Chief Editor of the telegraph weekly and www.telegraphnepal.com
www.telegraphnepal.com was created/designed in February 2007 establishing The Telegraph Weekly as Nepal's No.1 Academic Newspaper.
The Telegraph Weekly since November 1997 was placed on the Internet News domain with the kind courtesy of NepalNewsdotcom.
Since then, readers all over the world were able to access to the independent and non-partisan news, indepth analyses, interviews on contemporary events, research articles contributed by Nepal's highly competent and widely acclaimed research scholars, Professors, and Readers.
The process thus continues even today.
As per the readers' increasing demands, we decided recently to cater to the growing needs of our august readers, within and without, to present this weekly in a much more influential and pragmatic way.
The venture is there. It all depends on how our valued readers respond to our modest venture.
Articles by N.P. Upadhyaya
Or else why a King who enjoyed all the luxuries and dictated his terms and conditions on the people and was the heir apparent to a very old institution with 240 years long history could so easily convert himself as a commoner?
The King should have taken into account the fact that if even a Nepali media man can´t ignore India if it were to survive in Nepal, then how can a ruling monarch stay longer in the position summarily ignoring the Indian establishment?
The awarding of these two mega companies to India was done with such finesse that the population knew about this eventuality when it had already been handed over. How smart is Nepal´s Prime Minister! Isn´t it?
Finally, needless to say, the Chinese authorities have come to their senses and will in all likelihood not leave Nepal under the mercy of the Indian establishment alone.
How the new Indian diplomat calms down Prachanda´s dynamite like demand will have to be watched. However, what is for sure is that Ambassador Sood has come at a time when a hosts of political issues he will have to confront which presumably must have already been put on his official table for his perusal by his subordinates.
Primarily it was none less than Comrade Prachanda who used to sneak into the Indian embassy premises in the dark some months back for "political consultations" or presumably say receiving "instructions".