Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
02KATHMANDU1693
2002-09-03 11:13:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Kathmandu
Cable title:  

MORE EXPLOSIONS IN KATHMANDU AS STRIKE DATE NEARS

Tags:  PTER PGOV ASEC CASC NP 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KATHMANDU 001693 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR SA/INS AND DS/OP/NEA
STATE PLEASE ALSO PASS USAID - DCHA/OFDA
LONDON FOR POL - RIEDEL
MANILA FOR USAID - DCHA/OFDA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PTER PGOV ASEC CASC NP
SUBJECT: MORE EXPLOSIONS IN KATHMANDU AS STRIKE DATE NEARS

REF: A. (A) KATHMANDU 1680

B. (B) KATHMANDU 1674

------
SUMMARY
-------

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KATHMANDU 001693

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR SA/INS AND DS/OP/NEA
STATE PLEASE ALSO PASS USAID - DCHA/OFDA
LONDON FOR POL - RIEDEL
MANILA FOR USAID - DCHA/OFDA

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PTER PGOV ASEC CASC NP
SUBJECT: MORE EXPLOSIONS IN KATHMANDU AS STRIKE DATE NEARS

REF: A. (A) KATHMANDU 1680

B. (B) KATHMANDU 1674

--------------
SUMMARY
--------------


1. (SBU) Maoist insurgents continued their campaign of
bombings in urban areas of the Kathmandu Valley throughout a
long holiday weekend August 30-September 1. The explosions
targeted businesses in the city, although two armed invasions
of the homes of prominent politicians were also reported.
Prime Minister Deuba, returning to the capital September 2,
told reporters he had not yet decided whether to extend the
state of emergency, which expired August 28. The bombings, a
preface to a Maoist general strike declared for September 16,
demonstrate the insurgents' ability--even after nine months
of a state of emergency--to penetrate the extensive security
cordon within the fortified capital. End summary.

--------------
BOMB BLASTS JOLT CAPITAL
--------------


2. (U) Suspected Maoist insurgents have followed up an August
28 explosion at a shopping center in downtown Kathmandu (Ref
B) with a string of similar incidents--almost daily--in busy
commercial locations across the city. As noted Ref B, the
string of bombings coincides both with the expiration of the
state of emergency, which had been in near-continuous
operation since late November, and the onset of a
Maoist-declared "agitation campaign" to publicize a general
strike, or "bandh," the insurgents have scheduled for
September 16. Although only one person--an Army soldier
attempting to defuse an explosive device August 29--has been
killed in the blasts, the series of explosions is unnerving a
capital made complacent by a comparatively quiet summer.


3. (U) In the early morning of August 29 a Royal Nepal Army
(RNA) soldier attempting to defuse a bomb in Patan, about 6
km from the Embassy, was killed when the device detonated.
The bomb had been wrapped in red cloth and placed near a
utility pole at an intersection. On August 30--a religious
holiday in Nepal--another early-morning bomb damaged a
municipal office in Lalitpur, approximately 6 km from the
Embassy. The RNA successfully defused another device left

near a Nepal Telecommunications Corporation building in
Kathmandu August 31. On September 1 separate explosions at
an automobile showroom and near an ambulance parked outside
the state-owned Salt Trading Corporation, both in downtown
Kathmandu, caused extensive damage but no injuries. As in
the earlier incidents, the explosions occurred in the early
morning well before normal business and school hours.

--------------
ATTACKS ON POLITICIANS
--------------


4. (U) Suspected Maoists have also staged attacks on the
homes and persons of at least two politicians in the past few
days. On August 30 insurgents set fire to the home of
Minister of State for General Administration D.B. Lama in
Nuwakot District, 70 km due north of Kathmandu. The minister
was not home at the time, and no one was injured in the
blaze. On September 1 the president of a local Nepali
Congress district committee was shot by suspected insurgents
at his home in Bhaktapur, 18 km east of Kathmandu. He
remains in critical condition at a Kathmandu hospital. On
August 28 unidentified gunmen invaded the Kathmandu home of a
former MP of the Nepal Sadbhavana Party, injuring his wife
and child, and making off with an unspecified amount of cash
and property. (Note: While it seems probable that common
criminals, rather than Maoists, performed the latter attack,
the success of this bold, broad-daylight home invasion in the
heart of Kathmandu is just one more sign of the overall
deterioration of law and order brought on by the insurgency.
End note.)


--------------
RETURN TO EMERGENCY?
--------------


5. (U) The Maoists' success in setting off a series of
explosions in the heavily fortified capital has raised
speculation that Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba will ask
the King to re-impose the state of emergency. (Note: The
emergency expired August 28, while the PM was on an official
visit to EU headquarters in Brussels. End note.) Returning
to Kathmandu September 2, Deuba told reporters at the airport
that he would weigh carefully whether to ask the King to
re-impose the emergency after he consulting with his Cabinet,
members of the security forces, and others. He assured
reporters, as he has in the past, that the emergency, if
re-imposed, will be lifted before general elections November

13.

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


6. (SBU) Because of the early-morning timing of the
explosions, it seems likely their purpose is to terrorize the
general population and embarrass the security forces, rather
than to kill and maim. After a fairly quiet summer, many
Kathmanduites--probably including many within the upper ranks
of the security forces--were beginning to feel complacent,
confident that the RNA and a nine-month state of emergency
had successfully banished most of the insurgents to the
hinterlands. The insurgents' activities over the past few
days have punctured some of that complacency. After several
costly defeats in May and June, the Maoists have launched no
large-scale operations against the security forces. It is
too soon to tell if the losses have affected the Maoists'
ability to mount such operations in the future, or if they
have been lying low on purpose, regrouping, retraining and
recruiting during the monsoon. Regardless of the reasons for
their lack of activity, the long period of quiet has put
pressure on the Maoists to demonstrate to their own cadre, to
the Army, and to the general public, that they can still
wreak havoc--even via small-scale activities like the string
of bombings. Their ability to pull off such operations,
literally under the noses of the Army and police in the
heavily defended capital, is likely just enough to cow most
of the urban population into adhering to the September 16
strike and to mobilize public support for re-imposition of
the emergency. We expect the PM will soon ask the King to
re-impose the state of emergency for at least the next two
months.
MALINOWSKI