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 CURRENT NEWS: Nepal's army to go after Maoists in full force:
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Posted on 02-06-05 8:26 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Kathmandu, Feb 6 : Nepal's army said it would go after the Maoist insurgents in full force, pressuring them to resume peace negotiations with the new government or face the consequences.

The army's mandate is to "disarm the Maoists and bring them to the mainstream", said Brigadier-General Dipak Gurung, Royal Nepalese Army spokesman.

"If they don't do it willingly, we have to do it by force," Gurung told IANS.

The Royal Nepalese Army, constitutionally under the control of a security council consisting of the prime minister, defence minister and army chief, had its curbs removed Tuesday when King Gyanendra dismissed the government of prime minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and imposed a state of emergency.

"Our resources were diverted. But now with the civil administration and police dealing with the political parties and student unions, we will be more focused," Gurung said.

"Earlier, the army used to get diverted from its mandate due to being called to combat rallies, shutdowns, demonstrations and other forms of agitation," he said.

The army plans to mount pressure on the underground rebels. The Deuba government had approved the recruitment of an additional 7,000 soldiers whose training has already been started. Besides increasing the strength of the army, its headquarters have been decentralised into five divisions, each unit mounting its own operations in each of the five development regions of Nepal independently and one more for Kathmandu valley.

The RNA has also started setting up bases in the remote districts where earlier it had no presence and plans to expand them still more.

Gurung said the army had drawn the sting of the communist guerrillas by shutting down communications countrywide.

"There have been no attacks by the Maoists since Tuesday," he said. "They can't plan operations now since they have no means of communication." The spokesman blamed the media for the fear psychosis created by the underground guerrillas.

"An insignificant publication somewhere would say there's a shutdown called by the rebels and everyone would close in fear," he said. "We can survive without Maoist news. Maybe the media was misguided or was not mature enough. In the past 15 years, there was a lot of press freedom. But what did it achieve? Our ultimate end is a peaceful and prosperous Nepal."

Gurung denied that the army had been violating human rights to crack down on the nine-year-old insurgency.

"Immediately after the royal proclamation, army chief Gen Pyar Jung Thapa issued directives to the troops to respect human rights," he said. "It was no mere lip service. An army can't tolerate indiscipline. We treat human rights violations by soldiers as cases of indiscipline and take action. These are propaganda spread by the Maoists."

As an example of punitive action, Gurung said a major found guilty of breach of discipline was dismissed from the army and sentenced to two years in prison.

Gurung also said India and the US should support Nepal. Both countries have expressed grave concern at the royal takeover and urged for the immediate restoration of multi-party democracy. India also pulled out of the 13th SAARC Summit that was to have been held in Bangladesh on Feb 6-7, citing the development in Nepal and security situation in Bangladesh as the reasons.

"Countries like India and the US should support us because we are fighting against terrorism," he said. "It brought us to the brink of disaster with the country's sovereignty being in question. Terrorism is not just Nepal's concern, it's going to affect all of South Asia. We should all fight it together."
 
Posted on 02-06-05 8:32 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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What were they doing till the date? They were deployed for the last three years without any progress. How shameful their announcement is?
 
Posted on 02-06-05 8:55 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepal's human-rights community says the country is under illegal military rule headed by the king. In a written statement, more than two dozen human-rights groups called on the international community to stop all military support to Nepal and to pressure King Gyanendra's government to release political prisoners, stop the harassment of rights workers and restore communications in the capital.

The statement was addressed to the United Nations, the World Bank, the European Union, and individual world leaders, including President Bush. It was unsigned because of what it calls the "current threat" to human-rights defenders


for more news
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-02-06-voa13.cfm
 
Posted on 02-06-05 9:17 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepal : Maoists threaten blockade

Nepal?s new government has vowed to crack down on corruption and poverty, state media reported Saturday, as Maoist rebels warned they would bring the country to a halt if King Gyanendra did not reverse his power grab. A cabinet meeting chaired by the king adopted a 21-point socio-economic programme focused on creating jobs, ending nepotism and corruption, and spurring economic growth, state-run radio announced.

"Property amassed through abuse of authority, smuggling, tax evasion, illegal contract and commission will be seized and nationalised," it said, announcing the decisions of the cabinet. Gyanendra on Tuesday fired the government led by Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba for failing to organise elections or quell the insurgency by Maoists, who want to topple the monarchy and install a communist republic.

He also named a loyalist cabinet under his "chairmanship", declared a state of emergency and pledged to restore multi-party democracy in three years.

State-run English daily "The Rising Nepal" Saturday outlined other populist measures the new government planned to take in what analysts say is an attempt by the king to win support for his actions from Nepalis fed up with greedy and squabbling politicians.

The government would give more powers to village councils, dole out property to the landless, modernise farming, create jobs, develop tourism and provide free education to a percentage of needy students, it said.

A senior minister, meanwhile, said multi-party democracy would only be restored and elections held once Maoist rebels were defeated.

Foreign Minister Ramesh Nath Pandey told AFP that until the Maoist insurgency was halted, "multi-party democracy cannot come back on track."

"We have learnt the lessons after paying a heavy price that without restoring peace and security, we cannot hold elections," he said.

Maoist guerrilla leader Prachanda hit back in a statement received by AFP in New Delhi Saturday, warning that unless the king reversed his actions, the rebels would enforce an indefinite countrywide blockade from February 13. Prachanda urged citizens to stock up with vital provisions and come out "in strong resistance" to what he said was "Nazi-style repression" by the king?s forces.

"Our party challenges Gyanendra .. to withdraw his retrogressive steps immediately," his statement said. "If he fails to withdraw ... our party will be compelled to come out for countrywide blockade and traffic strike for uncertain time, from 13 February," it said.

source
http://independent-bangladesh.com/news/feb/06/06022005ap.htm#A1
 
Posted on 02-06-05 9:56 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Success of Army in the previous governments meant the success of those governments so RNA did not participate whole heartedly.

Now under direct rule of G, the RNA won't hesitate to do any thing to its capacity to make it successful. Heavy collateral damages are expected and wont be surprising.

Moaist leadership and cadres must be busy formulating new strategies for their new fight and they must have gained some more strength from NC and UML, who are still in large.

_
from
Novice in politics.
 
Posted on 02-06-05 10:28 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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>> Nepal's human-rights community says the country is under illegal military rule headed by the king.<<

Illegal Military rule?

Wondering if there's a term like "Legal Military Rule"?
 
Posted on 02-06-05 11:25 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepalese Seek Peace Between Rulers, Rebels
POKHARA, Nepal - Caught between a rebel army fighting for power, and a government fighting to hold onto it, Surya Prashad Dahal knows all too well what it means to be trapped in the middle.

"It doesn't matter to me at all who runs the country," says the young shopkeeper, who owns a tiny store that sells posters, mirrors and picture frames in this quiet, once-thriving tourist town at the foothills of the Himalayas.

"We just need peace," he says, his anger barely contained. Dahal's livelihood depends indirectly on the tourists who have been scared away by the nine-year Maoist rebellion and the political turmoil it has spawned. "It doesn't matter if it's the politicians, or the Maoists or the king."

It's an unfortunate reality in this beautiful but desperately poor kingdom, a country where the rebellion has spawned political turmoil and, most recently, royal absolutism.

In Pokhara, people like Dahal are desperate.

Saturday marked the end of a nationwide three-day strike called long ago by the Maoist insurgents. In Katmandu, the capital city where the king and his army now wield complete authority, the strike meant little: cars jammed the roads, shops were opened, and children went to school.

But in Pokhara, a lakeside town just a 25-minute flight away, Maoist threats of retaliation shut down the city. Nearly all stores were closed here, and in the streets, the children playing cricket outnumbered the cars.

It was the reaction the Maoists wanted, a public demonstration of their power over the people.

Dahal opened his shop, but kept the metal shutters pulled down part way, in case trouble erupted. He needs the money too badly to worry about the beatings, firebombings and killings the Maoists use to enforce their orders.

Business has been poor in Pokhara for the past few years, since the insurgents launched a series of attacks across the country that chased off Western tourists who once flocked here for the spectacular mountain treks, Himalayan wildlife and traditional village life.

The tourist downturn has cut deeply into the finances of Dahal's dwindling numbers of customers, most of them Nepalese who depend, in some way, on the tourists.

But he also had another reason to remain open: fear of army retaliation.

Local shopkeepers say army soldiers sometimes punish those who go along with the Maoist strike demands by forcing them to remain closed even when the strike has ended, compounding their business losses.

"We're afraid of both sides," says Ambika Barval, who kept her small restaurant open through the strike. Like many people, she has little sympathy for either side. "We just want to work, we just want to eat, we just want to survive," she says, as swallows fly around the dirty, cement-walled room.

Survival is a serious issue for many Nepalese, who have found their lives increasingly tangled in the web of government crackdowns, insurgent attacks and poverty that has left per capita annual income at just $213.

An estimated 40 percent of the country lives in poverty, with a vast majority making their livings from small farms.

That poverty, along with a rigid caste system little changed for centuries, has fed the insurgency, drawing in poor farmers with promises of redistributed land and social equality. Many other militants are simply kidnapped as children and absorbed into the rebel army.

The Maoists, who began their fight in 1996, now control huge tracts of rural Nepal, with government authority in many regions now limited to the largest towns.

Some analysts believe the government firmly controls just 20-30 percent of the country. The militants fund themselves through a system of informal taxes - which amount to little more than extortion - levied on farmers, business owners and even tourists who pass through their territory.

They have proven resistant to repeated government offensives, despite millions of dollars in U.S. military aid.

Last week, the insurgency spilled directly into politics, when King Gyanendra took control of the country, dismissing the elected interim government that shared power with him and declaring a state of emergency.

He put Nepal into virtual lock down: phone lines remain cut, strict censorship is being enforced and many civil liberties have been abandoned. Dozens of politicians, student leaders and activists have been detained.

By shutting off communication and quickly deploying security forces, the government stopped nearly all public opposition in Katmandu.

But in Pokhara, anger erupted in the streets, as university students poured from their campus chanting slogans within minutes of the king's announcement that the government had been sacked.

When police couldn't restrain them with tear gas, they opened fire. At least one student was wounded - a 19-year-old woman sitting on her dormitory steps.

Gyanendra, a largely unpopular monarch who ascended to power after his brother, King Birendra, died in a 2001 palace massacre, insists he had no choice but to seize power. He argues that Nepal's politicians - a notoriously unruly and corrupt group - accomplished little in the fight against the Maoists.

But many here doubt the king will be able to do any better, and worry he will further divide the country.

"If things keep happening the way they are now, life will only get worse," says Dahal. "I'm afraid that someday there won't even be a nation left called Nepal."
 
Posted on 02-06-05 3:43 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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At a time when the Bush administration has made ?chasing liberty? around the world an American national security objective, South Asia is firmly headed in the other direction. It has begun to snuff out democracy.

The consolidation of this new trend has been marked by last week?s royal coup d? etat by King Gyanendra of Nepal. It raises the prospect of further gains for the Maoists, whose seizure of power in Kathmandu is no longer a fanciful scenario.

The tragedy in Nepal is South Asia?s own. As lights have gone out in Nepal a new darkness envelops South Asian regionalism. India?s decision to pull out of the summit of South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation has drawn a lot of political flak.

But the diplomatic row over SAARC will be minor in comparison with what is likely to follow, as India struggles to deal with a range of new challenges to its regional policy. Irrespective of the controversies it might generate, New Delhi will have no option but to pick up the pieces in Nepal. It won?t be a pretty picture.

Just a day after the Iraqi people impressed the world by turning out in droves for the polls, King Gyanendra drove the last nail into the coffin of democracy in Nepal. Democracy might have begun to knock at the doors of the Middle East. But it is being shown the door in South Asia.

This is no mere coincidence. The hopes for democratic transformation that emerged in the region at the turn of the 1990s are now being buried. The movement for democracy that won the 1988 elections in Burma never took hold. The generals in Rangoon successfully crushed the attempt by Aung San Suu Kyi to peacefully change the nation?s political order.

At the end of 1990s, it was Pakistan that turned away from democracy. The hopes for a return to democracy in Pakistan continue to be under a cloud as Pakistani political classes contest the future role of Gen Pervez Musharraf who remains the army chief and the head of state.

In Bangladesh, the democratic transition has been shaken to the core by the unending and bitter rivalry between the two main political parties. It has now reached an ugly phase where the assassination of opposition leaders is undertaken with impunity.

The near successful assassination attempt against Awami League?s Sheikh Hasina a few months ago has been followed at the end of last month by the brutal murder of another opposition leader ? the widely-respected former finance minister, Shah AMS Kibria.

Unable to provide security to the leaders of opposition and generate confidence in its investigation of the attacks, and unwilling to end its dalliance with the extremist elements in the nation, the government of Khalida Zia has blamed the opposition for creating an excuse for India to avoid participating in the SAARC summit. The deepening divide in Dhaka signals a further deterioration of Indo-Bangla relations.

Returning to Nepal, Gyanendra?s hunger for power has not been matched by a sense of judgement. The King?s attempt to emulate Gen Musharraf has been pathetic to say the least.

On the internal front, Gyanendra does not have an institution like the Pakistan Army to rely on. While the Royal Nepal Army has grown in size in recent years, it neither has the political credibility nor the capability to enforce unconstitutional royalism for very long.

Externally, Gyanendra might have calculated that given a choice between himself and the Maoists, India and the international community would have no option but to back him. Given the deep Indian and American interest in the war against terrorism, Gyanendra might have bet that support from New Delhi and Washington ? grudging though it may be ? would be forthcoming.

If India and the US could live with the army rule in Pakistan, why couldn?t they come to terms with the monarchy in Nepal?

But the initial reaction from the two capitals has been the opposite. While all governments are tempted to live with new facts on the ground, India, US, and the European Union have assessed that Gyanendra?s power grab has weakened the war against the Maoists.

Ever since he assumed executive power in 2002, Gyanendra had a free hand to toy with weak prime ministers. The fractious political parties were always easy to manipulate and posed no real threat to his authority. While most political parties support the constitutional monarchy, the main demand of the Maoists has been the creation of a republic.

Instead of finding effective ways to defeat the Maoists the king has chosen to remove the fig leaf of democracy and crack down on the political parties. He has not used his power in the last two and a half years to promote much-needed reforms in Nepal.

Unlike Musharraf who at least has signalled a different orientation for Pakistan, Gyanendra?s record has little basis for great power confidence in his ability to even attempt a transformation of Nepal.

Gyanendra has also sought to play the China card. After all no one can ignore the reality that Nepal is the geopolitical fulcrum of the Himalayas. Being the bridge between China?s Tibet and India?s Gangetic plains, Nepal has often sought to play India and China against each other.

It used to work in the past. This time, too, he has won a statement from China that the coup is an internal affair of Nepal. But it is unlikely that Gyanendra would be able to get China to replace India, US and Britain as its principal supplier of arms. More importantly Sino-Indian relations have never been as good as they are today. Neither Beijing nor New Delhi would want to make Nepal a theatre for geopolitical power play.

Given these factors, few can bet on Gyanendra?s ability to pull Nepal together. But his ambition coupled with incompetence could produce either the first failed state in South Asia or the subcontinent?s first left wing revolutionary government. A watershed in South Asia?s recent political evolution is at hand.
 
Posted on 02-06-05 4:04 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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guy's, we are under military rule now...its clear cut.
wat to do, but to sit and pray and nepali ppl. wont start killing each other.
f*ck each and everyone.
 


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