In reply to BFG:
Rules are there for a reason.
Who knows of the local situation in Nepal? Maybe someone else can shed light on this
My wife (Uk trained GP) and myself have just come back from a year in Mauritius where we tried unsuccessfully to work. She needed to have residency ( took 4 months) and then the Mauritian Medical Council dithered with registration application. She also needed a local reference. We gave up trying and instead had a really nice time on a sabbatical. There are many unemployed doctors in Mauritius and hence the goverment is trying to increase/improve their training rather than bring foreign ones in.
Some people are campaigning the government about changing the rules of registration. And if you had a long term vision, then you would try that rather than just break the rules. I understand the above. The downside of this is that you lose out on 'foreign' experience
Any medical council will ask you if you had any issues abroad when working and certainly in the UK, you might face lots of problems. The Medical Council here states as one of the duties of a doctor'Honesty and integrity are central to probity and define how any professional person should act: being upstanding and law-abiding, and respectful of the trust placed in you by others'
You should not think that just because you are going to 'help' in a foreign country that you will be welcome with open arms or not expected abide by what they require.
Post edited at 17:05