Chiya Guff

The Judicial Jolt

Junior Judge, Senior Saltiness!

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S. Gundai

9 May 2026 3 min read 120 views

The Judicial Jolt

Welcome to the latest edition of the "Chiya Guff, where we trade the stale "bhag-banda" biscuits for a full-course meal of meritocracy. Grab your coffee and hide your office chairs, because the Balen Government just threw a massive rock into the stagnant pond of the Supreme Court, and the splashes are soaking all the right (or should we say, wrong) people.


The "Finally, a Chief" Department

After months of the Chief Justice seat gathering more dust than a government file in a basement, we finally have a name: Manoj Kumar Sharma. Our previous CJ went home after hitting 65, leaving the judiciary in a temporary coma. Now, the Constitutional Council (CC) has stepped up, and predictably, the "Old Guard" is having a collective meltdown.

The Seniority Sob Story

The "Old Vultures" and the "Chor Media" are weeping into their tea because the government bypassed the seniority list. Apparently, breaking "tradition" is a sin, even if that tradition is basically just waiting for someone to get old enough to retire.

  • Sapana Didi’s Missed Milestone: Most expected Sapana Malla Pradhan—the senior-most and a former 'UML quota' appointee—to take the throne. If she’d won, she’d be packing her bags by 2028.

  • The Six-Year Stretch: Instead, Sharma is the lucky winner who gets a cool six-year term until 2032. He’ll finish his full tenure before he even hits 65.

  • The Math of Merit: The Judicial Council sent six names in March. If seniority was the only rule, why send six? That’s like giving someone a menu but telling them they can only order the glass of water.


The Constitutional Council: Slimmer, Faster, Stronger

The "jholeys" are whining about the new ordinance that allows the CC to meet with just four members and pass recommendations with three votes.

  • Doing the Math: Four out of six is still over 51%, and three out of four is a whopping 75% majority. In what universe is 75% "undemocratic"?

  • The Empty Chairs: We waited months because the "Old Chors" in the Nepali Congress took forever to pick a Leader of the Opposition. Meanwhile, the National Assembly Chair (who happens to be Prachanda’s brother—no nepotism there, right?) and the LoP tried to vote "No."

  • Dissent Doesn't Count: Their notes of dissent were about as effective as a "No Smoking" sign in a 1990s Bhatti. Balen didn't recommend his brother; he recommended a professional.


Perks, Pune, and the American Dream

Our soon-to-be 33rd CJ is an LLB graduate from Nepal Law Campus with an LLM from Pune, India. You can already hear the Indian media warming up their vocal cords to claim credit for our judicial "Desi links."

  • The Package: A cool Rs 1.2 lakhs a month, a free house, vehicles, and enough staff to make a small village jealous.

  • Ending the Revolving Door: For decades, we’ve changed CJs and IGPs like diapers—every six months or two years—bleeding the national coffer dry with pensions and perks. Sharma’s full tenure means stability.

  • The SCOTUS Blueprint: To the haters screaming "dictatorship," look at Johnny Boy (John Roberts) in the US. In 2005, he became the youngest CJ in two centuries at age 50, despite being junior to everyone else on the bench. If it's good enough for the "land of the free," it’s good enough for the United States of Nepal.


Jai Nepal!

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S. Gundai

Chief Chiya-Raksi Critic

S. Gundai spends his mornings complaining about the dust over tea and his evenings solving the country’s problems over local raksi, though he usually forgets the solutions by breakfast.