गृहपृष्ठ ∕ Nepal ∕ Deputy Speaker Rana leaves for Russia Nepal Deputy Speaker Rana leaves for Russia KathmanduPati September 17, 2024 KATHMANDU – Deputy-Speaker Indira Rana today left here for Dubai of the United Arab Emirates in the context of attending the ‘Fourth Eurasian Women’s Forum’ scheduled at Saint Petersburg, Russia, from September 18. She would reach Saint Petersburg from Dubai via Moscow. Deputy-Speaker Rana would address the two-day event organized by the Russian Federation and Inter-Parliamentary Assembly of the Member Nations of the Commonwealth of Independent States on September 19. Rana is scheduled to return home on September 21. Write your comments RELATED NEWS Summit Air plane makes emergency landing at TIA after technical… Rain likely in Koshi, Madhesh, Bagmati, Gandaki and Lumbini Sagarmatha Sambaad: To protect mountains is to protect earth, seas… Chinese NPC’s Vice Chairman Xiao Jie in Kathmandu HoR session: Lawmakers demand timely, effective, coordinated disaster-preparedness efforts Woman dead as fire occurs in Kathmandu Top Headlines Relevance of Prithivi Narayan Shah in Contemporary Nepal1 Scrutinizing Relevance of Prithivi Narayan Shah´s Thoughts and Strategy2 Photo exhibition at Nepal Army Headquarters3 Ncell is the FIRST Nepali Telecom Company to receive ISO 27001 and ISO 27701 certifications for information security and data privacy4 NA team sets out on Gorakha-Kathmandu march to promote ‘unification route’5 Gold price ups Rs 2,000 per tola6 PM Oli, Sri Lankan’s former President meet7 PM Oli extends New Year greetings8 TRENDING Once on the Margins, Women Diplomats Are Now Making Their Mark in Nepal’s Foreign Service Sector What Makes Prithivi Narayan Shah a Philosopher and a Truly Democratic King? The Role of the Nepalese Army in Strategic Road Projects UPAYA CITY CARGO LAUNCHES Version 3.0 Impact of Social Media on Nepalese Society Public Relations for a Soldier Nepal Army’s mission in Lebanon provides Covid support kits to local municipalities Army Day : Five facts about Nepal’s ‘blue helmets’ in UN-peacekeeping missions