–Leninist) in 2011.[3][4] After Bijay Kumar Gachhadar split away from the party to form Madheshi Jana Adhikar Forum (Loktantrik), Yadav served as the parliamentary party leader of the MJF. He was also a member of the State Affairs Committee of the Constituent Assembly.[19] He retained his seat in the 2nd Nepalese Constituent Assembly from Sunsari 5 at the 2013 elections. He served as the parliamentary party leader of MJF and also served as a member of the Constitutional-Political Dialogue and Consensus Committee.[10][20]

National politics: since 2015

On 15 June 2015, his party merged with Federal Socialist Party and Khas Samabesi Party to form the Federal Socialist Forum. He served as co-chairman of the new party along with Rajendra Prasad Shrestha.[2] He contested the 2017 elections to the House of Representatives from Saptari 2 and was elected.[13][21] He was a member of the Education and Health Committee of the House of Representatives.[22] He served as the Deputy Prime Minister in a coalition government with the Nepal Communist Party from June 2018 to December 2019.[4] His party merged with the Rastriya Janata Party Nepal in 2020 to form the People's Socialist Party.[23] He served as co-chairman of the party with Mahantha Thakur until Thakur split off to form the Loktantrik Samajwadi Party, Nepal.[24] Yadav contested the 2022 elections to the House of Representatives from Saptari 2 again but lost to Janamat Party chairman Chandra Kant Raut by a margin of over 18,000 votes.[25]

Criticism

Yadav has been accused of being linked to Hindu extremist groups and in December 2006 publicly supported the notion of Nepal as a Hindu nation at a program of right-wing Hindu groups in Gorakhpur, India. A month after the incident he was leading the protests in support of turning Nepal into a secular federal republic.[14]

He has also been accused of focusing on Yadavs instead of the greater Madheshi community. He was criticized by some for supporting Nepali Congress candidate Ram Baran Yadav instead of CPN (Maoist) candidate Ram Raja Prasad Singh.[12][15]

Yadav had been criticized for the Gaur incident where dozens of CPN (Maoist) cadres were left dead following violent clashes with cadres of Madheshi Jana Adhikar Forum. Yadav was supposed to address a mass meeting of MJFN supporters in Gaur, Rautahat, the Madhesh Mukti Morcha of CPN (Maoist) were also holding their rally in the same venue. MJF and Maoist supporters were engaged in clashes during the Madhesh movement and the Gaur incident was seen as retaliation for these clashes.[26][27][28]

Once a major activist for Madheshi people, Yadav has been criticized for forgetting Madhesh-centric issues as he became more active in national politics.[29]

Personal life

Yadav is married to Parbati Yadav with whom he has two children, a son and a daughter. His son, Amarendra Yadav, contested the 2022 local elections for the deputy mayor of Biratnagar but lost.[30][31]

Electoral history

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See also


References

  1. "First meeting of House of Representatives concluded". The Himalayan Times. 2018-03-05. Retrieved 2018-03-15.
  2. "Upendra Yadav, Ashok Rai announce unity, form FSF-N". The Himalayan Times. 2015-06-15. Retrieved 2017-12-09.
  3. कर्ण, खगेन्द्र (2021-05-24). "मधेसवाद कि अवसरवाद?‍" [Madhesh-ist or Opportunist?]. eKagaj (in Nepali). Retrieved 2022-01-16.
  4. "Nepali prime minister expands cabinet for fourth time". Xinhua. Archived from the original on September 8, 2018. Retrieved 2018-06-02.
  5. "Ministers of Democratic Federal Republic of Nepal". 2008-11-20. Archived from the original on 2008-11-20. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  6. "CK Raut elected as HoR member from Saptari-2". kathmandupost.com. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
  7. Ghimire, Santosh (2022-11-28). "The fall of Upendra Yadav in Nepal's politics". Indianarrative. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
  8. Wagle, Dinesh; Mishra, Atul (2011-09-03). "उपेन्द्र यादव उवाच" [Upendra Yadav Said]. Kantipur (in Nepali).
  9. संघीय संसद सदस्य, २०७४ परिचयात्मक पुस्तिका [Federal Parliament Members 2017 Introduction Booklet] (PDF) (in Nepali). Nepal: Federal Parliament Secretariat. 2021. p. 270.
  10. Sarkar, Sarbary Dey (June 2018). "Madheshi Movement and Upendra Yadav" (PDF). Journal of Education and Development. 8 (15): 305–312.
  11. Basnet, Chudamani (2019-11-30). "The Federal Socialist Forum: Incipient Middle Caste Politics in Nepal?". Studies in Nepali History and Society. 24 (2): 355.
  12. भण्डारी, अखण्ड; झा, अबधेश (2017-11-05). "किन सरे उपेन्द्र यादव सप्तरी?" [Why did Upendra Yadav move to Saptari?]. Ekantipur (in Nepali). Retrieved 2022-01-16.
  13. Aryal, Mallika. "The rise of a party". Nepali Times. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  14. Jha, Prashant (2014). Battles of the New Republic: A Contemporary History of Nepal. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9781849044592.
  15. "Over two dozen MPRF activists arrested in the capital". 2007-02-09. Archived from the original on 2007-02-09. Retrieved 2020-12-28.
  16. Chamlagai, Abi (2021). "Nepal: Tarai/madhesh movements and political elites". Journal of Asian and African Studies. 56 (4): 949–963. doi:10.1177/0021909620954881. S2CID 225194374 via Sage Journals.
  17. "MJF is now a political party". Nepalnews.com. 2007-04-26. Archived from the original on 2007-04-30. Retrieved 2008-09-06.
  18. "संसदीय विवरण पुस्तिका, संविधान सभा व्यवस्थापिका-संसद (२०६५ - २०६९)" [Parliamentary Manual, Constituent Assembly Legislature Parliament (2008 - 2012)] (PDF). House of Representatives, Nepal (in Nepali). 2021. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  19. "संविधान सभा दर्पण - २ (२०७० - २०७२)" [Constituent Assembly Mirror - 2 (2013 - 2015)] (PDF). House of Representatives, Nepal (in Nepali). 2017.
  20. "Upendra Yadav wins parliamentary seat from Saptari-2". The Himalayan Times. 9 December 2017. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  21. "शिक्षा तथा स्वास्थ्य समिति". House of Representatives, Nepal. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  22. "CK Raut wins Saptari-2 beating Upendra Yadav by 18k+ votes". thehimalayantimes.com. 23 November 2022. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
  23. Sharma, Gopal (2007-03-21). "Curfew in Nepal town after 25 killed in clash". Reuters. Retrieved 2020-12-28.
  24. Jha, Prashant. "Underestimating Upendra". Nepali Times. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  25. बगाले, सन्जिब (2017-06-15). "उपेन्द्र यादवको 'यु-टर्न'को कारण" [The reason for Upendra Yadav's U-Turn]. Setopati (in Nepali). Retrieved 2022-01-16.
  26. रिमाल, कमल (2022-05-20). "उपमेयरमा उपेन्द्र यादवका छोरा अमरेन्द्रको पराजय निश्चित" [Defeat of Upendra Yadav's son Amarendra as deputy mayor is certain]. Himal Khabar (in Nepali). Retrieved 2022-06-10.

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