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 Soon Nepal needs Intervention by India with the International Communities Consensus?
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Posted on 02-26-05 10:10 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Soon Nepal needs Intervention by India with the International Communities Consensus?

'Democracy is good, but Polititioans, and the king is no good' is the remark of the ordinary people of Nepal who have become the scape goats victims of the attacks both the king's army RNA and People's army Maoists.

The king is being the cunning, ambisous have exhausted plotting tricks from behind to stage situations like national tragedy lince the massacre of f king Birendra and his family, it is said that king also had networking to dismantal the establishment of the mulitparty democracy institution. Then he is trying to put his hand on top of all the conspiracies that he plotted by telling Maoists the terrorists. Unfortunately, he does not see he has had for his life terrorized, drugged, cartelled Nepal with his underground plottings with his army RNA. It is now assummed that as a matter of fact RNA was not the army of king Birendra and Nepal. They are only of king Gyanendra's army inherited from his father, the morder of democracy Mahendra.

CIA, Interpoll, Scottlandyard, IIA have all the informations and international communities are watching the current situation carefully. They are not gonna let go KGP's plan to cross Nepali with fear and interigatons and turn into sheep and goats.

Both king's army RNA and the Maoists' army NPA have equally bad human rights records according to UN commissions and Intl agencies like Amnesty Intl. The present situation in which king plotted to cross the democracy with the army coup will have worst records than of the Maoists.

Nepali people will soon see neither the king nor the Maoists alone can win the situation fighting with each other. If anyone thinks give the chance to the king, will make big mistaking in killing many innocent people of Nepal. King had not only last 3 years, according to the Indian Army exports.

Unfotunately, KG has lost trust of ordnary people of Nepal, Politicians, political parties, human rights organizations, journalists, international communities like USA, Britain, EU, UN and India. World will not follow political steps of China or Pakistan any way.

Whole international comminities are in favor of Multipary Democracy and constitution monarcy. They can not eliminate monarcy even he is the only terror of Nepal. It will be Nepali people's choice in future to eliminate him from Nepal. World and its history know that it is Shaha and Rana regimes who made the Nepali people the poorest of poor humans of the world.

Here's the article from the Observer on the suffering of ordinary Nepali people:
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Hope slips away for refugees

Victims of the insurgency are losing again as the king attacks democracy

Ed Douglas
Sunday February 20, 2005
The Observer

Babadin Khan lies in his hospital bed, trying to think why Maoist rebels would want to blow up his tea stall. He was open for business during one in the apparently endless sequence of strikes called by the Maoists. But so, he explains, were all his competitors.
Selling tea is the only way he can make a living in his village, four miles from the town of Nepalgunj, western Nepal. Now his legs are covered in shrapnel wounds. His wife, Shamon, sits in tears beside him, fearful of how they will recover from the medical costs of just a few dollars.

The Khans are typical victims of the brutal insurgency pushing Nepal towards collapse. At least six bombs were exploded by the Maoists around Nepalgunj to coincide with the ninth anniversary of the so-called People's War, on 13 February. Police posts were destroyed, but Maoists also targeted local government staff in an attempt to roll back 'the Establishment'.

Up the road from Nepalgunj, at the Rajena refugee camp, around 60 families explained why they had left their farms. 'The Maoists come to recruit and kidnap our young people,' said Devi Lal Malla, 33. 'Then the security forces come and accuse us of being Maoists. We left everything we had and came at night.'

Local administration has effectively ended in much of rural Nepal, replaced by Maoist committees. With few NGOs prepared to risk working, health and schooling have degraded, sending Nepal's long climb out of poverty back, say experts, by 20 years.

Doctors visiting Accham report that the few health workers left have run out of rehydration salts, let alone antibiotics, in a country where 27,000 children a year die from diarrhoea. It is, Devi Lal Malla said, the same in Mugu district: 'There's not much medicine and what there is the Maoists take. The schools are open, but are very bad.'

You won't hear about the latest reports of what locals call 'the situation' in Nepal's capital Kathmandu. Since King Gyanendra sacked the government and announced a state of emergency on 1 February, his cabinet of royalist appointees has clamped down on press freedoms, one of the few bright spots in Nepal's recent history. Soldiers have been stationed in newspaper offices.

Political leaders remain under arrest, but within Kathmandu there is little popular resistance to their plight. Nepal won multi-party democracy in 1990 following public demonstrations. But years of in-fighting and corruption undermined support for the political elite. 'Democracy good,' one shopkeeper told me. 'Politicians not so good.'

Tourism, Nepal's third-largest source of income, is suffering, despite all sides declaring that tourists are not targets. Arrivals in January fell by 15 per cent. An internet blackout has ended, but mobile phone services are yet to resume. On Friday, National Democracy Day, the authorities arrested activists. Human rights workers have been detained, including Krishna Pahadi, a leading campaigner.

Last week, Irene Khan, secretary-general of Amnesty, warned Nepal was on 'the brink of disaster'. After meeting Gyanendra, she said: 'The king will be judged, not by his promises, but by how those promises are put into action by his government.'

Western governments have condemned the moves. The US and EU, along with India, temporarily withdrew their ambassadors last week. The US has given the king 100 days to restore human rights, tying military aid to an improvement. India is to review its support for the Royal Nepal Army.

Meanwhile, the cabinet has pledged to hold elections in three years. But while there is no security, there can be no development, and Nepal's poor are waiting. As one old man said at Rajena refugee camp: 'People come and write things down in their books, and then they go away and absolutely nothing happens. We just want to go home.'

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1418513,00.html


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SHARING A THOUGHT: President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam

NEW DELHI, FEB. 25. "My Government wants India to shine, but it must shine for all."

These 12 words in the President, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam's 8,000-word address to Parliament, at the start of the Budget session, define the Manmohan Singh Government's agenda, demonstratively rigged in favour of the common man (aam admi).

Addressing the members of the two Houses of Parliament, assembled in the historic Central Hall, the President put on record that "my Government is committed to an inclusive society, a caring polity and a sharing economy." Expectedly, the address hones closely the National Common Minimum Programme.

The customary address at the start of the session is used by the incumbent Government to spell out its priorities and preferences.

Apart from obligatorily flagging down various economic policy issues (which would get fleshed out in the Union Budget in the next few days), the Manmohan Singh Government used the occasion to showcase its sensitivity in dealing with issues of security and alienation.

"In the final analysis, power in India can only flow from the ballot box; never from the barrel of a gun," said the President in the context of the internal security concerns in Jammu and Kashmir, the Northeast and the naxalite problem.

Even while the President said that "the infrastructure of terrorism has not been dismantled across the border" in Jammu and Kashmir, and also asserted that there was no "weakening of our resolve to deal with elements inimical to our national security," he said that his "Government is committed to paying equal attention to the genuine concerns of the people and redressing their grievances." He repeated the Government's "willingness to talk to any group provided they abjure the path of violence." And, the Northeast region, he observed, "needs a new agenda of hope."

Communal violence


In pursuit of an agenda of communal harmony, Mr. Kalam said that "a Model Comprehensive Law to deal with communal violence is on the anvil. My Government will deal resolutely with any attempts to spread communalism, disturb law and order and deny a life of peace and security to any citizen." Even to the naxalites, the President promised to encourage "a dialogue with all political forces interested in promoting the welfare of the people in a peaceful manner."

But in the same breath, the President warned that the Government "will deal effectively with any group challenging the Constitutional authority of a democratically-elected Government and resorting to the use of arms."

Core issues


Dwelling on the Common Minimum Programme's seven core commitments ? agriculture, education, employment, healthcare, infrastructure, urban renewal and water ? the President's address unveils a bias in favour of the common man, even while attending to the task of accelerating the process of economic liberalisation.

In particular, he said: "We need a modern educational system that promotes secular values and creates concerned, committed and competent citizens capable of meeting the challenges of the 21st century."

In matters of foreign policy, the President's address notes the ongoing "serious dialogue" and describes the quest for peace as a "response to the felt desire of our peoples."

On Nepal, he said the situation could "only be addressed by a constitutional monarchy and multi-party democracy working together harmoniously on the basis of a national consensus."

http://www.hindu.com/2005/02/26/stories/2005022608520100.htm
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