Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
National Investigation Department (NID) (Nepali: राष्ट्रिय अनुसन्धान बिभाग) is the main intelligence agency of Nepal collecting information about country’s public security, economic crimes, corruption, domestic and cross border terrorism, money laundering, narcotics, and human trafficking.
Nepal Police (Nepali: नेपाल प्रहरी, romanized: Nēpāl praharī) is the national and primary law enforcement agency of Nepal. It is primarily responsible for maintaining law and order , prevention of crime and crime investigation within the jurisdiction determined by the Constitution of Nepal .
Nepal Police; Nepali Army; Nepal Red Cross Society; Nepal Agricultural Research Council (NARC) Nepal Telecom; National Information Technology Center (NITC) Nepal Academy of Tourism and Hotel Management; Nepal Airlines Corporation; Nepal Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) Nepal Health Research Council; Nepal Medical Council
Assam Rifles – 50,000 personnel organised into 46 battalions, an internal security force with secondary duties along the eastern borders. Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) – 82,000 personnel on the Bhutan and Nepal borders
The Ministry of Federal Affairs and General Administration (Nepali: सङ्घीय मामिला तथा सामान्य प्रशासन मन्त्रालय), (MoFAGA), is the ministry of Nepal that supervises activities undertaken by the local governments in Nepal. It also regulates and manages the civil service.
The armed police force of Nepal doing morning training at Halchowk, Swayambhu, Nepal. An Armed Police Force of Nepal personnel in Kathmandu. The Nepalese Armed Police Force is a land force tasked with counter-insurgency operations in Nepal. It functions as a semi-military wing, and occupies a sort of dual role as both military and law enforcement.
Trump muses on creating 'Gulf of America' and seizing Panama Canal. As he discussed his desire for U.S. control of Greenland and the Panama Canal, Trump mused on changing the name of the Gulf of ...
The Mulukī Ain of 1854 is the foundational legal text for modern Nepal. [8] The laws remained largely unchanged until 1963. In 2018, the Mulukī Ain was replaced by the new criminal and civil codes, and their respective codes of procedure.