in
Darchula district on India-Nepal Border
The
Indo-Nepali Maoist rebels in the border areas of the hilly State of Uttaranchal
and Nepal have paralyzed the local administrations and rebels are running
parallel governments in the rural and inaccessible areas of Indo-Nepal
border with the help of their international accomplices.
A senior Nepali rebel leader, who has crossed over to Uttaranchal in the wake of crackdown on rebels after King Gyanendra toppled the Deuba Government, told the South Asia Tribune in Dharchula that the Maoist leaders of the region have established a parallel system of 'administration'. A detailed visit to the area by this correspondent revealed that the rebels are collecting taxes from businessmen and holding (public court hearings) in the rural areas to sort out local disputes. They have also promulgated 'Dress Codes' for the students studying in government schools. This correspondent also visited Darchula in Nepal.
At 62, Juki Buda has already lived more years than most women of her generation in Nepal. Perhaps it's the hope for vengeance that keeps her alive. Nine years ago, during the first year of Nepal's Maoist uprising, police killed five members of Buda's family. They shot her husband dead. They gouged out her daughter's eyes and, when she didn't die, stripped her, poured kerosene over her naked body and set her on fire. August 2005
The
Maoist Grade 1-3 curriculum includes military science
The night sky is patched with dark pre-monsoon clouds and the porch of a straw-thatched mud house glows with bluish LED lamps lighting a makeshift stage. As the audience sit on straw mats, a peculiar music breaks the silence - a fusion of madal and battery powered keyboards. Performers take turns singing revolutionary songs and dances. Two of them ridicule King Gyanendra and former prime minister Sher Bahadur Deuba. The performers are teachers who have just finished a training program on the Maoists' new curriculum for Grades 1-3 in this remote village on the border of Salyan and Rolpa. "Education
is not only rote reading like in the old regime, our teachers have to be
trained," announces Bhesh Raj Bhusal (alias Dhruba) secretary of the Maoist-affiliated
All Nepal Teachers' Association.
The
rest of Nepal sees no hope in Kathmandu's continued political paralysis
It has been six months since King Gyanendra took over in Kathmandu promising to restore peace but in remote district towns across Nepal people are losing even the flicker of hope they had that the violence would soon end. Since February, I have traveled across Nepal: from Pyuthan, Rolpa, Achham in the west to Terathum and Charikot in the east. In Terathum, Kamala Tamang's policeman husband was recently killed by Maoists and she is worried about the baby that was born soon after. In Jajarkot, teachers are humiliated, extorted and forced to teach children violence. In Dang and Jhapa, villagers are concerned the army has restricted community forestry on suspicion that money from timber sales was going to the rebels. August 2005
Nepal's
Maoist insurgency has been fought across the country with skirmishes reported
nearly every day. But now it has also entered the classroom, affecting
schools, teachers and pupils.
They also say they want to remove class privilege from schooling - while the royal-led government tries to make the syllabus more pro-monarchy. The rebels have just finished training the first batch of teachers to introduce what they call a new revolutionary syllabus, "pro-people education", into Maoist-controlled schools.
Nepal's
Maoist rebels have a long track record of destroying infrastructure such
as bridges and roads.
To see the road, we walked for many hours from Rolpa's district capital, Liwang. On our way there, on a damp and misty morning, we were joined by an eight-year-old village boy, Khem Bahadur Oli, heading for the road-opening ceremony in Tila. We plan to extend our road network westwards... we're also planning to spread electricity provision and build new village markets. July 2005
An
Interview Revealing All
Baburam
Bhattarai favours an alliance with mainstream parties A senior Maoist leader
in Nepal has been
The
second highest ranking leader of the Maoist communist party, Baburam Bhattarai,
has now been re-nominated to the party's top body. Prachanda said the move
was aimed at uniting various factions in the party. The rebels have been
trying to woo mainstream political parties opposed to King Gyanendra's
seizure of power.
Looking
at Nepal's Maoist revolution through Indian Naxalite eyes
Here
in the densely populated Ganga plains, the 10-yard strip separating Nepal
and India has never been treated
Land
is too precious to leave it as a no-man's land. Nepali and Indian farmers
use it for grazing livestock, playing cricket or even growing vegetables.
But as the Maoist war in the Nepal tarai intensifies, the Indian fear of
spillover of violence has begun to change that relaxed attitude. Along
with border check points, the traditionally open dasgaja strip too is nowunder
close security watch. India's paramilitary Seema Suraksha Bal (SSB) now
pull up rickshaw wallas if they park their tricycles on no-man's land.
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