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Koirala was also one of the most important literary figures of Nepal. In politics Koirala was a social democrat; in literature he was an existentialist especially in his novel Tin Ghumti (Three Turns). He said that he wrote his literary works to satisfy his anarchist impulses, impulses which revolted against the traditional order of things. But ...
B.P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences (BPKIHS) (Nepali: वी.पी. कोइराला स्वास्थ्य विज्ञान प्रतिष्ठान) popularly known as Ghopa Camp, [1] is a Nepalese autonomous health sciences university.
Koirala family (Nepali: कोइराला परिवार) is one of the most prominent political families of Nepal. Krishna Prasad Koirala , a Rana-era socio-political activist, was exiled to Bihar , India by then Prime Minister Maharaja Chandra Sumsher . [ 1 ]
Koirala was born in Saharsa, Bihar, British India, in 1924 into a Hill Brahmin family. [5] His father, Krishna Prasad Koirala, was a Nepali living in exile. [6] In 1952 Koirala married Sushma Koirala, headmistress at the local school for women in Biratnagar. [7] Their daughter Sujata Koirala was born in 1953.
Bisheshwor Prasad Koirala's Atmabrittanta (Late Life Recollections) is the autobiography of a prominent political figure and the first democratically elected Prime Minister of Nepal. [1] In the book, Koirala recounts his early life in India, the development of his political career and the founding of the Nepali Congress National Party, armed ...
The following is a list of notable secondary schools in Nepal. Tertiary schools are included in the separate list of universities and colleges in Nepal. There are 77 districts and this list is grouped alphabetically by district (along with a section on international schools in Nepal). This list includes schools of international and national ...
Girija Prasad Koirala (1925–2010), five times Prime Minister of Nepal in the 1990s and 2000s, Head of State from 2007 to 2008; Krishna Prasad Koirala (died 1943), political leader of Nepal; Manisha Koirala (born 1970), Indian Bollywood actress; Matrika Prasad Koirala (1912–1997), Prime Minister of Nepal from 1951 to 1952 and from 1953 to 1955
On 16 May 1959, Koirala was invited by King Mahendra to form a government and the cabinet was formed on 27 May 1959. [1] [2] The cabinet was reshuffled just over a month later on 30 June 1959. [3] Koirala and the entire cabinet were arrested and the parliament was dissolved on 15 December 1960 as a result of a coup d'état by King Mahendra. [1]