Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05KATHMANDU1238
2005-06-08 04:23:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Kathmandu
Cable title:  

NEPAL POLICE ARREST MAOIST VICTIM PROTESTORS

Tags:  NOTAG NP 
pdf how-to read a cable
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KATHMANDU 001238 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/07/2015
TAGS:
SUBJECT: NEPAL POLICE ARREST MAOIST VICTIM PROTESTORS

REF(S): A) KATHMANDU 01121 B) KATHMANDU 01194

Classified By: Charge Elisabeth Millard. Reasons 1.4 (b/d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KATHMANDU 001238

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/07/2015
TAGS:
SUBJECT: NEPAL POLICE ARREST MAOIST VICTIM PROTESTORS

REF(S): A) KATHMANDU 01121 B) KATHMANDU 01194

Classified By: Charge Elisabeth Millard. Reasons 1.4 (b/d)


1. (U) Summary. Fifty-three Maoist Victim Association
protestors were arrested by police on the grounds that they
had no permission to be in a restricted area in Kathmandu on
June 5. However, Nepali political parties held a mock
parliament event on June 3 in which 19 National Assembly
members and 132 lawmakers from the House of Representatives
participated in Kathmandu on June 3 without police interference.
End Summary.

Third Arrest of Maoist Victims Association Protestors
-------------- --


2. (SBU) Approximately 200 people gathered in an area of
Kathmandu banned for protests on Sunday, June 5 in a peaceful
sit down demonstration to ask the government to provide
Maoist victims food, shelter and information on the status of
internal refugees. Police arrested 12 of the protestors,
including the acting president of the Maoist Victims
Association, Dharma Raj Neupane, for protesting in a
prohibited area. (Note: Police had also arrested and
released Neupane on the same grounds on May 13 and May 26.
End note.) According to the spokesman of the Maoist
Victims Association, police later returned and forcibly
confiscated tents and other shelter materials and arrested
about 40 additional protestors, including children and
elderly individuals. Those arrested were taken to Kharipati,
Bhaktapur in the Kathmandu Valley, where they remained in
custody as of June 7.


3. (SBU) The Maoist Victims Association used the death of a
Maoist victim, Gana Bahadur Gharti, 32, who died June 1, as a
catalyst to protest on June 5. Gharti might have died as a
result of injuries sustained on May 29 by government security
forces in a Kathmandu protest (as claimed by the Maoist
Victims Association) or from a heart attack (as claimed by
the Birendra Police Hospital after an autopsy.)


4. (C) The Home Ministry spokesman, Gopendra Bahadur Pandey,
told PolOff that the local administrator took action against
the protestors in order to prevent &objectionable
activities.8 He said that there were currently 53 people
in custody in Kharipati. That number did not include 4 or 5
children who were with their parents in custody. The children
themselves were not in custody, but accompanying their
parent, whose choice was to keep the children with them.
Pandey said that the Home Ministry was working to provide
additional relief to internally displaced people.


5. (SBU) Political parties and human rights groups have
reacted strongly to the arrests. CPN-UML Party Office
Secretary Kashinath Adhikari condemned the government for

SIPDIS
using force on people who were internally displaced from
their homes due to Maoist actions. The National Coalition of
Human Rights Defenders, formerly known as the group of 25
human rights organizations, condemned the ongoing repressive
actions of the state against internally displaced persons.

Mock Parliament Event Peaceful
--------------


6. (U) The mock session of the parliament organized by the
political parties in a street in Patan in the Kathmandu
Valley on June 3 passed peacefully with no interference from
the police. Altogether, 19 former National Assembly members
and 132 former lawmakers from the House of Representatives
participated in the mock parliamentary session. They
represented 95 percent of the political parties which had
ever held a seat in parliament. Chaired by Deputy Speaker of
the dissolved House of Representatives Chitra Lekha Yadav,
the session, as expected (Ref B,) endorsed the common agenda
of the seven political parties and passed a 13-point
resolution unanimously declaring that the reinstatement of
the parliament, and the Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal
1990, would be the starting point to resolve the current
problems faced by the country. The mock parliament,s 13th
point was &to heartily thank all the friendly countries for
supporting their joint movement against King's dictatorship.8

Comment
--------------


7. (C) Although the arrest of Maoist victims is unrelated to
prospects for reconciliation among Nepal,s political forces,
it is nevertheless troubling. The government,s action is
front page news in Nepal, with the June 6 edition of the
English language &The Himalayan8 newspaper carrying a
photograph of plainclothes police personnel arresting a
mother and child from the Maoist Victims Association rally.

MILLARD