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Press Release
Nepal’s Rights Profile Up, But Much Remains to Be Done: HRW
The human rights situation improved markedly after April 2006, when 19 days of widespread public demonstrations dubbed the Jana Andolan, or people’s movement, ended King Gyanendra’s year-long usurpation of all authority and created conditions conducive to a ceasefire in the brutal civil war between government forces and the Communist Party of Nepal—Maoists (CPN-M), Human Rights Watch (HRW) said.
It said after ceasefire in May, civilian casualties directly caused by the conflict dramatically declined, as did human rights abuses such as extrajudicial execution, arbitrary detention, and torture.
The removal of restrictions imposed by King Gyanendra after seizing power on February 1, 2005, also significantly improved the ability of Nepalese to exercise freedom of speech and association.
HRW said the peace pact signed on November 8, 2006 between the government and the Maoists explicitly referred to the parties’ respect for human rights and included the creation of several high level commissions to address more than a thousand cases of “disappearances” as well as accelerate the process of returning tens of thousands of displaced people to their homes.
Notwithstanding the hope and jubilation following the Jana Andolan and the resulting peace process, many Nepalese continue to voice concerns about the country’s human rights and political situation.
Human rights activists complained that the peace agreement did not create any effective monitoring or implementation mechanisms to address violations by both sides. The issue was particularly relevant because both warring parties, and particularly the Maoists, regularly violated the letter and spirit of the ceasefire code of conduct they had signed on May 26, 2006.
Despite changes in leadership, the Nepalese Army failed to cooperate with investigations about the fate of hundreds of “disappeared” Nepalese and the government failed to properly investigate or prosecute a single case of extrajudicial execution, “disappearances”, and torture, HRW said in a report recently.
Close to the Precipice
As 2006 began, Nepal seemed poised on the edge of disaster. On January 2 the Maoists ended a unilateral, three-month ceasefire because the government had not reciprocated. Intensifying fighting between government security forces and the Maoists quickly engulfed nearly every one of the country’s 75 districts. Civilian casualties, which had decreased during the ceasefire, quickly soared once fighting resumed. Maoists increasingly carried out attacks on urban areas and sought shelter among civilians. Security forces used jury-rigged helicopters to drop mortar shells on Maoist positions, in several instances in civilian areas.
The government tried to establish a facade of normalcy and legitimacy by proceeding with local and parliamentary elections in February despite intense opposition at home and abroad. Nearly all the country’s political parties boycotted the elections. Maoist forces attacked several candidates and forced many to withdraw their candidacy. Not surprisingly, the results were widely viewed as illegitimate and were severely criticized as flawed and unrepresentative by most Nepalis as well as the United States, the European Union, and Japan.
The Jana Andolan
Following the failed elections, on April 4 a broad-based opposition movement instigated street-protests by hundreds of thousands of Nepalis throughout the country. The protesters sought an end to King Gyanendra’s authoritarian rule and demanded an end to the civil war. The royal government attempted to quell the protests with excessive force and brutality, killing 18 people and injuring some 4,000 people, many of them children.
After 19 days of increasingly large protests that paralyzed the country’s economic and political life, the Jana Andolan succeeded in forcing King Gyanendra to reinstate the House of Representatives on April 24, 2006. (Many Nepalis called the movement the Jana Andolan II, a reference to the people’s movement that ushered in constitutional monarchy and multi-party rule in 1990.) An alliance of seven opposition parties assumed authority and immediately implemented a ceasefire agreement with the Maoists. The newly reinstated parliament removed King Gyanendra as commander-in-chief and stripped him of all but ceremonial authority. The seven-party alliance and the Maoists committed to establishing a constituent assembly to revise the country’s constitution.
After the Jana Andolan: Hope and Fear
The end of King Gyanendra’s dictatorial rule and the cessation of hostilities immediately decreased human rights abuses. Violations of the laws of war diminished significantly and casualties caused by armed clashes nearly disappeared. The government released hundreds of detainees held under the draconian Public Security Act (PSA) and Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Control and Punishment) Ordinance; the only exception was the preventive detention of several senior members of the deposed royal government under the PSA. Strict limitations on freedom of speech and association were removed. Maoist cadres began operating openly, including in Kathmandu, and committed to allowing other political parties to operate in areas under their control.
Ongoing human rights violations by both sides nevertheless contributed to concerns that those in power would again trample the human rights of ordinary Nepalis. The new government and the Maoists agreed to a Ceasefire Code of Conduct that includes several references to international human rights standards and the laws of war. However, the code of conduct lacks specific language about implementation or penalties for infractions. A National Monitoring Committee began monitoring the Code of Conduct in August, but at this writing it had not established its credibility and independence.
Both sides failed to institute accountability for past violations by their troops. The Maoists freed some of those responsible for a 2005 bombing attack in Chitwan, which killed 35 civilians and injured dozens of others, after sentences of two to three months of “corrective punishment.” The UN’s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) monitoring mission complained of ongoing failure by the renamed Nepali Army (formerly the Royal Nepali Army) to honor its commitment to provide access to documents related to disciplinary procedures and courts martial. In one of the most egregious instances, the army has actively obstructed attempts to investigate the death of Maina Sunuwar, a 15-year-old girl who was killed shortly after she was taken into custody by the army in 2004. Although the Ceasefire Code of Conduct commits both parties to publicize the whereabouts of citizens who have been “disappeared,” some 800 people remain unaccounted for at this writing.
Maoist forces did not release any of the thousands of children under age 18 believed to be serving in their ranks, and Nepali rights groups reported ongoing recruitment campaigns throughout the country. Their commitment to the contrary notwithstanding, the Maoists continued to intimidate and restrict the activity of political activists from competing political parties, including more than a dozen cases in which political activists were allegedly killed by Maoist cadres throughout Nepal. Nepali human rights groups as well as monitors from the OHCHR in Nepal documented dozens of abductions of individuals by the Maoists, including at least 16 members of other political parties. Farmers and businesses increasingly complain about being forced to “donate” to the Maoists. The Maoist leadership issued a directive on September 5 to its cadres to halt beatings, abductions, killings, and extortion. At this writing, however, Nepali human rights groups continue to register ongoing violations by Maoist cadres.
On July 25, 2006, parliament asked the government to sign and ratify the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, but at this writing the government had not acted. The government also failed to satisfy the proper accession procedures for the Additional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which establishes 18 as the minimum age for combatants. The parties’ agreement to draft a new, more representative constitution provoked complaints by already marginalized groups that they were being left out of the process. The initial committee in charge of guiding the constituent assembly was composed only of men, but was broadened after protests to include women as well as those from so-called untouchable castes, or Dalits. But other groups continue to be sidelined, for instance Nepal’s beleaguered population of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
Humanitarian Concerns, Internal Displacement, and Refugees
Nepal ranks near the bottom of nearly all indexes of human well-being and development. Aggravating the problems of Nepal’s already impoverished population, the decade of conflict seriously hampered aid distribution, health care and education. Economic disruptions caused by fighting and frequent blockades and checkpoints have curtailed food production and distribution, resulting in high rates of malnutrition and associated childhood maladies. Conditions are particularly bad for people displaced by the fighting and attendant economic problems, believed to number in the tens of thousands. After the ceasefire and the commitments made by the Maoists some displaced Nepalis returned to their homes, but thousands of others remained displaced, not returning because of a fear of reprisals or ongoing repression by Maoist forces. Unexploded ordinance and mines, mostly left behind by the Maoists, continue to injure civilians, particularly children.
Nepal continued to host more than 100,000 refugees from Bhutan. There was some hope for a resolution of the 15-year impasse in 2006 as the US offered to accept up to 60,000 refugees. Thousands of Tibetans braved a perilous crossing over glaciers and mountain passes to escape the Chinese government’s increasing pressure in their homeland, or to seek to visit the exiled Dalai Lama. The status of Tibetans in Nepal remains precarious as the Tibetan Welfare Office—which had provided assistance to refugees and served as the political representative of the Dalai Lama—remains closed since shortly before the King’s usurpation of power in 2005.
Key International Actors
The human rights monitoring team established by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Nepal, the largest of its kind in the world, materially improved respect for human rights and provided Nepal’s brave but beleaguered civil society with the ability to operate effectively. The new Nepali government and the Maoists requested assistance from the UN to establish a peace process, convene a constituent assembly, and monitor eventual disarmament and management of the parties’ arms. Concerted international pressure made a difference in promoting greater respect for human rights by both government forces and by the Maoists, both of which curtailed some of their worst behavior in order to maintain international support. Another area where international action clearly benefited Nepalis civilians was the restriction on lethal military assistance by some of the country’s biggest suppliers—including India, the United States, and the United Kingdom—which limited the access of both parties, and particularly the government, to more lethal weapons and ammunition that could have resulted in far higher numbers of civilian deaths and injuries. In particular, the US’s human rights conditions for military aid helped push the military to improve its treatment of detainees and respect for the laws of war.
Major donors to Nepal, such as the United States and United Kingdom, generally supported the ceasefire and the process of revising the country’s political structure, though their suspicion of Maoists at times elicited criticism from Nepalis involved in the peace process. China and India also supported the process, each anxious to maintain its influence on events while ensuring that violence did not create problems that would spill over the borders.


US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Richard A. Boucher at NHRC
Lalitpur - US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Richard A. Boucher today paid a courtesy visit to the office of the National Human Rights Commission-Nepal (NHRC-Nepal). He received information about NHRC activities, the present status of human rights in Nepal and about the on-going peace talks between Government of Nepal (GON) and CPN-Maoist.
Appreciating the role played by NHRC for the promotion and protection of human rights, he suggested the NHRC officials for a strong Commission. He also expressed concern over the proposed Truth Finding and Reconciliation.
Boucher was accompanied by James F. Moriarty, the US Ambassador to Nepal.
Dhruba Nepal
Officiating Secretary (Date: 2006-11-16)
Appeal to CPN (M)
NHRC Press Release
The National Human Rights Commission expresses its concern over the abduction of Krishna Lama, 41, of Kathmandu Metropolitan City-16, Balaju by the cadres of CPN (M). The whereabouts of Lama has remained unknown since his abduction.
A complaint registered in the Commission states that the cadres of CPN (M) had taken him into captivity on 14 October , 2006 from Kathmandu Metropolitan City. It is also learnt that the abductors have taken away a mobile set and a motorbike along with Lama.
The Commission extends appeal to CPN (M) to honor principles of human rights and the ceasefire code of conduct by releasing Lama immediately and unconditionally along with his belongings. (Date: 2006-10-26 )
Appeal to CPN (M)

It is found that the status of the Birendra Maharjan of Lalitpur district Lalitpur Sub-Metropolitan City (LSMC) Ward No-5, Bam Prasad Limbu of LSMC Ward No-15 and Shayam Singh Bhandari of Hetauda Municipality Ward No-4 has remained unknown after they were captivated by the cadres of the Communist Party of Nepal – Maoist (CPN-M) from Maharjan Suppliers, Laliptur on 2 October 2006.

Likewise, the status of Arun Sunuwar, a 19 year old student also has remained unknown since his abduction by the cadres of CPN (M) in a separate incident. Sunuwar was also abducted on the same day, from Baudha, Jorpati Narayantar, Kathmandu.

Despite the repeated request to the cadres of CPN (M), they have denied the access of the officials of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) to the abducted persons who are said to be under their captivity. The family members and the relatives are not also allowed to meet their kith and kin. NHRC has considered such act as a serious incidents against human rights.

The acts of abductions by the Maoists have violated the international human rights standard and humanitarian laws and seem to have ignored the code of conduct signed by the government and the Maoists at a crucial time when the on-going peace talks between the ruling seven-party alliance and the CPN (M) is heading towards a historic breakthrough.

The Commission appeals to CPN (M) for immediate release of all abducted persons without any condition and also extends request to respect, in words and deeds, the principles of Human Rights and the International Humanitarian Law.
Date: (2006-10-10 )
Discussion on Paris Principles with Parliamentarians

National Human Rights Commission has held a discussion program on Paris Principles with the members of Foreign Affairs and Human Rights Committee of House of Representative (HOR), Chief Whip and Whip of different political parties and with the representatives of different political parties. The Paris Principles are the principles which determine the status of National Human Rights Institution.
The Commission has organized the program in context of the approval of resignation of the Commissioners and the exercise taking place for the appointment procedure of new Commissioners at the Commission.
Delivering his Speech at the program, Speaker of the HOR Suwas Nemwang said that the role of the Commission is important while the country is heading towards the goal of Constituent Assembly. He further added that the process for the appointment of new Commissioners as well as the concern of making the Commission autonomous, independent & effective is proceeding.
Speaking at the program, the representative from the UNOHCHR in Nepal David A. Johnson said while appointing the members of National Human Rights Institution, like the NHRC on the basis of Paris Principles, there should be transparency and inclusiveness, for which there must be interactions in different levels.
In the program, presenting discussion paper entitled 'National Human Rights Commission in the Backdrop of Paris Principles', the officiating secretary of NHRC Dhurba Nepal said that the recommendation process of new appointment should fulfill the norms of inclusiveness, transparency and objectivity, and there should be conducted public debate among and between different levels.
In the program the parliamentarians of the Committee Jaya Prakash Prasad Gupta, Nawaraj Subedi, Mahendra Bahadur Pandey, Suresh Karki, Krishna Pratap Malla, Ram Bahadur Bista, Krishna Charan Shrestha, Romi Gauchan Thakali, Govinda Bahadur Shah, Fatik Bahadur Thapa, Chandra Bahadur Shahi and former secretary of Judicial Council Kashi Raj Dahal spoke on how to make the Commission independent, effective and autonomous. Speaking further they expressed that there should be realized Paris Principles on appointment of the Commissioners, for which the issues of plurality, inclusiveness, transparency and credibility should be kept in consideration.
The Chairperson of Foreign Affairs and Human Rights Committee of HOR, Mahendra Yadav said that the role of the Commission is important at present. He added that the Committee is sincere and ready to raise voice in HOR to make the NHRC strong and effective. Moreover, it is necessary to hold regular discussions between NHRC and the Committee which would fertilize the protection and promotion of human rights, he said. The program was chaired by Mr. Yadav. (August 1, 2006)
IIDS to Release Books on Conflict Resolution and Sustainable Peace.
Institute for Integrated Development Studies (IIDS) has just concluded a major study on conflict resolution and sustainable peace and has come out four volumes on the findings of the study.
The studies, entitled Nepal: Conflict Resolution and Sustainable Peace, deal with topics such as Decentralization and Regional Development; foreign policy and development issues; public institutions reform; as well as monarchy, national security, ethnicity, dalits and gender issues.
The contributors for each volume are the personalities such as Dr. Hraka Gurung, Mahesh Banskota, Ram Sharan Mahat, Santa Puna, Chitanaya Subbha, Birendra Prashad Misra, and Yasodha Nakarmi Shrestha., said IIDS executive director Dwarika Nath Dhungel.
Edited by Dhungel and Aditya Man Shrestha , the books due for release very soon, according to IIDS.
Date: 2005-10-28
Recommendation to HMG regarding incident that took place at Kantipur FM
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has sent its recommendations to His Majesty’s Government today regarding the incident that took place on the night of 21st October at the Kantipur FM Radio Station in Pulchowk. Details of the facts received about the incident and the recommendation to His Majesty’s Government are as follows:
(a) His Majesty’s Government Ministry of Information and Communication stated that the ordinance on the amendment of some Nepalese Acts and the provision under Section 11 (a) of the amended National Broadcasting Act, 1992, did not allow any broadcasting organization broadcasting a program from one location to simultaneously broadcast the same program from another location. It therefore stated that Kantipur FM had violated the provision as per the amended Act as it had broadcasted programs from Kathmandu and Bhedetaar at the same time. However, according to Kantipur FM, the newly amended provision did allow broadcasting after acquiring the permission to do so; the new amendment did not include any provision that stated that those who had earlier been permitted to broadcast had to re-acquire their permits. Based on Ministerial decision of March 30, 2001, Kantipur FM received its permit on April 12, 2001 and had been legally broadcasting its programs. It had therefore continued its broadcasting as the new legal arrangement did not prevent it from broadcasting.
(b) On this issue, it was observed that Kantipur FM had not been given reasonable opportunity to provide its clarification. It was found that a team that had come to monitor the station in the afternoon offered no information or direction to the effect that the station had been in contravention of the law and had returned without making any comment after going through the license of the station. Later in the night, the team had once again entered into the FM station without any prior information and taken away various equipments.
(c) It was found that the concerned FM station had not been informed about any special situation that necessitated the return at night and taking away the equipments by the team from the Ministry that had visited in the afternoon and had given any instruction at that time. It is essential to adhere to the provisions of Civil Code Sections 172 and 116 in order to enter anyone’s house at night. The Commission’s investigation has found that these provisions were not adhered to at that time. (d) In case of violation, Section 17 the National Broadcasting Act, 1992 has the provision of punishment for those who have violated the Act. However, no provision was found in the Act that allowed taking away of the equipments. As such, the activity has been in contravention of the abovementioned Section of the National Broadcasting Act, along with Articles 14, 17 and 22 of the Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal, 1990. On the same note, it has also been found that the action has been in contravention of Article 9, 14, and 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which Nepal is a state party.
Therefore, The Commission has recommended to His Majesty’s Government to respect the fundamental human rights principles enshrined in the Constitution and the law; to prevent any activity resulting in the violation of human rights; to protect the life and property of media persons; to protect the right to freedom of expression and opinion, and to give back Kantipur FM the equipments that were taken away from it.
Kedar Prasad Poudyal
Acting Secretary & Spokesperson

Date: 2005-10-24
NHRC initiated investigation into the incident that has taken place at Kantipur FM radio

The National Human Rights Commission’s serious attention has been drawn to the news published in the media regarding the adverse impact in the exercise of freedom of opinion and expression, press and publication rights and the right to information guaranteed by the Constitution as a result of the recent media ordinance on the amendment of some media related Acts issued by His Majesty's Government on October 8, 2005. The Commission has started reviewing the media ordinance from a human rights perspective.
Likewise, the Commission has also initiated its investigation work into the incident that had taken place at Kantipur FM radio station at Pulchowk on October 21.The Commission appeals to all concerned not to act in a manner that is in contravention to the rights guaranteed by the Constitution and international human rights instruments to which Nepal is a party.
Kedar Prasad Poudyal
Spokesperson

Date: 2005-09-23
Meeting with the Leader of Political Parties The National Human Rights Commission has started the consultation with the main political parties regarding the human rights and peace process.
In this context, a team led by the Chairman of the Commission Nayan Bahadur Khatri comprising the Commission members Sushila Singh Shilu, Sudip Pathak, Gokul Pokhrel, Dr. Ram Dayal Rakesh and the acting secretary of the Commission Kedar Prasad Poudyal met Girija Prasad Koirala, president of Nepali Cogress party, Surya Bahadur Thapa, president of Rastriya Janashakti Party and Pashupati Shamsher Rana, chairmen of Rastriya Prajatantra Party and held discussion about human rights and peace process.
The Commission has started the consultation keeping in consideration the considerable significance of the stakeholders in building conductive environment to transform the unilateral ceasefire announcement by the CPN (Maoist) to the lasting peace, wherein, the incessant deployment of human rights could be possible.
In the course of consultation, the Commission shall also hold discussion with His Majesty Government soon. Similarly, the commission shall soon meet the leaders of other political parties and discuss about the issue of human rights and peace process.
Kedar Prasad Poudyal
Spokesperson

 
 

CHIJ KUMAR SHRESTHA
Chairperson of the Association of International NGOs in Nepal

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