Tuesday, November 30, 2004

2nd World Buddhist Summit gets underway

2nd World Buddhist Summit gets underway

The 2nd World Buddhist Summit kicked off amid much fanfare in Lumbini, the birthplace of Gautam Buddha, on Tuesday.

Over 120 delegates of 28 countries including VVIPs from eight countries including India, China, Bhutan, Myanmar, Cambodia and Egypt have already arrived in Lumbni while all other invitees are expected to arrive by the evening, the organisers said. Over 600 people, including observers are participating at the summit.

In the morning, a prayer ceremony was organised in Lumbini in which Buddhist monks from various countries and the guests were present. A peace rally was also organised ahead of the ceremony in the morning. Three work papers were presented at the beginning of the summit.

Formal ceremony will begin from Wednesday when His Majesty King Gyanendra inaugurates the summit at 11:00 a.m., the organisers said.

Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba, Deputy Prime Minister Bharat Mohan Adhikari, Home Minister Purna Bahadur Khadka, Minister for Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation, Deep Kumar Upadhaya, and few other ministers and heads of security agencies have arrived in Lumbini.

Security has been beefed up in and around Lumbini and along the highways while, according to Home Minister Khadka, special arrangements have been made for the safety of the guests. He said the delegates and other guests coming to participate at the summit were being escorted to Lumbini from the Gautam Buddha Airport at Bhairahawa. nepalnews.com mbk Nov 30 04

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Saturday, November 27, 2004

Threat to Education in Nepal

Threat to Education in Nepal

By Kamala Sarup

(Kamala Sarup is a Co-Ordinator of a media watch group - The Peace Media Research Center - and can be reached at peacemedia@gmail.com )

Maoists attacks on schools exact a huge cost in terms of the damage and disruption they cause. The full impact of the war and almost total neglect of the national education system leave a staggering challenge for students. Since the Maoists started their war, schools in Nepal have been among the targets and hundred of schools in Nepal have been destroyed or abandoned. There is a general scarcity of teachers. It is only in Kathmandu that children stand a chance of receiving an education, but here too there are severe constraints. Unsurprisingly, failure rates are high, and few students even enter high school. The government has consistently spend small amount of its budget on the education sector.

Nepal's long and brutal war has robbed thausends of students and their futures. Students are paying the price of a war that has reduced the country's health, education, justice and social structures to ruins. The Maoists have been forcing students and teachers in large numbers in different parts of the country to take part in their ‘re-education’ and ‘people’s militia’ programme. They forced many teachers to resign, and those who did not comply were kidnapped and even murdered. Attacks on schools in Nepal by the Maoist is both shocking and brutal.

Many school days were lost because the Maoists forcefully closed the schools. Many parents, fearing for the safety of their children, chose not to send their children to school and confront the Maoists. Because of violence there is no teaching-learning environment. Many children in Nepal become psychologically wounded. However, it has created widespread panic among the students and their parents. Even in different parts of the country, parents have started forbidding their children from attending schools. The threat is slowly forcing the school to shut down. The Maoists even organised a cultural programme in the school. Meanwhile, the Maoists also have ordered all teachers in different part of Nepal to wear combat dresses and hand over their salaries to them.

Some schools are standing empty not because there are no students to use them, but because students are scared to go to school while other schools are closed completely. Moreover, children could no longer attend schools in areas dominated by Maoists. The human, material and financial resources have been significantly reduced, which directly affects the educational sector. Because of this, the Nepali educational system shows difficulties of access, high desertion and failure rates.

The armed conflict raging in the country since the past nine years has hit the educational sector hard. Especially after the second breakdown of the ceasefire in August, the battle ground has extended to the educational institutions. Even the education policy of the government is very poor. Thus education in the countryside has been thrown into chaos.
Strikes and closures have taken a severe toll on the number of school days available. Last year schools in urban areas functioned for about 150 school days, while in rural areas, even 100 school days are rare. Furthermore, the closure of schools because of political instability was a common phenomenon in Nepal. Schools and colleges also remained closed during transportation strikes, blockades, rallies and other strikes. With the frequent strikes disturbing the smooth running of schools and colleges in Nepal, more and more Nepalis are opting to send their children abroad for higher education.
The political violence and political instability are prompting thousands of students to head for safer, and also is threatening to destroy Nepal's educational system. A large degree of political tension in Nepal continues to revolve around questions of labels, identity, and political categorization.

Even politicians are always keen to use the teachers and students to further their own selfish motives. The educational institutions should not be used as tools to pressurise the other party to fulfil the political demands. Deuba government is ultimately responsible for security of the students, and must ensure that students and teacher are not put in the position where they are used as human shields. Deuba government must act for the protection of the students and teachers as a whole, regardless of geographical location. The indiscriminate killing of teachers and students must end. The terrible impact of the war on the country’s students is still everywhere to be seen. The government should now involve all schools, guardians, civil society, political parties, and their student unions to hold an open discussion. The Maoists should immediately stop abducting the students and no armed force should be allowed to enter schools.
Political strikes never address national problems and issues such as corruption and poverty. Although much of the political violence directed toward students happens. Students are experiencing much higher levels of violence because political violence in education has a bad legacy. The Strikes and closures cannot be a solution to the problems faced by any political or non-political organization. Past experience has revealed that such activities have further aggravated the problems at the cost of the economy.

Political violence in schools and universities began to escalate and the policy vacuum surrounding the issue must be addressed. Political violence violates student's human rights and has been condemned by international and regional human rights treaties and national legislation. Political violence also damages student's physical and psychological health and makes it more difficult for them to deal in a positive way with their life. This would be a tragedy for all of us, since, as we have learned, student’s security is tied to national security. Even recently a joint press statement issued by the donor agencies said they were gravely concerned over the interruption of school education and undermining of the future of Nepal's children. The statement has urged the Maoists and concerned parties to abstain from rampant mobilization of children and teachers for political purposes and intimidating interference and harassment. The donors have also called on the Maoists to commit themselves to respect the schools as 'Zone of Peace.' School education, as a basic right, must be declared a zone of peace.

Our schools and colleges have become a political battlefield. It is time to take a serious look at what the real impact of such strikes, closures or blockades on the economy is?. This is a very important issue because educational institutions are suppose to be safe places of growth and learning. Without this commitment, much of what has been achieved may be lost.
Education institutions are places where students learn values, as well as the information and skills they need to pass exams. It is the government’s responsibility to provide security to the students. In the past year alone, the Maoists have torched and destroyed at least 41 educational establishments. A disturbed academic environment for one year can retard the future of a student by ten years.

Lack of adequate and proper education certainly is one of the things that are fueling Nepal's plight. Government does not spend nearly enough on education, despite the fact that millions are in need. Even most of the schools lack toilets while many of them are deprived of drinking water. Most of the school buildings are old and often water oozes from roofs during rainy season, hampering the studies of the students. Yet another problem the students are facing in remote parts of the district is considerably long distance they have to cover to reach school. On the other side, the government schools have not been able to find adequate teachers to run the schools even as the new academic session is beginning next month.
Fortunately or unfortunately, even after pursuing democracy, Nepal has not yet overcome the social, economic, political and environmental crisis prevailing in the country. All the political parties talk on value based politics, but they hardly talk how to achieve it.
Nepal's political parties and leaders appear incapable of solving national problems. More than that, they have not even begun to identify the issues and problems to be addressed.

Deuba government should know that military solution does not seem feasible, new avenues must be explored, in consultation with civil society and the international community, to create and maintain a lasting peace as soon as possible. Today's children are tomorrow's future, so they ought to be able to go to school without fear. They need to argue with pens rather than with guns. Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, November 25, 2004

Deadline for Nepal Maoist rebels

Deadline for Nepal Maoist rebels
By Sushil Sharma
BBC correspondent, Kathmandu

Nepal rebels
The rebels have rejected previous appeals by Mr Deuba
Nepalese Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba has given a two month deadline to the Maoist rebels to begin peace talks.

Mr Deuba says the government is ready to discuss all issues.

He also appeared to suggest that the government may discuss a key rebel demand to elect a constituent assembly to draw up a new constitution.

An earlier round of peace talks between the Maoists and the government collapsed last year over the rebel demand for a new constitution.

Prime Minister Deuba issued the deadline after a marathon meeting of a high-level peace panel, comprising of top leaders of the governing four-party coalition.

He said the government would wait until 13 January for the rebels to return to the negotiating table.

Mr Deuba also said the government would no longer label the rebel negotiators "terrorists" and would guarantee their safety.

But he added that if the rebels ignored the deadline the government would step up a security offensive and go ahead with fresh parliamentary elections.

Appeals ignored

King Gyanendra appointed Mr Deuba prime minister last June with a twin mandate of restoring peace and holding national elections by April next year.

The prime minister has issued several appeals to the Maoists but they have been ignored.

His latest appeal follows an escalation in violence across the country.

Several dozen rebels, members of the security forces and civilians have died in recent weeks, raising the toll of those killed in the nine-year-old insurgency to more than 10,000.

The Maoists have been refusing to negotiate with the government, saying that it does not have full executive powers.

They have insisted on direct talks with the king who, they say, wields control over the administration and the army.

The rebels have also rejected the planned national elections.

Instead, they are pushing for elections to vote in a constituent assembly to draw up a new constitution which, they believe, will pave the way for Nepal becoming a communist republic.

The government wants the present constitution - which guarantees a constitutional monarchy in a multi-party democracy - to continue.
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Saturday, November 20, 2004

Maoists are full of self-absorbed CRAP

Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal (right) has urged a halt to international aid for Nepal(AFP/File/Min Bajracharya)

Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal (right) has urged a halt to international aid for Nepal(AFP/File/Min Bajracharya)

KATHMANDU (AFP) - The leader of Nepal's Maoist rebels urged a halt to international aid for one of the world's poorest nations to pressure the government into peace talks leading to a new constitution.

The Maoists are fighting to topple the constitutional monarchy established in 1990 in a conflict that has claimed more than 10,000 lives since 1996.

"We appeal to the international community to help realize the aspirations of peace and democracy of the Nepalese people by halting all economic, political, military and diplomatic assistance to Nepal," Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal, alias Prachanda (Fiery One), said in an e-mailed statement on Tuesday.

In 2004 Nepal received nearly 280 million dollars in economic aid, about 60 percent of its development budget, from donors including the World Bank (news - web sites), Asian Development Bank and the United States, according to the country's National Planning Commission.

Japan is one of Nepal's biggest aid donors followed by Britain and Germany, but Tokyo's embassy was not aware of any appeal to halt aid.

"Our embassy has so far not received any appeals from the Maoists to halt all sorts of aid to Nepal," an embassy official said.

Prachanda also accused the government of failing to hold serious talks for a political settlement. Two rounds of peace talks in the past year have failed with the latest cease-fire ending in October and the government rejecting a rebel demand for UN mediation.

"During the present civil war, senior officials of the Royal Nepalese Army (RNA) and royalists have been amassing huge property through commissions and they are intensifying war," Prachanda said.

Maoists began a two-day blockade of traffic Tuesday on a major road to and from capital Kathmandu in protest at the killing of four rebels.

The roadblock is centered where the rebels were killed last week in the district capital of Dhading, 90 kilometers (50 miles) west of the capital on the road leading to the tourist destination of Pokharan.

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SUFFERING OF THE CHILDREN OF NEPAL

UNICEF urges for end to victimisation of children

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has urged all Nepali people to act seriously to protect children from being victimised in the ongoing conflict.

In a statement issued on the occasion of the 15th International Child Rights Day, Dr Suomi Sakai, representative of the UNICEF Nepal Country Office said, “"Childhood should be a time of growth, of playing, learning, exploring and developing. It should not be a time of hunger, illness or ignorance,” adding, “And, a child does not stop being a child just because she is married off at 12 and a mother at 13. She is still a child, as is a boy or girl recruited as a combatant.

Such children, according to her, are children at high risk, and thus in even greater need of care and support.

Describing the present conflict situation in Nepal as a battle in an orchard Suomi questioned, "Who is tending to the trees? Who is making sure they have enough water, nourishment, and protection from harm? For the buds on the trees are the fruit in the making, just as children are adults in the making. The cost of this conflict is becoming a bitter harvest – it is damaging our children, the future of the country."

Giving reference of a stanza Do not pluck buds, do not tear them apart, of a poem written by great poet Laxmi Prasad Devkota, she said, "I cannot think that 55 years after he died in such pain and poverty, he would be happy to see the damage that this conflict between adults is inflicting on the children (buds) of Nepal."

November 20 marks the 15th anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child by United Nations general Assembly.

Nepal has already expressed its commitments to international child rights norms by ratifying the UN Convention in 1990.

Child rights activists have been expressing concern over the growing victimisation of children in the conflict, urging both the government and the rebels not to violate rights of the children. nepalnews.com rh Nov 20 04

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Friday, November 19, 2004

Communists in Nepal do NOT demonstrate leadership qualities!

Maoists set ablaze passenger buses

A group of Maoist rebels has set ablaze a passenger bus of Danphe Yatayat at Labali along the Taulihawa-Lumbini road at around 7 am Friday morning, reports said.

The bus was coming from Taulihawa, a bordering town in western Terai, to Kathmandu. The rebels asked all the passengers to get down the bus, doused it with kerosene and set it on fire, reports added quoting eyewitnesses.

Similarly, suspected Maoist rebels set ablaze a passenger bus of the state-owned Sajha Yatayat in Rupandehi district and another Sajha bus in Nawalparasi district Friday morning. nepalnews.com amt Nov 19 04

AT LEAST THEY DIDN'T KILL PASSENGERS AS IN FEBRUARY!

Maoists Sunday opened fire on a passenger bus in Thapa chowk of Jhapa district killing two people, a report said Monday.

According to Spacetime dainik, a nine year old school girl Gayetri Niraula was one of the two killed. Another two people were seriously injured in the incident, the report added.
nepalnews.com Feb 16 04


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Monday, November 01, 2004

AP Wire | 11/01/2004 | Gunman Seize a Nepalese, an American, 4 Iraqis in Iraq

Posted on Mon, Nov. 01, 2004

MARIAM FAM

Associated Press

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Gunmen stormed the compound of a Saudi company in a fashionable Baghdad neighborhood Monday, seizing an American, a Nepalese and four Iraqis after a gunbattle in which a guard and one of the assailants were killed, police said.

The American, who was not identified, was the 12th U.S. citizen reported kidnapped or missing in Iraq. He was grabbed about 500 yards from the house where two Americans and a Briton were kidnapped last month. All three were beheaded.

The dramatic abduction occurred two days after the decapitated body of Japanese backpacker Shosei Koda was found in western Baghdad. The al-Qaida-affiliated movement of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi claimed responsibility for his kidnapping.

Police Lt. Col. Maan Khalaf said the heavily armed kidnappers arrived in three cars around iftar, the traditional sunset meal which Muslims eat to break their daily fast during the holy month of Ramadan.

The kidnappers stormed the two-story house, which is surrounded by an outer wall with iron bars, in a hail of gunfire and forced the victims to leave with them. There were conflicting reports on the number taken but Interior Ministry spokesman Col. Adnan Abdul-Rahman said they were one American, a Nepalese and four Iraqis.

"We heard gunfire. I went outside to see what's going on when a man pointed a machine gun at me and said: 'Get in or else I'll shoot at you,'" said Haidar Karar, who lives nearby.

From his house, Karar saw "at least 20 attackers, some masked and some not." He said some were wearing traditional Arab robes and all were carrying automatic weapons.

More than 160 foreigners have been abducted this year by militants with political demands or by criminals seeking ransom. At least 33 captives have been killed - several of them by al-Zarqawi's group, which is believed headquartered in Fallujah.

By comparison, more than 152 Iraqis were kidnapped in October alone, the highest number recorded in a single month since the U.S. occupation began in March 2003, according to the Interior Ministry.

"This is the fate of whoever is aiding or supporting the crusaders against the Muslims and mujahedeen," the group said on its Web site. It was impossible to verify the claim's authenticity.

The latest violence occurred as American troops are gearing up for a major offensive against Fallujah, the strongest bastion of Sunni insurgents and located about 40 miles west of the capital. The order to launch the assault must come from Allawi, the Iraqi prime minister, who warned Sunday that his patience with negotiations was thinning.

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Associated Press reporter Omar Sinan contributed to this report. Sphere: Related Content