PS in dilemma over unparliamentary words
PS in dilemma over âunparliamentary wordsâ
Published: 10:30 am May 19, 2019
Kathmandu, May 18 The Parliament Secretariat has been facing a tough time identifying âunparliamentary wordsâ reportedly used by Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli and Nepali Congress lawmakers while addressing a meeting of the House of Representatives on May 7. On May 10, Speaker Krishna Bahadur Mahara had directed the PS to delete the âunparliamentary wordsâ used by PM Oli and other lawmakers during discussion on the policies and programmes of the government. For the first time in the history of parliamentary practice in Nepal, Speaker Mahara had directed the House to delete the âunparliamentary wordsâ used by the incumbent PM. Unlike in the past, he, however, didnât specify any words that the PS could remove from the record. After the speakerâs ruling, the Business Advisory Committee wrote to the Audio/Video Recording Department of the PS for the collection of those âunparliamentary words.â Spokesperson for the PS Rojnath Pandey said the department should forward a list of the âunparliamentary wordsâ to the speaker for his final approval. âThe speaker shall take a final call on the words that have to be removed from the recordings,â he said, referring to a provision of the HoR regulations. The HoR regulations only state that a lawmaker should not use âunparliamentary words.â However, the regulations have no provision for differentiating âparliamentaryâ and âunparliamentary words,â according to PS officials. Tensions had flared between lawmakers of the ruling and opposition parties during the House session on May 7 after PM Oli said he would not respond to parliamentariansâ queries âthat were petty and motivated by resentment and frustration.â The PMâs statement had offended many NC lawmakers. They were especially enraged over the use of the word âpettyâ. NC lawmakers, including their President Sher Bahadur Deuba, objected to the use of the word âpettyâ by the PM in the session and requested the speaker to exclude it from the recording, stating that the way the word âpettyâ was used in the parliament was offensive and unethical. NC hopes that the word âpettyâ used by PM Oli will be excluded from the recording. But, the PS officials told THT that âpettyâ meant âlittle, lesser or of minor importance,â and that there were far more offensive words that have been used in Parliament meetings for long. âThere are no criteria to measure which words are parliamentary and which are unparliamentary. The speakerâs ruling is unclear,â a PS official said on condition of anonymity. The Audio/Video Recording Division of the PS is now going through recordings of the second session of the Parliament meeting. The division will go through recordings of the fourth session of the Parliament only after completing the second and third sessions of the House meetings. âWe are going to collect the words spoken by PM Oli and NC lawmakers in that meeting and send it to the speaker,â the PS official told THT.