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Nepal Now Has A Spot On My List of Places I Don't Want To Be

post #1 of 5
Thread Starter 
Nepal's King urges peace in aftermath of bloodshed

Clash with rebels kills 160

The Associated Press, with files from Reuters

SATBARIYA, Nepal - Nepal's king appealed for peace and unity in a New Year message to his nation yesterday, three days after at least 160 people were believed killed in the increasingly bloody communist revolt to topple him.

"All Nepalese ... must ... unite in widening the base of mutual confidence and understanding through democratic exercise," King Gyanendra said in a message broadcast to the nation marking the Himalayan Hindu kingdom's new year.

"Continued violence and destruction of development infrastructure in the country has left our economy in shambles," said the King, who assumed the throne last June when Crown Prince Dipendra killed King Birendra and other relatives in a palace massacre before shooting himself.

The tiny impoverished nation is under emergency rule as King Gyanendra and his government try to crush Maoist rebels who control about a quarter of the country and are seeking to create a one-party communist state.

At the scene of the latest clash, in Dang district, 305 kilometres west of Katmandu, spent cartridges carpeted a floor stained with blood and littered with shredded police uniforms in a burned-out house. In a dry river bed nearby lay the bodies of dozens of victims of the bloodiest battle between police and Nepalese rebels in six years of fighting.

The battle began when thousands of Maoist rebels armed with rocket launchers and automatic rifles poured into four towns in the Himalayan kingdom's remote western foothills on Thursday.

By the following morning, more than 100 police officers were dead -- some of them stripped, forced to march naked and then beheaded, police said. Six civilians and at least 60 guerrillas were also killed before the rebels withdrew, torching the house of the government minister in charge of Nepal's police.

Police said the main target of the rebel raid was the two-storey house of Khum Bahadur Khadka, the Interior Security Minister, in his native town, Satbariya. Mr. Khadka was in Katmandu at the time, but the house was being guarded by 120 paramilitary policemen.

Firing grenades, rockets and guns, the rebels fought with police for several hours. About 60 policemen were shot to death, said police Inspector Padam Vohra. He said the rebels beheaded 27 policeman who surrendered and burned two others to death. "They are so ferocious that they killed officers ... even after they surrendered. They were stripped naked, then paraded, and finally beheaded with kukris," he said, referring to traditional Nepalese knives.

As they withdrew to their mountain hideouts, the rebels apparently dumped the bodies of their slain comrades, half burying them on the side of a dry river bed a few kilometres from the Minister's house. At least 60 bodies lay strewn across the ground on Saturday.

Police and residents said the guerrillas also raided the nearby villages of Lamahi, Tulsipur and Ghorahi.

"We are not equipped to fight them," said Thawran Thaket, a senior police head constable. "We have only .303-calibre rifles, which cannot match their rocket launchers."

Police said the rebels attacked a bank and a hilltop police station in Lamahi, killing 11 police and wounding 15.

The insurgency by the rebels -- who draw their inspiration from Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Tse-tung -- has sapped government resources in Nepal, where more than half the population of 23 million live beneath subsistence levels and only one-third can read or write.

The country has been beset by a succession of weak elected governments since King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah gave up absolute monarchy in 1990.

post #2 of 5
Don't you want to help our Communist brothers take-over Nepal, Raoul? I've booked my flight for this Thursday. I reserved a vegetarian meal, and used the money I saved to help pay the legal fees for our local child-molestor. See YOU in KhatmandU.

Frankly, there's a disturbing amount of Shit going down in the world, and for the Middle East, you wouldn't know it. It's nice to see something about an issue that has nothing to with Muslims, Republicans, or Democrats(except for the commie bit).

post #3 of 5
I've been to Nepal. it's a wonderful country, and it greatly saddens me to see yet another country becoming caught in something that was brought in from the outside (they aren't communists - they are Maoists, and you can bet they get money from China). The sad part is that the Maoists are usually unsure what they are fighting for: they are usually poor peasants who have nothing, are unable to read and write and have fallen completely and utterly for the promises that everything will be better once the current government falls. yes, the givernment of Nepal is incredibly corrupt (my uncle lives there and the stories he's told me about local officials are plain scary), but I can't see communist regime making it any better (far from better, since Nepal's biggest income comes from tourism). I'm just scared that this will completely destroy the country (and that the maoists will try a similar purge as the Chinese did in Tibet). It depresses me just as much as the Middle East.
post #4 of 5
Makes me appreciate the United States even more.
post #5 of 5
Thread Starter 
From <a href="http://www.globeandmail.com" target="_blank">here.</a>

Nepalese rebels kill 140 in revenge attack

Wednesday, May 8, 2002 – Page A13

Kathmandu -- One hundred forty Nepalese security personnel were killed overnight in a Maoist attack on police and army posts in the western rebel stronghold of Rolpa, local officials said today. One hundred five policemen and 35 army personnel died in the battle, in an area where 600 rebels have been killed in a week-long campaign.

Meanwhile, in Washington, President George W. Bush promised to help Nepal fight Maoist rebels, Nepalese Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba said yesterday after a meeting at the White House. "I am very glad, I am very happy, about President Bush [being] supportive to our campaign against terrorism," Mr. Deuba told reporters.
AFP

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