Posts Tagged ‘Himani’

Himani’s paragliding trip frays

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

POKHARA: Former princess Himani Shah was seen paragliding for about 45 minutes in Pokhara today.

Himani arrived in Pokhara on a private tour on Thursday. The paragliding trip began from Sarangkot and she landed in Khapaundi on the banks of Fewa Lake.

Brazilian pilot Wildes Antonioli was with the former princess during the flight. Antonioli said Himani attained a height of 3,250 meters. Himani said it was her maiden paragliding flight and it was a sublime experience.

Himani, who came to Pokhara with her family, has been staying in Fishtail Lodge. The lodge source said Himani had been staying with her kids. After the paragliding trip, Himani had food in Boomerang Restaurant at Lakeside.

Meanwhile, the security persons pounced on THT lensman Krishnamani Baral after he clicked Himani in mid-flight. They took him to Lakeside from Khapaundi and deleted the photos. However, the photos were restored from memory card using recovery software.

Several organisations protested the deletion of photos taken at a public place. “Since Himani is now a commoner, the act of deleting photos taken at a public place is condemnable,” Jha said.

Kaski chapter of FNJ and The Himalayan Times branch of FNJ have condemned the incident.

When contacted, Nepal Police and Nepali Army officials said they knew nothing about Himani’s Pokhara trip. However, a source said 8-10 security personnel have come from Kathmandu to provide security to the ex-princess.

Comments

1

Posted on: 2009-05-24 23:53:18

I dont agree on this coz if u say her as a commoner than why the journalist is making clips and making reports of a commoner doing paragliding…lots of common and normal people are doing paragliding but the journalist doesnt make it news…so if you are making Himani doing paragliding a news then she is above than commoner and she have rights of her privacy….journalists taks abt press freedom and behave like this…I sud think of reading THT if it stand for its side only…

Devyani plays matchmaker between India’s Rajputs, Nepal’s Ranas

Monday, August 25th, 2008

(IANS)

After her own marriage to a scion of India’s aristocracy, Devyani Singh nee Rana, once known as the girl for whom Nepal’s crown prince Dipendra allegedly killed his entire family, is now playing matchmaker between India and Nepal.

Devyani, who this year hit the headlines again when she took part in the election campaign of her father Pashupati Shumsher Jung Bahadur Rana for Nepal’s historic constituent assembly election in April, is now uniting the seniormost Rajput clan of India with the blueblooded Ranas of Nepal, who once ruled the Himalayan nation as hereditary prime ministers.

Preparations are afoot for one of the most spectacular society weddings in the subcontinent in which the groom’s bridal procession would include an elephant, four horses and four camels.

The 27-year-old groom, Virat Shumsher Jung Bahadur Rana, is the great-great-grandson of Chandra Shumsher Jung Bahadur Rana, who was the longest ruling Rana prime minister of Nepal.

The 26-year-old bride Himani Katoch, who works for the Deutsche Bank in New Delhi, is the daughter of Col. M. Katoch, who heads India’s seniormost Rajput clan.

‘We are expecting about 1,000 guests at the wedding reception,’ said Virat’s father Gautam Shumsher Jung Bahadur Rana, entrepreneur and writer whose recent article in the People magazine blamed former crown prince Paras for the abolition of monarchy in Nepal.

‘All the former royal families of India and Nepal would be there.

Due to the political turmoil in Nepal, the wedding would be held in February at a New Delhi club while the groom’s family will host a sumptuous reception in India’s former princely state of Rajasthan. Two ancient palaces, now converted into opulent hotels, would house the bride and groom’s families.

The Mandawa Haveli Hotel and Narayan Palace Hotel have been shortlisted.

‘The bride’s family was known to Devyani, who had earlier received a marriage proposal from them,’ Gautam Rana told IANS. ‘Though she chose to marry (Indian human resource minister) Arjun Singh’s grand son Aishwarya instead, she however became close to the Katochs.

‘It was she who arranged this alliance.

Gautam Rana, who has a special interest in traditional jewellery and costumes, is overseeing the groom’s traditional wedding suit that is being made by a rising Nepali designer.

‘Think of the costumes Hrithik Roshan wore in ‘Jodha-Akbar’,’ he said. ‘Bollywood copied them from Rana attire.

The groom will wear a breathtaking jama – long kurta — that is to be embroidered with gold thread. The embroidery alone will cost nearly Nepali Rs.200,000.

Nepal’s last king Gyanendra, now living in virtual exile, would be asked to grace the wedding.

‘My mother is very keen that all members of the family assemble under one roof at least once,’ Gautam Rana said.

Perhaps due to the tradition of inter-clan marriages, India-Nepal alliances seem to be haunted by the same fateful names.

Aishwarya was also the name of the queen of Nepal who was killed along with King Birendra in the royal palace massacre in 2001.

Himani is also the name of Paras’ wife, who was formerly the crown princess of Nepal.

Gyanendra faces fresh eviction as Maoists ready cabinet

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Kathmandu, Aug 22: Nepal on Friday heaved a sigh of relief with former Maoist guerrillas finally forming a new cabinet more than four months after the elections. But it is a fresh blow for ousted king Gyanendra, who now faces eviction from the mansion that had been his refuge since quitting the royal palace in June.

The last king of the Hindu kingdom of Nepal, who was reported to be penning his autobiography in his present solitary life, has begun looking for a new abode as he has to vacate the Nagarjun summer palace where the earlier Girija Prasad Koirala government had allowed him to shift from the Narayanhity royal palace.

Though the Koirala government had said the former hunting lodge of the royal family, now the property of the state, was loaned temporarily to the former king and his wife Komal to facilitate their final exit from the palace, it did not make any move to nudge the former royals away even two months later.

After winning the April election, Prachanda, the chief of the Maoist party that waged a 10-year war on the omnipotent royal family and brought their downfall two years ago, had indicated that the deposed king would be asked to find a new roof over his head once he came to power.

With Prachanda sworn in as republic Nepal’s new prime minister last week and a Maoist-led cabinet to be sworn in on Friday, the ex-king has read the writing on the wall.

The former king could now move into the residence of his uncle, the late Prince Himalaya, reported Jana Aastha, the Nepali weekly that has been a close watcher of the palace.

The sprawling mansion, located in Kathmandu’s quiet Chhauni area, was transferred to Gyanendra’s name when he was a Prince, the weekly said.

Before moving into the Narayanhity palace almost a year after his ascension to the throne, Gyanendra, who used to be a businessman, lived in Nirmal Niwas, his private residence, not far from the palace.

The former king finds it impossible to move back into his old mansion as he has given it to his son, former crown prince Paras.

Though the controversial former heir to Nepal’s throne left for Singapore along with his family, the tabloid said his wife, former crown princess Himani, had returned with their youngest child.

Himani, it said, would live in Kathmandu along with daughter Krittika while the two older children were now studying in Singapore.

IANS

Gyanendra discusses political situation with loyalists

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Kathmandu, Aug 21: Deposed King Gyanendra held “political consultations” with his loyalists to discuss

current political developments in Nepal at his residence here.

The ex-King had arranged a separate place at Nirmal Niwas to facilitate consultations about present political situation in the country with his loyalists, came to attend 81st birth day party of ex-Queen mother Ratna Shah yesterday, a national daily reported.

Gyanendra had serious talks with members of the erstwhile royal cabinet, his loyalists and former security

chiefs, including former Prime Minister Surya Bahadur Thapa and former army chief Pyarjung Thapa.

The former King, who is currently staying at government-owned Nagarjuna holiday home, also expressed

concern about their residence and facilities after the Maoists government was formed, the daily stated.

When contacted a staff of the former King confirmed about the birth day party but did not reveal the guest list.

Ex-Queen Komal, her daughter-in-law Himani and other family members had also attended the party hosted by Rajiv Shahi, the son-in law of Gyanendra’s younger brother and one of the survivors of June 2001 Royal Palace massacre, the daily said.

The former king had been living a quiet life after the abolition of monarchy in Nepal on May 28.

Bureau Report

More family members desert Nepal's deposed king

Monday, August 4th, 2008

His son and controversial former crown prince Paras was the first member of Nepal's disgraced former royal family to leave his motherland after the abolition of the 239-year-old institution of monarchy.After the playboy former royal's exit from Nepal last month for greener pastures in Singapore, his wife, erstwhile crown princess Himani, and their three minor young children followed suit within a fortnight.Now deposed king Gyanendra's remaining child, daughter Prerana, has also followed her brother.The former princess, who is married to a controversial commoner businessman, made a low-profile exit from Kathmandu late last month unnoticed by the media.Prerana was accompanied by her four-year-old son Parthav.She is now ensconced in an apartment in Singapore's Archer Road, trying to enroll her only child in the British School there, Nepali tabloid Jana Aastha said.Prerana's husband Raj Bahadur Singh had escorted Paras to Singapore.Singh acquired a dark reputation three years ago, after king Gyanendra seized absolute power with the backing of the army, when he began pushing his own businesses at the expense of the state treasury.To promote Singh's private mobile phone company, the government clamped down on the phone services of the state-run Nepal Telecom as well as Indian joint venture United Telecom.Singh also presented an engineering design by a private firm as his own and bagged a lucrative contract during his father-in-law's government. However, the contract was cancelled by the new government that came to power after the fall of the king's regime in 2006.The son-in-law, who faced allegations of bigamy and domestic violence in Nepal, also tried to force an Indian businessman to hand over his popular five-star hotel to him. However, the scheme was foiled by the ouster of the royal regime.Finding it difficult to do business in a republican Nepal and fearing further crackdown if the anti-monarchy Maoists come to power, the son-in-law has decided to relocate in Singapore.Yet another member of the royal family, the former king's niece Dilasha, has also quit Nepal for Singapore.Dilasha is the daughter of Gyanendra's younger brother Dhirendra, who died in the infamous massacre in the royal palace seven years ago, a national tragedy that is regarded as the beginning of the downfall of the once omnipotent Shah dynasty of kings.Barring Prerana, who has been a dutiful and trusted daughter in whose name the former king transferred much of his inherited property, the other relatives left Nepal blaming Gyanendra's ambition for their predicament.While Paras, once the heir to the throne, regards his father as having gambled away his inheritance, the others, who face the takeover of their property and excess land by the government, also blame the former king for their altered status.Nepal's first constituent assembly that came into being in May on an anti-king vote, formally abolished monarchy and stripped all royal family members of their titles.They have also lost their legal immunity and now have to pay taxes as well as utility bills.The cause of their woes, the ousted king, however, has declined to leave Nepal and seek asylum abroad.Gyanendra and his wife Komal have been leading a low-profile life in an inferior palace on the outskirts of Kathmandu since their eviction from the Narayanhity royal palace in June.Comments on this story More family members desert Nepal's deposed kingIs Nepal going for better or worse, I have been reading only negative reports from this young nation.

Ex-princess Himani leaves for Singapore

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

KATHMANDU, July 17 – Sixteen-days after her husband ex-crown prince Paras Shah left the country for Singapore, former princess Himani Shah Thursday headed to the former British colony to join her husband.The former princess, along with her three children, boarded a Silk Air flight to Singapore at one this afternoon.Police escorted Himani to Tribhuwan International Airport.Former crown prince Paras Shah left Nepal on July 1 to find a good school for his children and home for his wife.The former royal couple went to Singapore to admit their three children in to a school in Singapore.

Birthday blues for dethroned Nepal king

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

Nepal’s dethroned king Gyanendra’s 61st birthday falls Monday and this time it will be a sombre occasion – the first ever as a commoner outside the Narayanhity palace since he was stripped of his crown and compelled to leave the royal premises.It will be exactly 39 days since the formal abolition of his 239-year-old crown by Nepal’s newly elected lawmakers and 25 days since he left the palace where five kings of the Shah dynasty had lived to go into virtual exile on the outskirts of Kathmandu.Since an unprecedented press conference in the palace on June 11, hours before his final exit, in which the deposed king said he would remain in Nepal and work for the benefit of the people, Gyanendra has been keeping a low profile, attracting almost no media attention.A former royalist minister, Kamal Thapa, ruled out the possibility of Gyanendra launching a political party of his own, pointing out that royalist parties already exist, including his own Rastriya Prajatantra Party-Nepal.Besides the stunning change in his fortune, the ex-king’s birthday would also be saddened by the departure of his son and heir, former crown prince Paras, for Singapore last week.The 37-year-old is said to have disregarded his father’s advice and gone abroad in search of an appropriate school for his three young children. Once he decides on a school in Singapore, the three would also fly out with their mother, the former crown princess Himani.Besides his son’s children, the former king could also have to say farewell to his daughter and her family.Gyanendra’s son-in-law, commoner Raj Bahadur Singh who exploited his father-in-law’s clout during the royal regime to expand his businesses, has accompanied Paras to Singpaore. It is anticipated that Singh would try to leave the country along with his wife, former princess Prerana, and their school-going son.Determined to treat the former king as a commoner who enjoys no special privileges, the government has not formed a special committee, as in the past, to celebrate his birthday. Nor would Prime Miniser Girija Prasad Koirala issue any public greetings.Till last year, it was the custom for royalists to queue up at the Narayanhity royal palace to offer best wishes to the king. However, now with the palace having been turned into a national museum, it is out of bounds for former royalty as well as royalists.It remains to be seen if there will be the same turnout Monday at the Nagarjuna summer palace, that has been temporarily loaned to the former king by the government.But some diehard followers of the crown publicly proclaimed their plan to celebrate the birthday Monday.The Dharmapath Youth Club, a little-known organisation in Kathmandu, began postering walls around the palace, wishing the former king a long life.However, the dethroned king would have some solace. More than a month after his ouster, the political instability and violence continue to worsen in Nepal.The Maoists, who won the April election that signalled the end of monarchy, have not been able to form the new government due to wrangling between the ruling parties and fresh protests from Nepal’s Terai parties in support of an autonomous state in south Nepal have continued to paralyse the caretaker parliament for nearly a fortnight.The ruling parties have also not been able to elect the first president of republic Nepal, who would succeed the king as head of state and there is growing disenchantment with the squabbling political leaders, even within their own parties.Three years ago, a similar situation had helped Gyanendra seize power with the help of the army without immediate public opposition. If the public disenchantment with the parties grows, some analysts say the restoration of monarchy in future can’t be ruled out.

Ousted crown prince Paras leaves Nepal

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Thirty-three days after his father Gyanendra was stripped of his once revered position as the king of Nepal – and he himself lost the right to succeed to the 239-year-old throne, Nepal's controversial former crown prince Paras Tuesday left the country for Singapore, triggering speculation about his return.The 37-year-old was accompanied by two body guards and his brother-in-law Raj Bahadur Singh.This is his first exit from Nepal since being confined to the country for nearly two years following the fall of his father's absolute reign in April 2006.Unable to attend the birthday celebration of Thai king Bhumibol Adulyadej in Bangkok due to the restrictions on foreign travel imposed on him and his family by the new government, the former crown prince enjoyed the first advantage of becoming a commoner as his flight to Singapore abroad Silk Air was not opposed by anyone.Reports said Paras' wife, the former crown princess Himani, would join him within a week with their three small children.As the former royals remained silent on the departure, there was speculation that Paras could be looking for fresh pastures, unwilling to remain in a land that had inflicted such severe punishment on him and his family.A local daily, however, reported Tuesday that the former prince was not fleeing his country. He was merely going to Singapore to find a good school for his children, the Himalayan Times daily said.Eight-year-old Purnika, her six-year-old brother Hridayendra, who had once been the second in line to the throne, and their younger sister Krittikka had stopped going to school since May 28, when Nepal's newly elected lawmakers formally proclaimed the country a republic and abolished the throne enjoyed by the Shah dynasty of hereditary kings.Besides being concerned about the children's safety following growing anti-monarch sentiments in Nepal, their parents were also concerned about the effect their changed status would have on them.To shelter them from the ugly fallouts, their parents deemed it best to send them abroad to be educated there.If the children are put in school in Singapore, it would end the tradition of Nepal's royal family sending their children to schools in India.The former crown prince made a low-key departure from his residence Nirmal Niwas to the airport. He was not seen off there by his parents, who have been leading an equally low-key life in a hunting lodge on the outskirts of the capital since Gyanendra's final exit from the Narayanhity royal palace.Ousted crown prince Paras leaves NepalEven after abolition of monarchy, why media is so centred around it? Lets leave them in peace as any other citizen they have equal rights to be concerned about their children. Their other burning issues in “New Nepal”. Why dont media highlight those issues?Nepalese have a unique tradition of always oscillating between two extremes.If they like somebody, they don't mind even prostrating and crawling. But if they dislike, they will be prepared to go to any extent of brutality. Ex-royals of Nepal have of late been the victim of this weird predisposition. There was a time when majority of the Nepalese would vie for licking not only the sole of royals but also their distant relations. But now, expecially after the recent political change that has turned Nepal into a secular federal republic, Nepalese seem to have been callous towards ex-royals. Given such a situation fraught with devastative imponderables, it is natural for Paras, ex-crown prince, to migrate to Singapore also with an eye on better education and security for his three children. I don't think that Nepalese should bother about all these things. Interestingly, Paras is said to have blamed his father, ex-king Gyanendra, for the downfall of 240-year old institution of monarchy. According to Nepalese media, he believes that he could have rescued the throne from popular wrath had his father abdicated in his favor, a la Bhutanese king Jigme. Given the brutal track record of wayward Paras, this is nothing but a complete nonsense. How could he have appeased the Nepalese who had been completely fed up with the king for whom 28 million people of Nepal were nothing more than wretched worms and insects? How could he have extinguished the conflagration of Nepalese wrath constantly inflammed by the king's stony indifference to ever increasing murder, terror and intimidation of a murderous outfit called NCP (Maoist)? How could he have addressed the growing Nepalese discontent over the king's soaring kleptomania that did not spare even the riches and wealth of his own deceased brothers? Paras should understand that it is easier said than done. He might be expert at killing innocent Nepalese. He might be smart in opening fires at luxurious discotheques of Kathmandu. He, along with his alter ego Siddartha Shah, might be strong enough to digest a bizarre cocktail of drugs and alcohols. Above all these things, he might be capable of escaping entire charges with complete impunity just on account of being a member of royal family. But statecraft is something different, beyond his comprehension. Had Gyanendra abdicated in his favor, Nepal would have experienced unprecedented bloodbath of which he himself could have been a victim. Therefore, Paras should stop thinking about all these things. It is better that he start minding his own business. Nepalese don't have even an iota of remorse for his and his family's devastation.

Gyanendra heir plans to leave Nepal

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Bitter at the way fate, his country and his father treated him, former crown prince Paras is planning to leave Nepal, a report said on Monday.

The heir of dethroned king Gyanendra, who is furious with his father for having gambled away his inheritance, is leaving for Singapore Tuesday, Nepali tabloid Naya Patrika reported.

However, there was no immediate official confirmation. Earlier this month, the tabloid had created a sensation by reporting that Gyanendra had fled from the Narayanhiti royal palace under the stealth of night but the report proved to be wrong.

The daily said the former heir to Nepal’s throne, whose hope of becoming the king of Nepal was dashed after his father’s bid to seize absolute power with the help of the army boomeranged, has booked a seat on Silk Air.

However, his wife, the former crown princess Himani, and their three young children were not accompanying him immediately, the report said.

But plans had been made for them to join him within a fortnight, it added.

The three children – two daughters and a son – had stopped going to school since Nepal officially became a republic.

The former crown prince, known for his quick temper and arrogance, had been suffering heartburns after Nepal’s newly elected lawmakers last month formally abolished the crown and stripped all members of the royal family of all their titles.

After the historic proclamation May 28, that turned Nepal, once the world’s only Hindu kingdom, into a secular republic, Paras was reported to have complained to his cronies that he could have saved the situation.

Another tabloid, the Jana Aastha weekly, an avid royal watcher, had reported that the former crown prince had asked his embattled father to abdicate in his favour, just as the former king of Bhutan, Jigme Wangchuk had done. He had claimed that he would be able to overturn the tide of public sentiment against monarchy once he ascended the throne.

To his chagrin, his father rejected the proposal, the weekly said.

The headstrong prince’s anger increased after the government stripped him of his security contingent of army soldiers, replacing them with over a dozen police and armed police personnel.

The Naya Patrika daily commented, tongue in cheek, that Singapore would not be the right destination for Paras.

Once known to take drugs, he would find the stringent laws of the new country a deterrent, it said.

Also, since a large number of Nepalis live and work in Singapore, he could find anti-monarchy sentiments pursuing him there too, it added.

The report is certain to trigger a rush of journalists to the airport Tuesday in the hope of catching a glimpse of the flying former prince.

If true, this would be the former crown prince’s first jaunt abroad after the fall of his father’s regime two years ago.

During King Gyanendra’s absolute rule, Paras triggered another controversy when he went to Austria and France as his father’s envoy under the guise of handing over a pair of rhinos from a national park to a Viennese zoo.

SC questions decision to provide facilities to ex-king

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

The Supreme Court (SC) on Sunday issued show cause notice to the government regarding the decision of giving a place of residence, security including other facilities to ex-king Gyanendra and his family.A single bench of Justice Ram Prasad Shrestha took up the public interest litigation and ordered the government to submit in writing the reason behind the decision to give residential facility including security to the former royals within 15 days.The SC order came in response to the writ petition filed against the cabinet decision to give the Nagarjuna ‘Palace’ to ex-king Gyanendra and residential buildings inside the Narayanhiti Palace premises to the former queen mother and also provide security personnel for them.Although ex-king Gyanendra, his wife Komal, son Paras, daughter-in-law Himani and his mother Ratna were also made defendants along with the government, the SC didn’t issue the notice to them saying that it was not necessary.Meanwhile, the government committee, which submitted its inventory of properties inside the Narayanhiti Palace on Friday, has said in its leaked report that it has reservations regarding the record of the properties that it received from ex-king Gyanendra and his officials and said it was not satisfied with it.The committee is learnt to have reached the conclusion after it could not get the details of all the properties inside the palace. In its report, the committee has mentioned the list of the items that it was not provided with by the palace.