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Sher Bahadur Deuba

Sher Bahadur Deuba is a Nepalese politician who served as the 32nd prime minister of Nepal for five terms. He was the president of the Nepali Congress since 2016 until 2026 and was the Member of Parliament for the parliamentary constituency of Dadeldhura 1 before the parliament was dissolved on 12 September 2025. During the Gen Z protests, he and his wife, Arzu Rana Deuba, were physically assaulted by protesters at their residence. His tenure in office has been controversial for nepotism, corruption and disillusionment with citizens.

Early life and education
Deuba was born on 13 June 1946 in Ashigram, Kingdom of Nepal. He completed his primary education from Ashigram Primary School. He then attended Mahendra High School in Doti where he completed his School Leaving Certificate exam. He moved to Kathmandu for his higher education and in 1963 enrolled in Tri-Chandra College. In 1988, Deuba, with the help of acting Nepali Congress president Krishna Prasad Bhattarai, got a scholarship through Socialist International and was sent to London to attend the London School of Economics where he was a research student studying political science. In London he worked as a part-time translator for the BBC World Service. == Political career ==
Political career
Beginnings (1963–1990) He started his political career as the member of the Far Western Zonal Student Union in 1963. The organization was founded by students from Far-Western Development Region who were studying in Kathmandu at the time. While studying at Tri-Chandra Multiple Campus, he became a member of the Arjun Narasingha K.C. led Student Rally Coordination Committee along with Ram Chandra Paudel. He became a founding member of the Nepal Student Union in 1970. The next year, he became the president of the union, a position that he held for eight years. Deuba was arrested in connection with the Jaisidewal bomb plot. He served nine years in jail during the 1970s and 80s for his participation in pro-democracy activities. Multiparty era (1991–2002) After the 1990 revolution, Deuba came back from London and was elected from Dadeldhura 1 at the 1991 election from Nepali Congress. He became Home Minister in Girija Prasad Koirala's cabinet. First cabinet (1995–1997) After the minority government of Manmohan Adhikari fell, Deuba was appointed as prime minister in 1995 with the support of Rastriya Prajatantra Party and Nepal Sadbhawana Party. He came into controversy for having 52 cabinet members in his eighteen month long tenure a move that was criticized by party president Girija Prasad Koirala. His government was also accused of bribing MPs from minor parties and sending Rastriya Prajatantra Party MP's to Bangkok in order to avoid key votes in the parliament. His administration also introduced pensions, allowances and other privileges for legislators. Deuba's administration frequently solicited the advice of the opposition in major domestic and foreign policy issues. His cabinet signed the Mahakali treaty with India, which had been initiated by the previous CPN (UML) government, introduced a system of voter ID and ended dual ownership of land through consensus in the parliament. Contunuing with party policy, his administration favored economic liberalization that the Koirala government in 1991 had started. Value-added taxes were introduced during his tenure. Deuba completed state visits to India, China, Pakistan, the United Kingdom and the United States during his tenure. Second cabinet (2001–2002) After Koirala was forced to resign following the Holeri scandal in July 2001, Deuba defeated Sushil Koirala in the contest for parliamentary party leader and was appointed as prime minister for the second time. Following a breakdown in negotiations, the Maoists resumed their attacks on the government and a state of emergency was declared for six months in February 2002 after a parliamentary vote. The July 2002 local elections were also postponed following the escalation of violence. After Deuba failed to get a two-thirds majority to extend the state of emergency and dissent within his party on the government's handling of the Maoist issue, Deuba requested King Gyanendra to dissolve the parliament and called for new elections within the next six months. Nepali Congress (Democratic) (2002–2007) Deuba's move to extend the state of emergency and dissolving the House of Representatives was severely criticized by party chairman Girija Prasad Koirala. After Deuba was expelled from the Nepali Congress, his faction of the party called a general convention that deposed Koirala . Koirala declared this general convention illegal and was supported by two-thirds of the members of the committee. In September 2002, the Election Commission declared that Koirala's group was the official Nepali Congress following which Deuba split the party and formed Nepali Congress (Democratic). He remained as prime minister until 1 February 2005, when the king seized executive power and placed leading politicians including Deuba under house arrest. In July, Deuba was sentenced to two years in jail on corruption charges related to Melamchi Water Supply Project by the Royal Commission on Corruption Control set up by King Gyanendra. After the Supreme Court dismissed the commission for being unconstitutional, he was released from prison. In September 2007, he re-united the Nepali Congress (Democratic) with the Nepali Congress. Constituent Assembly (2008–2015) He was elected from Dadeldhura 1 and Kanchanpur 4 at the 2008 Constituent Assembly election, the latter of which he vacated. Deuba was the candidate for Nepali Congress for prime minister but lost to CPN (Maoist) leader Pushpa Kamala Dahal, 464-113. He faced off against Ram Chandra Poudel for parliamentary party leader but lost. Congress president (2016–present) , in 2017 At the party's 13th general convention, Deuba contested against Ram Chandra Poudel and Krishna Prasad Sitaula for party president. Deuba fell 11 votes short of winning in the first round and was elected in the second round, defeating Poudel with 58% of the vote. Fourth cabinet (2017–2018) In August 2016, the party agreed on a deal with CPN (Maoist Centre) to run the government for nine months each until the next election. As per the agreement, Deuba was sworn in as prime minister for the fourth time on 7 June 2017. He was elected from Dadeldhura 1 at the 2017 election but the left alliance of CPN (UML) and CPN (Maoist Centre) gained a majority in the House of Representatives. He resigned in February 2018 to make way for the new government. In the contest for parliamentary party leader he defeated Prakash Man Singh. This was met by a legal challenge in the Supreme Court which ruled in favor of restoring the lower house and appointing Deuba as prime minister in July 2021. Deuba was then appointed prime minister for the fifth time. At the party's 14th general convention in December 2021, he faced a challenge from Shekhar Koirala, Prakash Man Singh, Bimalendra Nidhi and Kalyan Gurung. Deuba got 48% of the vote in the first round and faced Koirala in the second round. Deuba was re-elected as president defeating Shekhar Koirala with 60% of the vote after Singh and Nidhi supported him in the second round. He was reelected from Dadeldhura 1 at the 2022 election. He was also reelected as the parliamentary party leader, surviving a challenge from general secretary Gagan Thapa. Deuba was replaced by Pushpa Kamal Dahal following the election. == Controversies ==
Controversies
Deuba's tenure in public office has been marked by persistent accusations of nepotism, corruption, and weak governance. Critics have also pointed to repeated episodes of political instability during his five terms as Prime Minister, and his role in escalating the Maoist insurgency through a series of failed negotiations and emergency measures. Bloated Cabinet and Party Split (1995) During his first term as Prime Minister, Deuba drew widespread criticism for assembling a cabinet of 52 ministers over an eighteen-month tenure — a move condemned as an exercise in patronage politics and criticised openly by Nepali Congress party president Girija Prasad Koirala. Tensions between Deuba and Koirala's faction deepened over subsequent years. After Deuba was expelled from the Nepali Congress in 2002, his supporters convened a general convention that removed Koirala from the party presidency. Koirala declared the convention illegal, and in September 2002, the Election Commission ruled that Koirala's group was the official Nepali Congress, after which Deuba formally established the Nepali Congress (Democratic). Handling of the Maoist Insurgency and State of Emergency (2001–2002) Deuba's second premiership, which began in July 2001 amid the escalating Maoist insurgency, has been the subject of sustained criticism. After peace negotiations collapsed, his government declared a six-month state of emergency in February 2002 and designated the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) a terrorist organisation. Critics and political scholars have argued that Deuba bore significant responsibility for the failure of early-stage peace talks, having disregarded a list of Maoist demands presented to the government in January 1996. His government also dissolved elected local bodies and replaced them with appointed government officials in July 2002, a measure condemned as democratic backsliding. Deuba further introduced the Terrorist and Destructive Activities (Control and Punishment) Act (TADA), which human rights organisations criticised for its overly broad scope and potential for misuse. After Deuba failed to secure a two-thirds majority to extend the state of emergency, King Gyanendra dismissed him in November 2002 on grounds of incompetence. Melamchi Corruption Conviction (2005) In July 2005, Deuba was convicted by the Royal Commission on Corruption Control — established by King Gyanendra following his seizure of executive power — and sentenced to two years in prison on charges of embezzling funds in connection with the Melamchi Water Supply Project. Deuba refused to appoint legal counsel or respond to the charges, asserting that the commission was unconstitutional. The United States government expressed concern over the conviction, noting that the commission had served as investigator, prosecutor, and judge simultaneously, and that the Asian Development Bank — the project's principal donor — had examined similar allegations and found no supporting evidence. The Supreme Court of Nepal subsequently struck down the commission as unconstitutional, and Deuba was released from prison in February 2006. Press Freedom and Intimidation of Journalists (2025) In 2025, journalist Dil Bhusan Pathak was charged under the Electronic Transactions Act after alleging on his YouTube channel that Deuba's son, Jaiveer Singh Deuba, was linked to questionable dealings involving the new Hilton Kathmandu. The case drew further attention when a media house director alleged that Foreign Minister Arzu Rana Deuba had pressured her outlet over its coverage of the journalist's case — an allegation the minister denied. The Committee to Protect Journalists described the charge against Pathak as emblematic of growing risks journalists face in Nepal for critically reporting on powerful figures. 2025 Gen Z Protests, Attack on Residence, and Money Laundering Inquiry On 9 September 2025, amid the Gen Z uprising, protesters vandalised and set fire to Deuba's residence in Budhanilkantha. Viral videos circulated online showing individuals removing and burning stacks of banknotes from inside the property; fact-checkers confirmed the footage was authentic. Deuba and his wife Arzu Rana Deuba sustained injuries during the attack. In the aftermath, the Department of Money Laundering Investigation opened a formal inquiry into Deuba, along with former prime ministers KP Sharma Oli and Pushpa Kamal Dahal, and former ministers Arzu Rana Deuba and Deepak Khadka, on suspicion of accumulating illegal wealth through abuse of public office. The inquiry — described as the first of its kind against such long-serving political figures — covers wealth, companies, and financial transactions across three generations of the Deuba family. == Personal life ==
Personal life
Deuba is married to Arzu Rana Deuba. They have a son, Jaybir Singh Deuba. During the 2025 Nepalese Gen Z protests, Deuba and his wife were injured after their house was attacked and set on fire by protesters on 9 September and were rescued by Nepal Army and Armed Police Force officers. == Electoral performance ==
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