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India-Pakistan
Protests erupt in Nepal after PM fires army chief
2009-05-04
KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Nepal's prime minister fired the army chief Sunday after a struggle over admitting former Maoist rebel fighters to the military, sparking mass protests and jeopardizing the survival of the country's first elected government.

President Ram Baran Yadav, meanwhile, rejected the ouster of army chief, Rookmangud Katawal, in a letter, calling it unconstitutional. The letter was delivered to Katawal's office late Sunday night and copies were also sent to Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal's residence.

Yadav was the first person elected as president in this Himalayan country, where a centuries-old monarchy was abolished last year. The army is officially under the president's command, not the prime minister. However, since the country's constitution is being rewritten, many things are unclear, including who has the power to fire the army chief. The president is a member of the Nepali Congress, the main opposition party, which vowed to fight the decision.
And they're soon going to find out that the Maoists have out-flanked them on this one, and everything else.
The army chief's dismissal prompted a key political party to withdraw from the ruling coalition and frayed already tense relations between the government, dominated by former Maoist rebels, and the military they long fought.

The dispute between the prime minister — a former Maoist rebel leader — and Katawal centered on the difficult question of how to integrate former rebels as required by a U.N.-brokered peace agreement into the ranks of the army they fought for a decade. Since giving up their bloody rebellion in 2006 and joining the political mainstream, the Maoists have confined their fighters to U.N.-monitored camps and locked up their weapons. Dahal wanted them freed and admitted to the national army but Katawal resisted the move and clashed repeatedly with the government over the issue.

The government says Katawal also ignored orders to stop recruiting soldiers, boycotted last month's national games, and allowing eight army generals to continue working past their tenure.

"The army chief was removed because he failed to give a satisfactory explanation on why the government orders were ignored," said Information Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara.

The Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist Leninist), the second largest party in the coalition government, withdrew from the coalition Sunday "to protest the prime minister's unilateral decision," the party's general secretary, Ishwar Pokhrel, said. Leaders from several smaller parties walked out of the Cabinet meeting after Dahal announced his decision. They were debating Sunday night whether to withdraw their support completely.

Political analysts said the government could be on the brink of collapse. "It has become almost impossible for the Maoists to remain in government in the present situation," said Ameet Dhakal, editor of Republica, a leading newspaper in the capital Katmandu. "It's a big crisis for the country now."
Expect massive street demonstrations, then riots, then the Maoist fighters leaving their UN camps, weapons in hand ...
Thousands of demonstrators filled Katmandu's streets Sunday, some to support the Maoist government and others to protest. Maoist supporters, waving red flags, called the army chief's sacking a "victory for people's rule" while the opposition blocked traffic and burned tires in protest.

Anger is high in Nepal, where much of the public blames the Maoists for the power outages that can last more than 16 hours a day, the fuel shortages that have made for endless lines at gas stations, and the rising price of food and household staples.
That's just a taste of things to come. When the Maoists have full control, you won't be allowed to say anything about fuel shortages, or anything else.
But the Maoists are still revolutionary heroes to many, especially among rural villagers who voted them into power last year in Nepal's first elections. The centuries-old monarchy was abolished soon after.

Krishna Khanal, a political science professor at Tribhuwan University in Katmandu, said the Maoists could still survive the crisis. "If the smaller parties decide to support the Maoists, then they can still run the government," he said. "But there is no immediate solution to the present political crisis."
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India-Pakistan
Sacked Nepal army chief refuses to step down
2009-05-03
KATHMANDU: Nepal’s army chief Gen Rukmanga Katawal, who was sacked by the ruling Maoist Party on Sunday, has refused to accept the decision, according to TV reports.

Times Now says that an emergency meeting is being held by the top brass of Nepal’s army at the residence of Katawal over the issue.

Earlier, ending days of speculation, Nepal's Maoists-led government on Sunday fired Gen Rukmanga Katawal, replacing him with loyalist Gen Kul Bahadur Khadka.

The announcement was made by prime minister Prachanda's press adviser Om Sharma despite domestic and international calls against such a move, including from India.

The 61-year-old Katawal, who received his marching orders just three months before he is due to retire, is expected to knock at Nepal's Supreme Court to stay the Maoists' hand, IANS reported.

"It is a routine procedure," said a Nepal Army brigadier-general who had served for 33 years.

"The general's challenge to the government over the eight brigadier-generals the government tried to retire last month is a pointer that Gen Katawal will go to court," said a former lieutenant-colonel, who too declined to be named, IANS said.

Recently, when the Maoist-led government sought to retire eight brigadier-generals, the army went to court under Katawal's orders to block the move.

The dispute is still being heard with the Supreme Court scheduled to deliver its verdict next week.

The general's task could be made easier by the four other parties in the Maoist-led coalition government who said the former guerrillas had taken the decision to retire Katawal Sunday unilaterally, ignoring their advice to seek the opinion of the interim parliament.

Soon after Maoist Information and Communications Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara announced that Katawal had been replaced with Lt. Gen. Kul Bahadur Khadka, the opposition Nepali Congress called a meeting of the other parliamentary parties to discuss a united reaction.

Meanwhile, rallies began to erupt in Kathmandu over the ouster of the army chief.

While Maoist cadres expressed triumph, saying that the general deserved his dismissal for defying the orders of the government, the opposition rally flayed the Maoists for taking unilateral decisions and jeopardising the peace process.

The Maoists' move came a fortnight after they served an ultimatum to Gen Katawal, seeking his clarification on recruitments by military, its "hastiness" in reinstating eight generals retired by the government and its decision not to participate in the national games.

He had furnished his reply contending that he had not disobeyed the government's directives on removing eight generals and halting recruitment in the military.
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India-Pakistan
Nepal Maoists refuse to form govt
2008-07-22
KATHMANDU: Nepal's Maoists have announced that they will not form the country's first post-royal government after the defeat of their presidential candidate. The announcement has plunged the country into a new political crisis.

The former rebels' decision, seen as a blow to Nepal's peace process, came a day after rival parties in a constitutional assembly ganged up against the Maoists to elect a president allied to the main centrist party. "The party's central committee meeting has decided not to form the government under our leadership," Maoist spokesman Krishna Bahadur Mahara said.
They'll take their ball, go home, and restart the violence revolution ...
Elections to the assembly in April gave the Maoists the largest single bloc of seats, but not an outright majority. The Maoists had insisted that their choice of president should be elected and they form a new government.

But a vote on Monday saw Ram Baran Yadav from the Nepali Congress Party -- the Maoists' main rival -- anointed the country's first president.

"After the presidential election, it is certain that we do not have a majority. So we do not have any basis to form the next government," said Mahara.

The Maoists' continued involvement in mainstream politics is seen as crucial to the survival of Nepal's peace process, which ended a decade-long rebel uprising that killed at least 13,000 people dead.
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India-Pakistan
Deposed Nepal king to move to suburbs
2008-06-05
KATHMANDU - Nepal's deposed king is to move from his main palace in the heart of the capital into a former royal hunting lodge on the edge of Kathmandu, a minister said Wednesday. Ousted monarch Gyanendra officially lost his crown last week when a Maoist-dominated constitutional assembly made Nepal a republic after an overwhelming vote in favour of ending the 240-year-old monarchy.

The assembly also issued a 15-day deadline for Gyanendra to vacate the sprawling Narayanhiti palace, now slated to be turned into a national museum.

"The cabinet meeting on Wednesday decided to provide Nagarjun palace to the ex-king Gyanendra for accommodation for the time being," Nepal's peace minister, Ram Chandra Poudel, told AFP. Nagarjun palace is one of seven royal properties nationalised last year. It is situated in an army-protected forest reserve eight kilometres (five miles) north of the centre of Kathmandu.
Accommodation or prison?
The move is a temporary measure until the king can make other arrangements, Maoist spokesman Krishna Bahadur Mahara said. "He won't be able to stay there for a life-long period. He will have to find another place for himself eventually," he said.

The government is currently auditing property inside the king's main palace which contains national treasures including a crown studded with diamonds and ringed with huge emeralds.

A security review is also under way and the government has agreed to provide the ousted king with police protection. It chose not to use the army to guard the ex-king as it is seen as an institution dominated by pro-royals. "He won't be getting any military security. We will arrange security from the police if he requests it," the Maoist spokesman said.
Makes it easier for them to do a Ekaterinburg-style solution in the near future ...
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India-Pakistan
All eyes on palace for Nepal king's eviction
2008-05-31
KATHMANDU - Nepal's government said Friday it has started an audit of palace property and sent an official letter telling King Gyanendra to leave after an historic assembly abolished the monarchy. The ousted Hindu "god-king', given a two-week eviction order, has kept a studied silence behind the high walls of his pink-hued Narayanhiti palace, although the royal flag has come down from over the heavily guarded complex.

"An official letter has been dispatched from the government asking Gyanendra Shah to vacate the palace," Information Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara told AFP. "A high-level committee has been formed to prepare the details of the property inside the palace. All the property will be transferred to national property," he added.

An estimated 1,500 soldiers guard the king, but Nepal's army -- seen as a bastion of royalists -- said they will comply with the decision, which also involves turning the royal palace in Kathmandu into a museum.
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India-Pakistan
Nepal Maoists threaten to quit government
2007-07-24
Never saw that coming, did you.
KATHMANDU - Nepal’s former Maoist rebels threatened to pull out of a coalition government on Monday, amid a row over soldiers posted to guard the residences of Maoist ministers. The threat by Information and Communications Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara, a Maoist nominee in the cabinet, is the first since the former guerrillas joined the government in April under a peace deal ending their decade-long civil war that killed more than 13,000 people.

It came a day after the army tried to change the guards at the residences of five Maoist ministers. Mahara said the new guards were from an elite “ranger force” of the Nepali Army which was created to fight the Maoists before they declared a ceasefire last year, and that they had been posted there without consultation. “We are seriously considering whether to stay in the government or not,” Mahara told reporters.

The guards have since returned to barracks. An army spokesman denied they were from an elite battalion and said the change of guards at the ministers’ residence was a routine process.
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India-Pakistan
Nepal's king faces the boot as talks go on
2006-12-15
Nepal's governing parties and Maoist rebels held talks yesterday an interim constitution that could bring the rebels into government and see the monarchy suspended. Leaders from the ruling seven-party coalition, including Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala, attended the talks, while the Maoists were represented by their second-in-command, Baburam Bhatterai.

Maoist spokesman Krishna Bahadur Mahara said the document could be finalised later Thursday but added the political parties "not us were taking their time over the document".

Senior government negotiator Pradeep Gyawali said talks Wednesday were "positive and sorted out differences that cropped up on some crucial issues, including who (was) to be made the head of state in the interim period". But he did not divulge details. The Maoists have said they want to strip King Gyanendra of his title and name a temporary head of state, such as Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala -- the respected octogenarian architect of last month's peace deal that officially ended a decade-long civil war.

Some members of the interim coalition, however, would prefer to see the position left open or the king -- who is still revered by many in the conservative nation as a Hindu deity -- retain a strictly ceremonial role.
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India-Pakistan
Nepal Maoists suspect new arms supplies for army
2006-09-14
KATHMANDU - Nepal’s Maoist rebels said on Wednesday they suspected the multi-party government of amassing weapons for its army, highlighting the continued mistrust between both sides despite a slow peace process. Dozens of army trucks thought to be carrying arms were headed for Kathmandu through a highway linking it with the southern plains bordering India, rebel spokesman Krishna Bahadur Mahara told Reuters but did not say where they came from.

“The trucks are now in military barracks near Gajuri,” Mahara said referring to a village 70 km (45 miles) west of the capital. “We think they are carrying arms.”

India, Nepal’s giant neighbour, has supplied arms including automatic rifles in the past to the army to fight the rebels.

An army spokesman denied the trucks were transporting weapons. “It is a normal convoy move. There are no arms and ammunition,” Brigadier General Nepal Bhusan Chand said.
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India-Pakistan
Referendum favoured on Nepal monarchy
2006-08-27
The Interim Constitution Drafting Committee on Friday submitted the draft of the statute to the Government and Maoist negotiations teams. The interim statute has proposed a referendum during the election to the constituent assembly to decide the fate of the monarchy. It wanted the bicameral system of parliament scrapped for an interim period and said there should only be a single House. Similarly, it wanted the post of Speaker and Deputy Speaker replaced with a Chairman and Vice-Chairman. It suggested expansion of the fundamental rights of the people. Merger of the two armies (state army and the Maoists army) after the constituent assembly elections was also proposed.

Committee Chairman Laxman Prasad Aryal handed over the draft to Home Minister Krishna Prasad Sitaula and Maoist Chief Negotiator Krishna Bahadur Mahara. Mr. Sitaula said "we will soon convene summit talks between the top leaders and give final shape to the statute." Mr. Mahara said the differences would be sorted out.

Since the Seven Party Alliance (SPA) and the Maoists could not agree on key issues to be included in the draft statute, the committee has given various options for contentious issues. Differences remain on four key issues: What should be the status of the monarchy in the interim period? What should be the process and modality of the constituent assembly? What will function as the interim legislative body? Who will promulgate the interim statute?
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India-Pakistan
Nepal peace talks close to collapse, rebel chief warns
2006-08-08
The peace process in the Himalayan state of Nepal between Maoist guerrillas and Nepalese politicians is on the verge of collapse over the future of the monarchy and disarmament, a senior communist leader said yesterday.

The comments, by deputy rebel chief Baburam Bhattarai, were the first signs of a split in the alliance between the seven political parties and the Maoists that effectively removed the king from power in April. "The talks are very close to collapse," Mr Bhattarai told business leaders in Kathmandu. "The dialogue process is stuck at a very sensitive stage. The government is trying to force us to war again."
"They're twisting our arms! We got no choice but to go kill people!"
The rebel leader ruled out an immediate return to battle, saying that if the talks failed the Maoists would "launch a new peaceful, popular movement in the cities, and not go back to the jungles".
"I had a bad case of crotch rot last time in the jungle, and believe you me I don't want to go back."
Despite previous Maoist statements that they would accept a ceremonial monarchy if the people wanted one, Mr Bhattarai criticised the interim prime minister's recent statement in favour of a ceremonial monarchy. "We caution and warn the prime minister that we may have to leave him if he continues to protect the monarchy - and that protest will not only finish the king, it will also finish all those who are siding with the monarchy," Mr Bhattarai said.

The negotiations appear to have stalled because the Maoists are unwilling to give up their guns unless the Nepalese army is disarmed. The UN had proposed that armouries could be built in barracks for the rebels where weapons could be kept under two sets of locks. One set of keys would be held by the Maoists, the other by the UN. However, the Maoists would not accept the plan unless the country's military was similarly constrained. "What was being proposed was dissolving the [Maoist] People's Liberation army. It is not acceptable to us," Maoist chief negotiator, Krishna Bahadur Mahara told the Guardian. "We are not for the status quo. How can we accept demilitarisation only for us, and not for them?"
Because they're the lawful government?
Analysts say that the Maoists were attempting to strengthen their hand in the negotiations by talking tough. "The international community has been quite firm. India, the US, the EU have all told the Maoists they cannot join the interim government with guns in hand," said Kanak Mani Dixit of Himal magazine. "What they need is a face-saving measure (for the Maoists), because Nepal does not want to return to war."
Which means you have to cave-in to the Maoists, since that's the only 'face-saving' measure that they'll accept.
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India-Pakistan
Maoists refuse to disarm, but will accept UN supervision
2006-06-23
Nepal's Maoist rebels said Thursday they are not prepared to disarm but are willing to put their army and their weapons under the supervision of the United Nations. The new government and the Maoists reached a landmark power-sharing agreement last week, but Nepal's home minister has said that the interim government cannot be formed until the Maoists lay down their weapons. "We are not going to disarm. But to create a conducive environment for constituent assembly elections we are willing to neutralise our weapons and our army under UN monitoring," rebel spokesman Krishna Bahadur Mahara told AFP.

Under last week's agreement parliament will be dissolved and power shared in a new interim government, which is due to come into being within a month. In the longer term the government has pledged to hold constituent assembly elections to form a a body that will permanently rewrite the constitution, and most likely remove the king from politics permanenetly. Mahara said the rebels would not use arms during the constituent assembly elections and called on the army to match the move. A ceasefire is currently in force. "We are expecting UN monitoring and technical assistance for the management of arms from both sides," he said.

The question of the rebels laying down arms was not addressed in their eight-point agreement. But Home Minister Krishna Prasad Sitaula said on Wednesday the issue must be addressed before the power-sharing arrangement comes into effect. "Formation of the interim government is not possible without settling the Maoists' arms issues," Sitaula said.
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India-Pakistan
Maoist leader and Nepal PM to meet
2006-06-13
Shortly after which the government will surrender to the Maoists.
KATHMANDU -Nepal’s Premier Girija Prasad Koirala and Maoist rebel leader Prachanda will soon hold historic peace talks, a senior insurgent said Monday, as the government pledged to release hundreds of jailed Maoists. “Our chairman Prachanda said that the high-level talks with Prime Minister Koirala should be held soon,” Maoist spokesman Krishna Bahadur Mahara told a press conference.

Home Minister Krishna Sitaula had earlier Monday indicated that the talks, which would be the first face-to-face meeting between a prime minister and the rebel leader, were on the cards. “Talks between the top leaders will be held soon,” Sitaula told reporters after a cabinet meeting. He did not elaborate.

“Both the government and the Maoists are very positive about the peace process. It is heading in the right direction,” added Sitaula, who on Sunday paid a flying visit to a remote western hamlet to meet Prachanda and his second in command Baburam Bhattarai.
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