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Kathmandu Metropolitan City has sent the letter to former King Gyanendra Shah through post after refusing to understand the fine. After the team of the Metropolitan Police Force that went to deliver the letter on Sunday was turned away from the gate of Shah's Nirmal residence, the Metropolitan sent the letter through post on the same day.
Although Nirmal Niwas refused to understand the letter, Dhruv Kumar Kafle, Assistant Spokesperson of the Metropolitan Corporation, informed that the fine will be on top of the government debt collection.
'There is a legal system for paying and paying taxes, fees, fines and fines at the union, state and local levels . The authorized office can collect these things,' he said, 'If the amount determined to be paid is not satisfied, the paying party has the opportunity to submit a claim that it is not due to this or due to these reasons.' But no claim has been submitted from Nirmal Niwas, if the claim is not submitted, the paying party will be deemed to have accepted and it must be paid.
'If you don't pay it, then in the Financial Responsibility Act 2074,' he said, 'If the office decides to collect the government debt, then it will be accumulated in the government debt and it has to be paid.
The metropolis fined former king Gyanendra Shah 7 lakh 93 thousand rupees under various headings for causing haphazard littering on roads and road boxes and causing damage to physical structures during a program organized on Chait 15th in Tinkune, Kathmandu last Friday.
