Kathmandu, October 21

Nepal Medical Council has allocated seats for Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery and Bachelor of Dental Surgery to medical colleges for the academic year 2019-2020.

The council has allocated a maximum of 100 seats to MBBS and 50 seats for BDS for themedical colleges.

Two of the medical colleges Devdaha and Kathmandu School of Medical Sciences have been given ten more seats than last year.

Devdaha Medical College can now teach 50 students in its MBBS programme. Last year the college was given 40 seats.

Kathmandu School of Medical Sciences has now been allocated 85 seats for its MBBS programme while 50 seats have been allocated for its BDS programme. Earlier only 75 seats were allocated for MBBS.

&Devdaha Medical College and Kathmandu School of Medical Sciences have been given more seats this year as no complaints were received from students and guardians and these colleges have met our guidelines,& said a source from Nepal Medical Council on condition of anonymity.

&The medical colleges were not punished this year. So the seats were given to them as it was given last year,& he added.

Birat Medical College has been given 75 seats for MBBS.

Nepalgunj Medical College, Manipal Medical College and Lumbini Medical College were allocated 100 seats each for MBBS.

Patan Academy of Medical Sciences has been allotted 65 seats for MBBS.

Kathmandu Medical College, Nepal Medical College, College of Medical Sciences and BP Koirala Institute of Health Sciences were each allocated 100 seats for MBBS and 50 seats for BDS.

Similarly, Nobel Medical College was given 100 seats for MBBS and 35 seats for BDS.

A total of 50 seats have been allocated to Kantipur Dental College.

The Association of Private Medical and Dental Colleges has warned that colleges will not admit new students this year even though the Medical Education Commission has increased fees for medical studies.

The association had earlier warned that there would be no new admissions until their demands were met. It had demanded that medical colleges be given 150 seats for MBBS and 75 seats for BDS programmes, respectively.

&Though private medical colleges have warned that they will not take admission until the medical seats are increased, there is no chance for any increase in the number of seats for this year. The seats increment procedure will be reviewed next year,& the source added.

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Kathmandu, October 21

Education should be given, policies should be implemented and womenrights should be ensured if we are to meet the strategic vision of getting to three zeros by 2030: zero unmet need for contraception and family planning; zero preventable maternal deaths and zero gender-based violence and practices such as child marriage, said Natalia Kanem, Executive Director at United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).

Efforts should be accelerated to meet 2030 goals. Governments, civil society, and individuals must all take part, she said.

Accelerate efforts to meet 2030 goals: UNFPA chief

Speaking at a press conference today in the Capital, Kanem said that geography in Nepal has been a major hindrance for women getting reproductive health services.

In order to meet the 2030 goals womenrights should be ensured, maternal deaths should be prevented, unmet needs for family planning services should be addressed, girls& right to education and health should be ensured and child marriage should be eliminated, she added.

According to Nepal Demographic Health Survey 2016 maternal mortality remained high at 239 per 100,000 live births in Nepal.

Maternal mortality ratio in Nepal is high. &To decrease the rate, child marriage should be stopped. Everyone should understand the consequences of child marriage.

If we can track the reasons for maternal mortality rates, make midwives and nurses available in the rural villages then there will be reduction in the maternal mortality rate. We need to protect the reproductive rights of women and girls,& she said.

&Though there are hindrances we must reach the women living in rural areas as they are the ones whoare in need of the reproductive health services, she said.

Commenting about womenparticipation in the three-tier government system in Nepal, Kanem said that more womenparticipation in the three-tier government system in Nepal is a signal of implementation of womenrights, but it is not a complete story. Education should be provided to girls to make them aware and bring changes, she added.

Kanem is on a two-day visit to recognise the achievements of Nepal in relation to the Cairo vision and commitment of the government to its full implementation by 2030; and to invite the government at the highest level to participate in the Nairobi Summit on ICPD25 to be held from November 12 to 14.

Kanem met Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli today and commended him for the countryachievements on sexual and reproductive health and encouraged further progress on the ICPD mandate.

She also met Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Health Upendra Yadav, Minister of Foreign Affairs Pradeep Kumar Gyawali, Minister of Women, Children and Senior Citizens Tham Maya Thapa, government officials and youngsters during her two-day visit.

The ICPD Programme of Action was unanimously adopted in Cairo in 1994 by 179 member states including Nepal, and it transformed the discourse on sustainable development with a vision and values that anticipated the vision and values of the SDGs.

This year, UNFPA marks 50 years since its founding as well as the 25th anniversary of the landmark International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) held in Cairo in 1994.

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Kathmandu, October 21

Police have arrested three persons in connection with fake Nepali currency bank notes, along with printing machine, from a rented flat at Naya Basti in Gokarneshwor Municipality-3, Kathmandu, today.

A special team of Bouddha Metropolitan Police arrested the trio by raiding the second-floor flat of the house belonging to Roshan Dawadi at around 6:00am today. Police said the illegal act of printing fake currency was going on since Dashain. Acting on a tip-off, the raid was carried out.

Police added that house owner Dawadi was a former inspector of Nepal Police and was cooperating with the investigation.

The arrested have been identified as Rajan Pariyar, 28, Santosh Nepali, 35, and Mahendra Nepali, 21. All the arrested hail from Melung Rural Municipality, Dolakha.

Police confiscated 34 fake bank notes of Rs 1,000 denomination that wereready for circulation in the market.

Similarly, 290 pieces of paper to be used for printing Rs 1,000 fake bank notes, colour photocopy machine and fake ribbons used in currencies, among 43 other items, were seized from the operation centre.

Police said counterfeiters had already exchanged up to Rs 60,000 in the market.

Deputy Superintendent of Police Ramesh Bahadur Singh of Bouddha Police Circle said the fraudsters themselves visited busy market places during Dashain and purchased various items using fake currency.

Singh added, &Most of them bought recharge cards worth Rs 100 from various street vendors and local shops by giving fake Rs 1,000 notes and receiving Rs 900.&

According to Singh, the fake bank notes lacked many of the security features, including water marks. He said, &They had also used fake ribbons on the notes, to give the impression of genuine note.&

He further said police were further investigating how the perpetrators acquired the skill to duplicate currency.

Police have alerted the general people about being swindled by such people, and urged them to contact the police as soon as they encountered any duplicate currency.

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