Prime Minister K P Sharma Oli laid flowers at the demolished 19th-century Dharahara tower where people gathered to pay homage to those killed when the 7.9-magnitude temblor struck, after a minute's silence to remember the deceased.
Though the quake jolted Nepal on April 25, 2015, the memorials were being held today in its grim reminder as per the Bikram Era calendar. The quake was extremely devastating for the land-locked Himalayan nation, displacing lakhs of families besides putting a huge dent in the country's economy.
Shortly after the quake, that killed nearly 9,000 people, the government had promised to pay USD 1,850 (around 2 lakh Nepali rupees) to each family whose houses were damaged. The quake and aftershocks that hit central Nepal, including Kathmandu, also injured 22,000 others.
Ramesh Shrestha, whose house was demolished in the quake, said: "I am scared if my family will get compensation at all. It has already been a year."
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Today, Buddhist monks in maroon robes held prayers at Swyambhunath stupa that was home to a popular temple destroyed in the quake.
Oli reached the earthquake-devastated site at Dharahara that was completely damaged by the earthquake, here amid a programme organised in commemoration of the great earthquake. A procession led by Nepalese Tourism Minister Ananda Pokharel took round of the city before converging into a gathering at the Dharahara site.
A 4.2-magnitude aftershock hit central Nepal this morning as the country was marking the first anniversary of the devastating earthquake. The epicentre of the earthquake, that was felt in Kathmandu too, was located in Nuwakot district, 125 kms west of here.
The earthquake badly hit the country's tourism and
caused an economic loss of USD 7 billion. According to the Asian Development Bank, growth is now expected to reach just 1.5 per cent over the financial year ending in July this year - the lowest since 2007.
The government had promised to distribute a lump sum of Rs 2,00,000 to those whose houses were completely damaged by the quake, However, very few people have received the relief money.
A small group of about 20 protesters dressed in black took to the streets, chanted "politicians in palaces, public in tents" and "what happened to reconstruction?". Police quickly removed their banner but allowed them to shout anti-government slogans.
Days after the April 25 quake, a second temblor struck Nepal, adding to its woes.
The first earthquake of 7.9-magnitude with epicentre at Gorkha district, 150 kms west of Kathmandu, hit the country on Baishakh 12 of the year 2072 Bikram Era (April 25) and the second quake with 7.3-magnitude hit on Baishakh 29 or May 12 with epicentre at Kodari Highway in Nepal-Tibet border, 120 kms east of Kathmandu.
Nepal has experienced two great earthquakes in the past 180-year period before last year's temblor which has been dubbed as the 'Gorkha quake'.
A hundred years before, in 1833, a similar over 7.8- magnitude earthquake hit central Nepal and the nature of last year's temblor is close to that of this quake, say experts.
The great earthquake had damaged many historical sites including Kathmandu Durbarsquare, Patan Durbarsquare, Bhaktapur Durbarsquare, Dharahara tower, Swoyambhu stupa, Bouddhanath stupa, Gorkha Durbar, Bungamati Matshendranath temple etc.
A grand programme will be organised at Bhrikutimandap in Kathmandu tomorrow, which will be addressed by Prime Minister Oli. A group of artists are creating a 150 feet-long painting depicting the Dharahara tower, that collapsed during the earthquake, killing dozens of people.