-
Suspect remains silent in Swiss bar fire probe
-
Italy great Parisse appointed Azzurri forwards coach
-
Iran truce spurs hopes for world economy, but recovery will be rocky
-
BAFTA racial slur was breach of BBC editorial standards: internal probe
-
Red or black: Thai men tempt fate at military draft draw
-
CAF president visits Dakar following AFCON trophy reversal
-
Medvedev thrashed 6-0, 6-0 by Berrettini in Monte Carlo
-
Australia's O'Callaghan sets sights on Titmus's 200m freestyle world record
-
Oil prices plunge, stocks surge on US-Iran ceasefire
-
Researchers unmask trade in nude images on Telegram
-
Warner aware of 'seriousness' of drink-driving charges: Cricket NSW
-
Indian hit movie 'Dhurandhar' breaks Bollywood records
-
Australia PM welcomes Iran ceasefire, says Trump threats not 'appropriate'
-
Nigeria sweats in heatwave as Iran war drives up costs to stay cool
-
'Pinprick of light': Artemis crew witnesses meteorite impacts on Moon
-
German factory orders rise in February but energy shock looms
-
China says investigating 'malicious' cyberbullying of teen diving star
-
North Korea fires two rounds of ballistic missiles: Seoul military
-
Taiwan opposition leader says China visit to sow 'seeds of peace'
-
Jet fuel supplies to take 'months' to recover from war disruption: IATA
-
How did Pakistan broker a temporary truce between Iran and the US?
-
North Korea fires multiple ballistic missiles in two rounds: Seoul military
-
Rockets comeback sinks Phoenix on Durant return
-
'Ketamine Queen' to be sentenced over Matthew Perry death
-
Vietnam's To Lam bets big on building blitz
-
Sooryavanshi, 15, hailed as 'amazing, fearless' after acing Bumrah test
-
Pakistan to host US-Iran ceasefire talks Friday
-
Middle East war: ceasefire reactions
-
North Korea fires multiple ballistic missiles towards East Sea
-
Both sides claim victory after US, Iran agree to 11th-hour truce
-
Unbeaten legend Winx's $7 million foal retires without racing
-
Trump to AFP: Iran deal 'total and complete victory' for US
-
Solar push helps Pakistan temper Gulf energy shock
-
Crude prices plunge, stocks surge as US and Iran agree ceasefire
-
Wave of nostalgia as 2000s TV makes a comeback
-
Iraqi armed group releases US journalist
-
Forest's Igor Jesus eyes Europa League 'dream', Villa brace for Bologna in quarters
-
In-demand prop De Lutiis rebuffs Ireland to commit to Australia
-
US, Iran agree to 11th-hour truce after Trump apocalyptic threats
-
Konica Minolta Announces First Class of 2026 Pro-Tech Service Award Recipients
-
Devon's Dissertation Symposium Launches Student-Focused Academic Support Services for Graduate Researchers
-
EQS Group Shortlisted in Two Categories at ICA Compliance Awards Europe 2026
-
Medical Care Technologies (OTC Pink:MDCE) Expands AI Monetization Strategy and Advances Pipeline of AI Applications
-
Oar & Iron Raw Bar & Grill Arrives in Babcock Ranch
-
Pace Life Sciences To Deliver Two Speaker Sessions at Society of Quality Assurance (SQA) Annual Meeting 2026
-
Chilean Cobalt Corp. Continues Accelerated Drilling, Defines Initial Development Target, and Advances Engineering at NeoRe Rare Earth Project
-
SoloTruth Launches Asset Relationship Management (ARM) Platform for Real-Time Fixed Asset Verification
-
Clean Vision Announces Retirement of Convertible Note, Clean-Seas West Virginia to receive 2TPD Pyrolysis Reactor
-
Time Doctor Wins Gold at 2026 Reworked IMPACT Awards in Work Management & Project Management Category
-
5E Advanced Materials to Participate in Water Tower Research Insights Conference on April 14, 2026
Nepal's 'courageous' new PM known for integrity
Nepal's first woman Supreme Court chief justice Sushila Karki -- now the country's new prime minister -- is known for her insistence on integrity and the need for an independent judiciary.
Karki, who took the oath of office late Friday from President Ram Chandra Paudel, will lead the political transition in the Himalayan nation after deadly anti-corruption protests.
The 73-year-old emerged as the leading candidate of many representatives of "Gen Z" -- the loose umbrella title of the protest movement -- who selected her via online platform Discord.
She told Nepali media that the Gen Z protesters had told her that "they believe in me" to lead for "a short time for the purpose of doing elections".
"She is a credible choice to lead the interim government," Anil Kumar Sinha, a former justice of the Supreme Court who worked with Karki, told AFP.
"Her integrity has never been in doubt, and she is not someone who can be intimidated or easily influenced. She is courageous and not swayed by pressure."
- 'In favour of youth' -
In a speech broadcast on Nepali media earlier this year, Karki spoke of ingrained corruption.
"We see it everywhere but we don't speak -- now we need the youth to speak up, take the lead and stand in elections", she said.
"What I have seen in the last 35 years does not work. I am 100 percent in favour of youth coming forward."
Her tenure as chief justice, from 2016 to 2017, was brief but significant -- challenging gender stereotypes and facing down politicians over corruption.
Karki came of age in a society where women rarely entered the legal profession.
Born in 1952 in Biratnagar, an industrial town in eastern Nepal, she earned degrees in political science in India and in law in Kathmandu.
She began her career as a lawyer in 1979, and quickly gained a reputation as a fearless advocate, often taking up cases others avoided.
- Defiant -
In 2012, Karki was one of two presiding Supreme Court judges who jailed a serving government minister for corruption -- a first at the time for Nepal in its battle against a culture of graft.
In 2017, the government tried to impeach her as chief justice after she overturned its choice for chief of police.
The United Nations called the impeachment "politically motivated" and the move was blocked. She stepped down from the post at her retirement.
Nepal emerged from a brutal decade-long Maoist insurgency in 2006 and, in 2008, the end of the country's 240-year-old Hindu monarchy.
The transformation to a federal state was marred by political infighting, and successive governments have dragged their feet on bringing perpetrators of abuses committed during the civil war to justice.
But it was under Karki's watch as chief justice that a court in 2017 sentenced three soldiers to 20 years in jail for the murder of a teenage girl, at the time only the second conviction for crimes committed during the war.
She is Nepal's first woman prime minister, but not its first woman leader -- Bidya Devi Bhandari held the largely ceremonial role of president for two terms from 2015 to 2023.
R.Lee--AT