Reports state that until now a total of seven commissions have been formed to investigate and end perversions witnessed in the cooperatives. Every probe commission has reported to the government with suggestions for ending anomalies in the cooperative sector, specially, the saving and credit cooperatives. If those suggestions were implemented and a strong law was introduced, one would not dare to misuse the cooperative funds, say savings of those poor people by those people protected by the political parties and political leaders. We have a 275-member House of Representatives plus a 59-member National Assembly. People elected them to formulate necessary laws. There is a strong elected government enjoying all executive power. The government doesn’t want to give business to the House and every time, the House is ended without completing its jobs. Many drafts of the bills are kept impending always. When we talk about a strong cooperative law, the members of Parliament are not interested in approving it. It is because influential leaders from major political parties, Maoist Center, Nepali Congress and UML are directly involved in cooperative fraud. Former minister for law and justice and NC’s senior leader Dhanraj Gurung, Public Account Committee chairman in Parliament, Rishikesh Pokhrel and Rastriya Swatantra Party chairman Rabi Lamichhane, among others, are found being involved in the cooperatives fraud. Many big cooperatives which are facing problems now, are being protected by different political parties. It is said that the cooperatives’ money was used for the construction of the Maoist Center’s headquarters in Perisdanda, Kathmandu. UML also is said to have enjoyed funding from some cooperatives. Those who misused the cooperative fund are very influential as they are protected by the political parties by receiving financial gains. This is the reason that the government is not ready to bring an effective law to control the cooperatives and punish those involved in the cooperative fraud. If the government wishes to arrest GB Rai, it is not impossible. But to make the cooperative fraud cases against Lamichhane weak, the government has played a role in disappearing Rai. The above are just a few examples of the cooperative sector. Every sector is strongly dominated by brokers and middlemen. They are so powerful that the supreme leaders of the major political parties don’t want to listen to those brokers and middlemen. The government itself is keeping holes giving space to the brokers and those brokers are working through a network by paying equal commissions to the leaders of the major political parties in the government and also to the main opposition leader. If not ended such a practice, the nation will be further ruined but the leaders are not in a mood to end it.