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Bishnu Pratap Shah, a well known personality in the service sector of Nepal represented in his lifetime the cause of good governance in his own way. He served in different capacities and rose to the higher positions through his dedication to work, talent and capability. Shah, who had been appointed to important positions of Zonal Commissioner and Government Secretary during the party-less Panchayat era, also succeeded in getting higher position of the Chief Election Commissioner[1] after the restoration of democracy in 1990, on the basis of his personal integrity and dedication to work. He had won the heart of the Nepalese readers through his thought provoking write-ups published in Kantipur daily from time to time. In one such article he had underlined the need to hold Constituent Assembly elections, long before the peace process was initiated as he had already smelt the root cause of the Maoist insurgency. In fact, he was not only an efficient administrator and honest civil servant, but also a person with diverse personality and vision.
Bishnu Pratap Shah | |
---|---|
Secretary, Ministry of Information and Communication | |
Chief Election Commissioner | |
Personal details | |
Born | 29 August 1937 |
Died | 29 April 2005 |
Citizenship | Nepalese |
Nationality | Nepali |
Spouse | Ishwori Shah |
Occupation | Administrator |
Shah steered the Election Commission so perfectly that it facilitated Nepal to hold Parliamentary, as well as local level elections on the basis of the principle of adult-franchise to the satisfaction of all the political parties and the mission of the Peoples Movement. He was Born in Maidi VDC Ward No. 2,[2] Dhading district on 29 August 1937 to father Captain Lal Jung Shah and mother Subhadra Kumari. Shah was married to Ishwori Shah in 1971 and has a son Bimal Pratap Shah and a daughter Binita Shah (Khadka)and grandchildren Shivashish Pratap Shah and Biraj Khadka. Shah died on 29 April 2005.
Education and career
editShah had received Master's Degree from Michigan State University in Anthropology. Shah started his career in civil service as the publicity officer of the then Election Commission in 1958 B.S. and served under different capacities including district Panchayat Secretary, Palpa, Chief District Officer of Gorkha, Syangja and Sunsari, Deputy Director General of Radio Nepal, Joint Secretary in different government offices including the National Planning Commission, Zonal Commissioner of Bagmitati Zone and Secretary in the Ministry of Home Affairs and Ministry of Information and Communication, and the Prime Minister's Office. He also served as the first Chief Election Commissioner of Nepal after the restoration of democracy in 1990. He had also served as board of director of different organizations including Radio Nepal and also served as the first chairperson of the French owned Indosuez Bank in Nepal.
Representing Nepal
editHe had represented various government delegations to different countries including China, India, Cambodia, France and USA under different capacities. Shah paid visits to different countries including United States, Italy, France, Finland, the Netherlands, Germany, United Kingdom, Philippines, Cambodia, China, India, Hong Kong, Switzerland, Spain, Thailand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Egypt and Bangladesh under different occasions.
Honors and accolades
editBesides being honoured as the Chairman of Association of Asian Election Authorities (AAEA), he was also decorated with Trishakti Patta (Second) and Gorkha Dakshina Bahu (Second) at home and Legion of Honour (highest civilian honour of France). Shah had also served as chairman of board of directors of different schools, colleges and trusts. He had also authored various articles in Nepal and abroad on the topics of history, politics, administration, literature, tourism etc.
Shah was a patriotic person, dedicated civil servant and an efficient administrator. "With his quality to identify and solve problems, democratic attitude and thorough political analysis, many people will remember him for a long time" writes Prof. Ghanashyam Kandel. Senior journalist Yuvaraj Ghimire points out that "Shah did not only display honesty and spotless nature during his 45 year long career in public positions, he had also become non-controversial despite the change in political system and successfully conducted four elections including parliamentary and local level ones. He was liberal, cooperative and continued academic studies even after retirement from public service." "Shah always tried to forge consensus among the election commissioners while taking key decisions and he had never tried to impose his ideas on others" recalls Prof. Dr. BIrendra Prasad Mishra, who had worked as the Election Commissioner under the tenure of Shah. As a student Shah was talented, a mixable friend, qualified administrator, honest and loving parent of his family members. He had extraordinary wisdom, dedication and hardworking capacity and capacity to analyze things. We all may get inspiration from his life full of dedication, hard work, honesty and high intellectual capacity.
Lineage
editBishnu Pratap Shah, according to the Shah dynastic linkage tree, directly represents the 16th generation of the then King Dravya Shah, the first king of Gorkha and Shah is descendant of Chandrarup Shah and Chautariya Pushkar Shah. Chandrarup Shah was the youngest son of King Prithwi-pati Shah [1] and Queen Kulangavati. He was appointed as Regent for his nephew Maharaj Nara Bhupal Shah, while Chautariya Pushkar Shah was appointed to the post of Prime Minister in 1838.[13]
References
edit- ^ "Annual Progress Report for the 8th AGM". Archived from the original on 19 August 2008. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
- ^ "National Geographic Magazine". Archived from the original on 26 March 2008.