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 खाने पनि कि पजेरो ?
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Posted on 04-26-09 4:15 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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The truth hurts "suffer and horrified for drinking water in kathmandu"



Water Shortage Nepal
So often we are surrounded by a truth that we never properly see. We are clouded by our perception, our beliefs, our desires. I've been to Nepal 5 times but until now I've never really understood. Perhaps it was because I always had a definite return date, there was a fixed timeframe during which I could immerse myself in another world and anything was endurable because there was an end in sight. This time, the end is unclear. I don't know when I'll return. I don't know how I can support even the simple lifestyle I've grown accustomed to here. It's on to the 8th day in a row that there has not been water to even flush the toilet. The monsoon is approaching and although I collect rain water in buckets, on plastic sheets and from gutters it's barely covering the household needs for basic drinking and cooking. There are two babies living in this house and the water I collect is understandably always used for them. It's 35 degrees everyday, I'm hot, sweaty, covered in caked on dirt and grime and have contracted both conjunctivitis and a mild stomach bug. In fact, I'm so sticky that I can pick things up by touch alone.


Ganesh and I walked 15km today armed with buckets in search of water, but every location was the same... water dripping out at a rate of about 1 drop per minute and a queue of at least 200 waiting for their turn to catch the drips. My ability to keep myself clean is clearly inadequate in this environment. How is it that I never fathomed the condition people live in here until now? I saw it, but I never really felt it. In actual fact it is not the physical hardship that has depressed me, but the reaction of the people around me. I'm having difficulty with social and cultural barriers and I no longer have the happy faces of the children in my classes to keep me occupied. I feel guilty everytime I think about using what little remains of my western pennies to purchase even something simple like a bottle of water to drink (the householders have developed a habit of drinking or hiding any available water when I leave the house)... I have left all of what used to matter to me, and although am now in a position where I could start something positive with the education I've been given, I have lost motivation while struggling with even obtaining a consistent supply of electricity. Yes, I understand, 8 days is nothing. And of course, I've been on many a camping trip that has lasted much longer, lived in villages with only outdoor hand pumps and no electricity at all, but this situation is not by choice, and I have neither the means nor the possibility of employment to improve the situation. I realise that I am still 1000 times better off than anyone else here. That I have the skills and the ability to change this situation. But for now, having just been hit with a proper understanding of life in Nepal I am once again speechless with awe at what some people must suffer and horrified at western excess that has caused such a disparity.


 
Posted on 04-26-09 4:19 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepal officials sentenced for corruption


Updated - Thursday 15 September 2005



The controversial Royal Commission for Corruption Control (RCCC) has given former premier Sher Bahadur Deuba and former minister Prakash Man Singh a jail sentence of two years and a fine of NPR 90 million (EUR 1.1 million) each. The verdict came on 26 July 2005 for alleged corruption in the Melamchi water supply case. The RCCC also convicted former secretary, Tika Dutta Niraula, executive director of Melamchi Drinking Water Project, Dhruba Bahadur Shrestha, deputy executive director of the project Dipak Kumar Jha, and contractor Jep Chhring Lama of Lama Constructions of corruption in the drinking water project.


The Water and Energy Users' Federation, Nepal (WAFED), a Kathmandu-based NGO, wants the US$ 464 million (EUR 379 million) Melamchi water supply project - funded mainly by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Japan Bank for International Cooperation, the Japan government and three more foreign donors - to be stopped. WAFED, however, distanced itself from the commission. They consider it an unconstitutional body formed arbitrarily by the King after the royal coup.


Related news: Former Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba arrested over Nepal water contract, Source 20 May 2005



 
Posted on 04-26-09 4:27 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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CORRUPTION-NEPAL: All the King's Men Try to Fix a Broken Humpty Dumpty



By Suman Pradhan

KATHMANDU, Apr 27 (IPS) - In the wee hours of Wednesday several jeep-loads of heavily armed policemen arrived at the residence of former Nepalese prime minister Sher Bahadur Deuba. He was packed into one of the vehicles and driven away - arrested on charges of corruption.

As the police jeeps drove away with the former prime minister, it became clear just how polarised Nepal has become over the issue of corruption, especially after King Gyanendra dismissed the Deuba government on Feb. 1 and seized complete political power.

Corruption was once the biggest issue worrying Nepali voters. But today, it has been turned into a politically charged issue - thanks to the machinations of the new autocratic regime. In its zeal to only charge democratic politicians for corruption and abuse of authority, the regime has ironically managed to create the inevitable impression that it is settling old scores.

'People today have a lot of sympathy for these politicians even if they are corrupt because the government has mishandled the issue,' said Ram Sharma (name changed), a political analyst with a donor agency in Kathmandu. 'They (the royal regime) have shown a remarkable lack of political acumen while pursuing these cases.'

No one doubts that Nepal's politicians deserve the attention of anti-corruption agencies. No one, not even politicians, deny that the freewheeling democratic years from 1990 to 2002 were characterised by massive corruption in government ranks.

Leaders who were voted into office because of their honest and simple lifestyles were soon driving expensive Pajero jeeps in a matter of years. Leftover cash was invested in major private businesses away from the prying eyes of the public.

A poll funded by the U.S.-based National Democratic Institute late last year found that most Nepalis were deeply concerned by corruption issues and wanted political parties to deal with it effectively. But the parties dithered, afraid that tackling corrupt leaders would fracture the whole multi-party democratic process.

But after he seized power, King Gyanendra had no such concerns.

Announcing corruption as one of the major scourges, he formed a Royal Corruption Control Commission (RCCC) in February, just after seizing absolute power. The all- powerful RCCC has the mandate to probe, prosecute and sentence offenders - a power so great that it turns natural justice on its head, legal experts allege.

In a remarkable lack of political sense, the king packed the commission with old royal hands who had served in an era of absolute monarchy started by Gyanendra's father - King Mahendra – in 1960. That era was dismantled by a popular movement in 1990, when pro-democracy demonstrators forced Gyanendra's brother - King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah - to relegate his authority to that of a constitutional monarch.

Nonetheless, all the gains made in 1990 were dismantled by the royal coup on Feb. 1.

One of the RCCC's first task was to probe financial improprieties in the last Deuba government. Several ministers were summoned, questioned and released on bail for disbursing public funds to political activists last year during the holy Dasain festival, which falls in autumn. Allegedly, all the former ministers who gave out the money happened to belong to democratic political parties.

Then the RCCC put its hands in a controversial drinking water project - the 464 million U.S. dollar Melamchi drinking water project - financed, among others, by the Asian Development Bank (AsDB).

Early this month, it summoned Prakash Man Singh, a former minister for physical planning and leader of Deuba's Nepali Congress (Democratic), to answer why he had cancelled an old contract to build a 23-kilometre road leading to the project site and given it to a Chinese-Nepali joint venture instead. Singh refused to appear before the RCCC.

'This is a political witch hunt,' Singh said early last week. 'The decision was made in accordance with the law and there is no corruption involved. Besides, I refuse to appear before a commission which is unconstitutional.'

That got him into jail. Late last week, after the deadline for him to appear before the RCCC expired, police swiftly bundled Singh into a van from his house and threw him in a lockup. The RCCC has extended his detention by seven more days to finish its investigation.

Deuba's arrest will be at a huge political cost to the RCCC. That is because of the public’s perception that the royal commission is being used as political tool to settle old scores.

'No one says our politicians are clean. But so is the case with the king's supporters. They did more corruption during the 30-year rule under absolute monarchy than these guys. Why does not the RCCC go after them?' asks Bikram Lama, a taxi driver in Kathmandu.

The Asian Development Bank itself has further bolstered the politicians' case. 'The Kathmandu Post' newspaper reported Tuesday that AsDB officials had themselves approved of the contractor change in the Melamchi drinking water project.

'The approval was undertaken according to AsDB procedures,' the newspaper reported a bank official as saying. The previous contract was cancelled, the official was quoted as saying, 'due to gross under-performance.' The RCCC has yet to react to the AsDB's claims, but the damage has been done.

Also, it does not help that the RCCC is openly encroaching into a jurisdictional area of the constitutionally empowered Commission for Investigation of Abuse of Authority (CIAA). Officials there privately lament the RCCC's role and say the royal body is giving a bad name to the anti-corruption investigations.

'Even in those cases we're looking after, the RCCC has interfered in. But what can we do? It is the king's commission and he is all-powerful,' decries a CIAA investigating officer.

But the RCCC has given every indication that it doesn't give a damn.

On Apr. 21, it issued fresh orders to Nepal's banks to furnish the financial records of over 100 selected politicians and bureaucrats. None of those names belong to loyal royals. (END/2005)


 
Posted on 04-26-09 4:30 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Deuba gets jail term on corruption charge


KATHMANDU, JULY 26 The Royal Commission for Corruption Control (RCCC) on Tuesday awarded a two-year jail term and a Rs 90 million ($1.3 million) fine each to former Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and former minister Prakash Man Singh, holding them guilty of embezzling $5.3 million in the multi-billion Melamchi drinking water project.

RCCC chairman Bhakta Bahadur Koirala handed out the sentences. The Commission was appointed by King Gyanendra, with sweeping powers to try cases of corruption in high offices.

Singh was the Physical Planning minister in Deuba’s cabinet when it awarded the contract for a $464 million drinking water project—funded by the Asian Development Bank (ADB)—to a Chinese company with local partners.

The Commission also convicted the former secretary to the government, besides the executive and deputy executive director of the Melamchi Drinking Water Project, handing out a year’s jail term and a Rs 45 million fine to each.

Sources in Deuba’s family said both Deuba and Singh would challenge the verdict in the supreme court.

Incidentally, the RCC verdict was delivered three days after the integrity committee of ADB—the lead donor of the project—informed the Commission that there was no irregularity or corruption in the project. The Norwegian government—which had provided Rs 180 million for the project—announced its withdrawal, criticising the Royal regime for harassing its political rivals.


 
Posted on 04-26-09 4:31 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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ADB says it will pull out from Melamchi


 
image

Asian Development Bank (ADB) headquarter has sent a letter to Finance Minister Dr. Ram Sharan Mahat stating that it would pull out from the Melamchi Drinking Water Project. ADB’s letter comes after Minister for Physical and Works Hisila Yami’s decision to review the earlier agreement of awarding the contract of managing valley’s drinking water to UK’s Severn Trent Company.

The ADB is the leading donor of the project and has agreed to provide loan of USD 140 million for the Melamchi project.

Citing its internationally discredited image and need to maintain government/public hold on water management, Minister Yami had made the decision to review the agreement. This agreement was approved by the previous cabinet. The agreement to award the foreign company the contract to manage valley's water distribution was a precondition for the ADB to invest in the US$ 340 million project.

The Melamchi project aims to bring in 170 million litres a day (MLD) water to the Kathmandu valley. The valley has been suffering from acute shortage of drinking water – while its demands have shot up to 240 MLD, the supplies have stagnated at 90 MLD.

Meanwhile, talking to a media, minister Yami has said that she was not against the project as Melamchi was important for the long term. “Our only concern is that the government and the people should have the hold on the management of basic things like water," the report quoted Yami as saying.



 
Posted on 04-26-09 4:36 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Do you think Sher Bahadur Deuba should be punished or hanged in public?


 




 
Posted on 04-26-09 4:55 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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mm,


keep up the good work for bringing awareness. these are the bitter truths of impoverished Nepal.


Deuba et.al should be burned alive.


 


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