KATHMANDU
JUNE 4 2008 13:11h
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Gyanendra, 60, had asked the government to help him find suitable accommodation because his son Paras was living in his private home.
Unpopular Gyanendra was given 15 days to vacate the main royal palace in the heart of the capital after a special assembly elected in April turned the Himalayan nation into a republic last week.
Gyanendra, 60, had asked the government to help him find suitable accommodation because his son Paras was living in his private home.
"For the present he will be allowed to stay in the Nagarjun palace," the minister, who asked not to be named, told Reuters after a cabinet meeting.
The Nagarjun palace is eight km (five miles) northwest of Kathmandu.
Scrapping the monarchy was part of a peace deal with Maoist rebels, who ended their decade-long civil war and joined the political mainstream in 2006. More than 13,000 people died in the conflict that left the tourism-dominated economy in tatters.
The Maoists won a surprise election victory in April and became the biggest party in the assembly. They are expected to form a new government soon.
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