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At 12 o'clock of the night, see Pratyan Gyanendra

At 12 o'clock of the night, see Pratyan Gyanendra
Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev is the last King of Nepal from 2001 to 2008. As a child, he was also briefly king from 1950 to 1951, when his grandfather, Tribhuvan, went to India with the rest of his family. Following the Nepalese royal massacre in 2001, he again became king.

Gyanendra's second rule was marked by constitutional turmoil. His predecessor King Birendra had a constitutional monarchy in which he had a policy represented to a representative government. The growing insurgency of the Nepalese civil war during the rule of King Gyanendra with the representatives of the interfering. After several delays in the election, King Gyanendra was suspended the constitution and in February 2005 in direct authority assumed that it would be a temporary situation in the Maoist insurgency.

In the face of broad opposition, he reinstated the previous parliament in April 2006. His rule was almost two years later, when the Nepalese Constituent Assembly announced that Nepal was a Nepalese Republic and the monarchy was dissolved.
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