Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Trekking in Nepal

Trekking in Nepal

Nepal is a land of unparalleled scenic beauty located within one of the most diverse geographical areas on earth. Nestled high in the Himalayas between China and India, it has retained its essentially agrarian and medieval character. Its wondrous history and geography are still the defining aspects of everyday life.

Nepali landscape is uncommonly diverse, ranging from the humid Terai in the south to the lofty Himalayas in the north. Nepal boasts eight of the world's ten highest mountains, including Mount Everest.

Since Nepal first opened its frontiers to foreign visitors in the fifties, it has been the epicenter of Himalayan adventure activities. Climbing and trekking holidays in Nepal Himalaya has become highly sought after adventure sports throughout the world soon after the advent of tourism culture.Nepal has an unsurpassed range of environments, ranging from the lowland of Terai to the snowy summit of the highest mountain range on Earth. Traveling in Nepal not only offers an opportunity to submerge in Himalayan bliss but also a chance to step back in time. Standing before the entire world as a vivid kaleidoscope of picturesque landscapes, exotic wildlife, arid high-altitude meadows, magnificent mountains, incredible travel destinations, unique culture, festivals, ancient heritage, pristine backwaters, and exotic cuisine, Nepal is undoubtedly a traveler’s delight. Trekking in Nepal is often referred to as walking through the paradise on earth.


Trekking in Nepal



Trekking is the best way to experience Nepal's unbeatable combination of natural beauty and culture. On beaten trails or virgin tracks, Nepal is a trekker's paradise. The very organic rhythm of foot travel is a wonderful way to explore and make meaningful contact with the country. On average, trekking consists of walking daily 5 to 7 hours, 9 to 14 kilometers on a series of ascents and descents. The immense contrasts in altitude and climates found here, support an equally spectacular mix of lifestyle and wildlife. Nepal is a pioneer in the sport of trekking.

Known as the Himalayan Kingdom, Nepal is dominated by eight of the world's fourteen highest mountains, including Everest.

Each one is over 8000 meters (26,000ft). In all, there are 1,310 peaks of 5000 meters (16,900ft) or more. Annually, more than 200,000 tourists come here to trek. You will experience superb panoramic views of mountains, a diversity of landscape, flora and fauna, colorful cultures, friendly people and ancient history. Trekkers leave Nepal with grand tales to share with their family and friends.  

White River Rafting Nepal

White River Rafting Nepal

Nepal is home to eight out of the fourteen highest peaks in the world with colorful and intricate Hindu religion to the austerity of the Buddhist monasteries. From these breathtaking heights, rivers crash down through the foothills, fed by monsoon rains and melting snow, on their way to the Great Plains of the Ganges.


Nepal has many rivers for you to explore: 


  1. Trishuli River 
  2. Seti River 
  3. Bhote Koshi River
  4. Kali Gandaki River 
  5. Marsyandi River 
  6. Sun Koshi River 
  7. Arun River 
  8. Karnali River and  
  9. Tamur River 


On these rivers you will find the world's most thrilling whitewater with a wide range of difficulties, warm water and bug free beaches for camping. All this makes a wealth of unlimited opportunities for great river rafting, kayaking, climbing, mountaineering, biking, hiking and ever popular trekking adventures in Nepal. Nepal has something to offer to everyone. 

Wonderful Paragliding in Nepal

Wonderful Paragliding in Nepal

Paragliding is a relatively new adventure sport in Nepal. Paragliding in this Himalayan country can be a truly wonderful and fulfilling experience for the adventure-seekers. You can experience unparalleled scenic grandeur as you share airspace with Himalayan griffin vultures, eagles, kites, while floating over villages, monasteries, temples, lakes and jungles, with a fantastic view of the majestic Himalayas.
Gliding is a weather dependent sport and the flying season in Nepal commences from November through February, the best months being November and December. By virtue of its latitude and monsoonal climate, the tree line in Nepal is at an incredible 3,900 m above sea level. With conditions milder than summer alpine, these are excellent and constant atmospherics.
The topography and climate of Nepal also make it an ideal destination for all levels of pilots- subtropical conditions provide plenty of thermals and combined with the long valleys common in Nepal, they produce perfect 'cloud streets' ideal for paragliders, inviting them to fly along this "sky highway". The local microclimate, controlled by the numerous lakes in the valley, is unique, which makes it even better for the glider. The main area for flying in Nepal is the Annapurna region, more specifically the Pokhara valley. This lakeside town is Nepal's second "city", nestled at the foot of the Annapurna Himal, the views commanded from here, of 3 of the worlds 8000m peaks, are unsurpassed. At an altitude of 800m ASL the subtropical climate means that, year round, it is short and T-shirt weather. The micro-climate of the valley makes it an ideal area for flying, with far more constant conditions than the Kathmandu valley 150 km east.

There are several sites around Phew Tal (the lake) but the most accessible is Sarangkot (1500m ASL). A view point 700m above Pokhara, it is unique in that it has a road running to the top. A short walk brings you to the only purpose built take off in the country. Cut out of the slope is a 45m by 45m clearing. With regular cycles providing easy reverse launches, you could not ask for a more picturesque site. With the lake 2000 ft below, the mountains behind, and the unlimited potential for XC and out and returns, this has quickly become the main site for the area, and many pilots have based themselves in Pokhara for the season, flying from this mountain alone. 

Nepal- 10 World Heritage Sites

Nepal-  10 World Heritage Sites

Popular places to visit in Nepal  are 10 World Heritage Sites. Nepal is a small mountain landlocked kingdom is the world. Even it has the area of 147,181 sq. km., Nepal holds 10 places as UNESCO (United Nations Educational Scientific Cultural Organization) as ‘World Heritage Sites’.
There are 830 properties of world in World Heritage list as cultural and natural heritage having outstanding universal value. And among them there are 644 cultural heritage sites, 162 natural heritage sites and 24 mixed properties. Out of these 10 sites are from Nepal. These all 10 heritages sites are known as popular places to visit in Nepal.

The following are national heritage enlisted in World Heritage Site by UNESCO.
  1. Lumbini
  2. Pashupati Area
  3. Sagarmatha National Park
  4. Chitwan National Park
  5. Hanumandhoka Durbar Square
  6. Patan Durbar Square
  7. Bhaktapur Durbar Square
  8. Changunarayan Temple
  9. Bauddhanath Stupa
  10. Swayambhunath Stupa

1. Lumbini

Lumbini is a peerless landmark of Buddhist world. Lumbini is the birthplace of Gautam Buddha. Lumbini is recognized as the pilgrimage of all the people of the world who follow the Buddhism. UNESCO enlisted Lumbini as the World Heritage Site in 1997 AD. The Ashoka Pillar which was made by Emperor Ashoka in 245 BC is located here. There are also the Puskarani Pond and Maya Devi Temple. In 1970 AD, 13 nations including Nepal have formed Lumbini Development Committee and it started Lumbini Development Master Plan. Under the plan, various countries of the world have constructed monasteries, stupas, etc in Lumbini. The countries like China, Myanmar, Japan, Vietnam, South Korea, India, Thailand, France, Germany, etc have constructed many monasteries and stupas. Libraries, Museums, Research centres, etc are also located in Nepal.

2. Pashupati Area

Pashupati area is a holy place of the Hindus. The Pashupati area includes the temple of Pashupat, Deupatan, Jaya Begeshori, Gaurighat, Kutumbahal, Gaushala, Pingan Nath and Sleshmantak forest. There are about 492 temples, chaityas, satals, etc. Temples are constructed in various styles. There are about one thousand Shivalingas in the Pashupati area.

3. Sagarmatha National Park

Sagarmatha National Park was established on 19th July, 1976 AD. Sagarmatha National Park is located in Solukhumbu district of Sagarmatha zone. Sagarmatha National Park was enlisted in the World Heritage Site in 1976 AD. Sagarmatha National Park is extended in 1148 square kilometer area. The highest peak of the world Sagarmatha is located here. Besides, Lhotse, Choyu, Nuptse, Pumori, Amadablam, etc are other major peaks located in Sagarmatha National Park. The major vegetation found in this park is Rhododendron, dhupi, bhojpatra, etc. The birds and animals like wild yak, musk deer, red panda, snow leopard, Himalayan black bear, lophophorus (Danfe), polar cheetah, etc are found here.

4. Chitwan National Park

Chitwan National Park is one of the most important tourist destinations of Nepal. Chitwan National Park is located in Chitwan district and 120 kilometer south-west of Kathmandu. Chitwan National Park is especially famous for one-horned rhino, which is rarely found in the world. Royal Bengal Tiger is another important wildlife found in Chitwan National Park. Besides this, elephants, crocodiles, tigers, peacocks, etc are other important wildlife’s and varieties of birds found in Chitwan National Park.

5. Hanumandhoka Durbar Square

Hanumandhoka Durbar Square is located in the heart of the Kathmandu city. The Malla kings ruled over Kathmandu from Hanumandhoka Durbar Square palace. After the conquest of the Kathmandu valley, King Prithvi Narayan Shah started to rule from here and it became the capital of unified Nepal. Hanumandhoka Durbar Square is said that Pratap Malla erected the statue of Hunuman in this palace and it was named Hanumandhoka. Besides Hanumandhoka, Basantapur palace, Taleju temple, Musuem, House of Kumari, Kasthamandap, a Kettledrum, etc are the ancient heritages located here.

6. Patan Durbar Square

Patan Durbar Square was the place of Malla kings during medieval Nepal. Patan Durbar Square is located in Lalitpur district. Krishna temple with 21 golden pinnacles (gajur) is the master piece of Malla art and architecture. Besides this, these are Bhimsen temple, Bishwanath temple, Jagat Narayan temple, Mahabauddha, Kumbheshor Mahadev, temple of Rato Machhindranath, etc.

7. Bhaktapur Durbar Square

Bhaktapur Durbar Square was the place from where the Malla kings of Bhaktapur ruled over their kingdom. The heritage like Fifty-five Window-palace, statue of Bhupatindra Malla, National Art Gallery, Golden Gate, Nyatapola, etc are located here. Bhaktapur Durbar Square is enlisted in World Heritage in 1979 AD.

8. Changunarayan Temple

Changunarayan Temple is the oldest temple in Kathmandu valley came into existence in the 4th century. Changunarayan Temple is adorned by some of the best specimen of stone, wood, and metal craft in the valley. The temple stands as the epitome of culture, religion, history and faith of Kathmandu valley. Changunarayan Temple is located in Bhaktapur district and 22 kilometer east of Kathmandu. Changunarayan Temple is constructed during the rule of Lichchhavi king Mandev. There is a lord Vishnu’s idol with ten heads and ten arms. This is a fine example of stone carving from the 5th century. Changunarayan Temple is made in Pagoda style. There are also inscription carved in stone, wood and metal craft made in the 5th century.

9. Bauddhanath Stupa

Bauddhanath Stupa, the biggest stupa in Nepal, lies about 7 kms east of the capital. Bauddhanath Stupa is one of the oldest stupas in the country. It is believed that this stupa was constructed in around 5th century. There are other 45 Buddhist monasteries in this area. UNESCO enlisted it in the World Heritage Site in 1979 AD.

10. Swayambhunath

The Buddhist temple of Swayambhunath is situated on the top of a hill in Kathmandu, is one of the most popular holy places and instantly recognizable symbol of Nepal. The temple is colloquially known as “monkey temple” because of the large tribe of roaming monkeys are found there. It is believed that this temple was constructed before the 5th century. Swayambhunath temple is regarded as the symbol of religious tolerance as there is the temple of Hindu goddess Saraswati. There are other stupas and idols also. Recently, the biggest statue of Buddha has been constructed near Swayambhunath temple.

Beside these heritages enlisted in World Heritage Site, there are many other natural and cultural heritages in Nepal such as Bardiya National Park, Shivapuri National Park, Halesi of Khotang, Swargadwari of Pyuthan, Gosaikunda of Rasuwa, Kalika temple of Baglung, Chhintan Devi of Dhankuta, Pathibhara of Taplejung, Muktinath of Mustang, Ram Janaki temple of Janakpur, Jaya Bageshori of Nepalgunj, Chandanath of Jumla, etc.

About Nepal



Nepal Introduction

For a small country, Nepal has tremendous geographic diversity, rising from the tropical Terai Plain — the northern rim of the Gangetic Plain situated at about 100 meters above sea level in the south
— above the perpetual snow line at about 5,500 meters to some 90 peaks over 7,000 meters and eight over 8,000 meters including Mount Everest, locally known as Sagarmatha. North of the Himalaya, Nepal extends to the fringes of the high and arid Tibetan Plateau.

Nepal commonly is divided into three east-west physiographic belts: The Terai, the Hills and the Mountain Region. It is also divided into three major drainage systems: in the east the Koshi, in the center the Gandaki/Narayani, and in the west the Karnali.

Nepal's Climate


Nepal has a great deal of variation in climate. Its latitude is about the same as that of Florida, so the low elevation Terai has a tropical and subtropical climate. Above the Terai, the climate is completely different due to higher elevations. The east-west-trending Himalayan ranges to the north and the monsoonal alteration of wet and dry seasons also contribute to local variations in climate. Scholar Sharad Singh Negi identifies five climatic zones in Nepal based on altitude: a tropical and subtropical zone below 1,200 meters (the frost limit in winter), a cool temperate zone between 1,200 and 2,400 meters (where there is at least occasional snowfall in winter), a cold zone between 2,400 and 3,600 meters (tree line), a subarctic zone from 3,600 to 4,400 meters, and an arctic zone above 4,400 meters.

In terms of natural vegetational regimes or distribution patterns, altitude again plays a significant role. Below 1,200 meters, the dominant form of vegetation consists of tropical and subtropical forests that have evolved in response to the monsoonal climate. Altitude also affects annual rainfall or precipitation patterns. Up to about 3,000 meters, annual rainfall totals increase with elevation, but above this they decrease with elevation and latitude. Two other patterns can be discerned. First, given the northwestward movement of the moisture-laden summer monsoon (June to September), the amount of annual rainfall generally decreases from east to west, although there are exceptional areas such as the Pokhara Valley in Central Nepal with higher rainfall due to generally lower “hills” to the south and the main Himalayan Range immediately to the north that stops the northward passage of moist air. Second, adabiatic effects increase rainfall on south- and east-facing mountain slopes, with a rain shadow on northern sides. This reaches its climax in the inner Himalayan region and on the Tibetan Plateau. Eastern Nepal receives approximately 2,500 millimeters of rain annually, the Kathmandu area gets about 1,400 millimeters, and western Nepal about 1,000 millimeters.

The towering Himalayas play a critical role, blocking the northwesterly advances of moist, tropical air from the Bay of Bengal, and ultimately leading to its conversion to rain in the summer. In the winter, this range prevents the outbursts of cold air from Inner Asia from reaching southern Nepal and northern India, thus ensuring warmer winters in these regions than otherwise would be the case.

In addition, there are seasonal variations in the amount of rainfall, depending on the monsoon cycle. Bishop divides the monsoon cycle into four seasons: premonsoon, summer monsoon, postmonsoon, and winter monsoon. The premonsoon season generally occurs during April and May; it is characterized by the highest temperatures, reaching 40 °C during the day in the Terai Region and other lowlands. The hills and mountains, however, remain cool.

The summer monsoon, a strong flow of moist air from the southwest, follows the premonsoon season. For the vast majority of southern Asians, including Nepalese, the term monsoon is synonymous with the summer rainy season, which makes or breaks the lives of hundreds of millions of farmers on the subcontinent. Even though the arrival of the summer monsoon can vary by as much as a month, in Nepal it generally arrives in early June, is preceded by violent lightning and thunderstorms, and lasts through September, when it begins to recede. The plains and lower Himalayas receive more than 70% of their annual precipitation during the summer monsoon. The amount of summer monsoon rain generally declines from southeast to northwest as the maritime wedge of air gradually becomes thinner and dryer. Although the success of farming is almost totally dependent on the timely arrival of the summer monsoon, it periodically causes such problems as landslides; subsequent losses of human lives, farmlands, and other properties (not to mention great difficulty in the movement of goods and people); and heavy flooding in the plains. Conversely, when prolonged breaks in the summer monsoon occur, severe drought and famine often result.

The postmonsoon season begins with a slow withdrawal of the monsoon. This retreat leads to an almost complete disappearance of moist air by mid-October, thus ushering in generally cool, clear, and dry weather, as well as the most relaxed and jovial period in Nepal. By this time, the harvest is completed and people are in a festive mood. The two biggest and most important Hindu festivals– Dashain and Tihar (Dipawali)–arrive during this period, about one month apart. The postmonsoon season lasts until about December.

After the postmonsoon, comes the winter monsoon, a strong northeasterly flow, which is marked by occasional, short rainfalls in the lowlands and plains and snowfalls in the high-altitude areas. The amount of precipitation resulting from the northeast land trade winds varies considerably but increases markedly with elevation. The secondary winter precipitation in the form of snowfalls in the Himalayas is important for generating a sufficient volume of spring and summer meltwaters, which are critical for irrigation in the lower hills and valleys where agriculture predominates. Winter precipitation is also are indispensable for the success of winter crops, such as wheat, barley, and numerous vegetables.

The Mountain Region


The Mountain Region (Parbat in Nepali) is abruptly elevated thousands of meters into the zone of perpetual snow along the Main Central Thust fault zone. South of this fault system, “hills” do not greatly exceed treeline at about 3,500 meters. North of it the Himalayas rise as a virtual wall above the snowline at 5,000 to 5,500 meters to some 90 peaks over 7,000 meters (22,965′) and eight giants exceeding 8,000 meters (26,246′), including Mount Everest at 8,848 meters and Kanchenjunga at 8,598 meters.

Cutting between the various subranges of the Himalaya and north of them are alpine, often semi-arid valleys including Humla, Jumla, Mustang, Manang District and Khumbu that are lightly populated by people with Tibetan affinities called Bhotiya or Bhutia, the famous Sherpas in the Kumbu valley near Mount Everest. Bhote traditionally grazed yaks, grew cold-tolerant crops such as potatoes, barley and millet, and traded across the mountains, e.g. Tibetan salt for rice from lowlands in Nepal and India. Since the 1950s these mountain peoples have also found work as high altitude porters, guides, cooks and other accessories to tourism and alpinism.

Bhote language and culture extend north into Tibet proper, with the international border following the Himalayan crest in eastern Nepal. In central and western Nepal the border mostly follows lower (~6,000 meter) ranges tens of kilometers north of the highest peaks, the watershed between the Ganges and Brahmaputra river basins.



The Hilly Region


Situated south of the Mountain Region, the Hill Region (Pahar in Nepali) is mostly between 1,000 and 4,000 meters in altitude. This region begins at the Mahabharat Lekh (Leser Himalaya) where a fault system called the Main Boundary Thrust creates an escarpment 1,000 to 1,500 meters high, rising to the crest of this range generally at about 2,000, occasionally up to 3,000 meters. The abrupt south-facing slope is nearly uninhabited, thus an effective buffer between languages and culture in the Terai and Hill regions. Northern slopes of the Mahabharats are gentler and moderately well populated.

North of this range, valleys as high as 2,000 meters are densely populated by rice-growing, Nepali-speaking Hindus and by Newar merchants who also speak Newari. The increasingly urbanized Kathmandu and Pokhara valleys are part of this region. Hillsides up to about 3,000 meters are instead occupied by indigenous “janjati” ethnic groups natively speaking highly localized Tibeto-Burman languages and dialects. There are Magars and Kham Magars west of Pokhara, Gurungs south of the Annapurnas, Thamangs north of Kathmandu, Rai and Limbu further east. Upland staple crops are maize, millet, barley and potatoes rather than rice. Temperate and subtropical fruits are grown as cash crops. Marijuana is grown and processed into hashish, or was until international pressure forced the government to stop being the middleman operating government monopoly stores in urban centers. There is increasing reliance on animal husbandry with elevation, using land above 3,000 meters for summer grazing and moving herds of sheep and goats to lower elevations in winter. Except for the rice-growing lower valleys, the hills are in chronic food deficit. Many menfolk are employed in the Terai, in India or overseas to earn cash for imported grain. The Hill region ends dramatically where the main Himalayan Range abruptly rises thousands of meters into the realm of perpetual snow.



The Terai region


The Terai or Madhesh region begins at the Indian border and includes the northermost part of the flat, intensively farmed Gangetic Plain called the Outer Terai. This is culturally an extension of northern India with Hindi, Awadhi, Bhojpuri and Maithili spoken more than Nepali, however it was annexed to Nepal by conquest and by treaty with the British.

Rivers including the large Koshi, Narayani (called the Gandak in India), and Karnali meander across the Terai after breaking through the ranges to the north. These and smaller rivers rising south of the main Himalaya are prone to flooding during the summer monsoon.
The Outer Terai ends at the first range of foothills called the Siwaliks. This range has a forested alluvial belt along its base, marshy with springs fed by groundwater percolating down from higher elevations. Before the use of DDT the alluvial zone was dangerously infested with malaria. Nepal’s rulers used it as a defensive frontier called the char kose jhadi (twelve kilometer forest).

Beyond the alluvial belt, the Siwaliks rise as high as 1,000 meters, steepest on their southern flanks because of faults. This range is composed of poorly consolidated, coarse sediments that quickly absorb rainfall. This is unsuited to agriculture so there is very little population. However in several places north of the Siwaliks there are dun valleys or the Inner Terai. Among these are Surkhet, Dang and Deukhuri in western Nepal and the Rapti Valley (Chitwan) in central Nepal. These valleys were also malarial and lightly populated until DDT was used to suppress mosquitos, but they had significant agricultural potential that was exploited to some degree by the Tharu ethnic group who were resistant to malaria. After DDT was used to suppress malaria in the 1950s, farmers from the hills began settling in these valleys to the detriment of the Tharus.

The Terai ends and the Hills begin at a higher range of foothills called the Mahabharat Range.


River system


Nepal can be divided into three major river systems from east to west: the Koshi River basin, the Narayani River basin (India’s Gandak River), and the Karnali River basin. All ultimately become major tributaries of the Ganges River in northern India. After rising inside Tibet or in the Transhimalayan Ranges along the border, they cross the main Himalaya and Lesser Himalaya in deep gorges and then deposit their heavy loads of sediments and debris on the plains, thereby nurturing them and renewing their alluvial soil fertility. Once they reach the Tarai Region, they often overflow their banks onto wide floodplains during the summer monsoon season, periodically shifting their courses. Besides providing fertile alluvial soil, the backbone of the agrarian economy, these rivers present great possibilities for hydroelectric and irrigation development. To date Nepal has not made extensive use of its hydrolelectric resourses. All of them make use of the natural elevation differences, diverting water from the river and running it through turbines further downstream. The latest one is the Kali Gandaki hydroelectricity project a few km north of Tansen. Building dams in Nepal has remained a disputed issue, mainly because of the high risk of earthquakes in the region. None of the river systems support any significant commercial navigation facility. Rather, the deep gorges formed by the rivers represent immense obstacles to establishing the broad transport and communication networks needed to develop an integrated national economy. As a result, the economy in Nepal has remained fragmented. Because Nepal’s rivers have not been harnessed for transportation, most settlements in the Hill and Mountain regions remain isolated from each other. As of 1991, trails remained the primary transportation routes in the hills.
The eastern part of the country is drained by the Koshi River, which has seven tributaries. It is locally known as the Sapt Kosi, which means seven Kosi rivers (Tamur, Likhu Khola, Dudh, Sun, Indrawati, Tama, and Arun). The principal tributary is the Arun, which rises about 150 kilometers inside the Tibetan Plateau. The Narayani River or Gandak drains the central part of Nepal and also has seven major tributaries (Daraudi, Seti, Madi, Kali, Marsyandi, Budhi, and Trisuli). The Kali Gandaki, which flows between the Dhaulagiri Himal and the Annapurna Himal (Himal is the Nepali variation of the Sanskrit word Himalaya), is the main river of this drainage system. The river system draining the western part of Nepal is the Karnali. Its three immediate tributaries are the Bheri, Seti, and Karnali rivers, the latter being the major one. The Maha Kali, which also is known as the Kali and which flows along the Nepal-India border on the west side, and the (West)Rapti River also are considered tributaries of the Karnali. 


The great four martyrs of Nepal

Dharma Bhakta Mathema was a professional body builder as well as a founding member of Praja Parishad party of Nepal. He introduced modern body building techniques in Nepal. But he is better known for his contribution to the Nepalese struggle for freedom against hereditary prime ministership of the Rana dynasty. He was killed during the freedom movement, and he is duly recognized as one of the four martyrs of Nepal. His statue is found, along with other three martyrs, in the Martyr's Gate (Sahid Gate) memorial in Kathmandu.A school is also established on his name 'Shahid Dharma Bhakta School (SDB)' currently located in Nakkhu, Lalitpur, Nepal by her daughter Renu Devi which runs the classes from montessori to grade 10 (School Leaving Certificate). On Magh 12, 1997 BS, Dharma Bhakta was hanged till death at Shifal, Kathmandu, at midnight. for more Click here

Dasharath Chand is martyr of Nepalese Democratic Movement and a politician of Nepal who was active in starting a political revolution in Nepal during Rana rule. He was born at Baskot of Baitadi district of Nepal in 1903 AD as a son of Sher Bahadur Chand.He received his education at different places of Uttarakhand like Almora, Nainital, etc. Finally, he went to Banaras, where he completed an Intermediate education. In Banaras he worked for Kashi Nagari Pracharini Sabha. Gangalal Shrestha and Dasharath Chand were arrested. In prison, they were given severe torture and pain. They were asked to beg pardon but they did not do so. At last, in 1941, January 25, Dasharath Chand and Gangalal were shot dead at Shobha Bhagawati. for more Click here

Ganga Lal Shrestha was a Nepalese revolutionary who was executed by the autocratic Rana regime. He is honoured as one of the four martyrs of the Nepalese revolution. He was a member of the clandestine political organisation named Nepal Praja Parishad that started a movement in 1939 to remove the Rana oligarchy and establish democracy in Nepal. The secret Nepal Praja Parishad was exposed by one Ramji Joshi in return for a cash reward of Rs. 5,000. This led to the arrest of many of its members on 18 October 1940. On 19 January 1941, the Ranas sentenced Ganga Lal, Dashrath Chand, Dharma Bhakta Mathema and Shukra Raj Shastri (although he was not involved in Praja Parishad), to death. On 28 January 1941, Ganga Lal was taken to Shobha Bhagwati on the bank of the Bishnumati River where he was shot dead along with Chand by Nara Shumsher Rana. The other two, Mathema and Shastri, were hanged. Ganga Lal was allowed one last meeting with his family the day before he was executed. They went to the jail and he was brought out from his cell with hands and feet shackled. The emotional reunion stirred his youngest brother Pushpa Lal Shrestha to dedicate himself to fight for democracy and equality. In 1949, he founded the Communist Party of Nepal which played a key role in removing the Ranas. for more click here

Shukra Raj Shastri was a Nepalese intellectual and fighter for democracy who was executed by the autocratic Rana dynasty. He is one of the four martyrs of the Nepalese revolution that toppled the Rana regime. The other three are Dashrath Chand, Dharma Bhakta Mathema and Ganga Lal Shrestha. The Ranas were eventually overthrown in February 1951, and democracy was established in Nepal. The Rana oligarchy ruled Nepal from 1846 until 1951. During this time, the Shah king was reduced to a figurehead and the prime minister and other government positions were hereditary. Jang Bahadur Rana established the Rana dynasty in 1846 by masterminding the Kot massacre in which about 40 members of the nobility including the prime minister and a relative of the king were murdered. Tyranny, debauchery, economic exploitation and religious persecution characterized Rana rule. This 104-years of Rana regime has been called as one of the darkest periods of Nepalese history. for more click here