Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login

NEWSDESK

Fresh curfew in Nepal towns after bloody unrest
23 Jan 2007 04:37:35 GMT
Source: Reuters
•  Nepal peace

KATHMANDU, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Authorities imposed day curfews in two southern Nepalese towns on Tuesday after violent protests by ethnic Madhesis clouded a peace process aimed at ending years of conflict.

Two people were killed and dozens wounded on Monday in clashes between police and protesters from Nepal's southern plains who say they have been sidelined by a deal to bring former Maoist rebels into the political mainstream.

Madhesis, from the narrow strip of the Terai region which is home to nearly half of Nepal's 26 million people, share closer cultural links with neighbouring India than with Nepalis residing in the Himalayan mountains of the north.

Lahan, 125 km (80 miles) southeast of the capital Kathmandu, has been in turmoil since last week after a Maoist activist fired at protesters from the Madhesi community. A 16-year-old boy was killed in that shooting on Friday, which triggered the clashes.

Officials said the town was peaceful overnight, but tensions remained high. "It is quiet now, but we don't know what will happen if the protests resume," said Shekhar Shrestha, who administers the Siraha district where the town is located.

A curfew clamped on Monday in Lahan, was extended from 7 a.m (0115 GMT) on Tuesday for 12 hours, an official said. A curfew was also imposed in the neighbouring town of Siraha to prevent violence from spreading.

"We have imposed curfews in the two towns to prevent further clashes and to protect the life and property of people," said Shrestha.

On Monday, hundreds of Madhesi protesters tried to storm a police station in Lahan prompting police to fire at the crowd in self-defence, officials said.

The violence in the Terai is the worst since a landmark peace deal between the Maoists and the multiparty government was signed in November declaring an end to a decade-old insurgency against the monarchy that has left 13,000 people dead.

The Madhesi Peoples Rights Forum, which organised the protests in Lahan, says the peace deal offers little for people living in the Terai, which is the bread basket of impoverished Nepal.

They want autonomy for the region under a federal structure and more representation for Madhesis in government jobs including in the army and police as well as in parliament.


AlertNet news is provided by

Email this article       Send comments

Emergencies

•  Nepal peace

MORE >>

Countries

Small country map
© 2004 Europa Technologies Ltd.
Reset map

•  India profile
· View map

•  Nepal profile
· View map

MORE >>

NGO latest

•  MSF issues 'Top Ten' most underreported humanitarian stories of 2006
MSF International

•  Two Years After The Indian Ocean Tsunami, Habitat For Humanity's Reconstruction Efforts Focus On Housing And Community Development
Habitat for Humanity

•  Two Important Dimensions for Making Shelter Support and Reconstruction More Effective
DMI - India

•  Stakeholders Involved in the Shelter Relief Process in the Uri Area in Kashmir
DMI - India

•  AIDMIĀ“s Work in Providing Shelter Relief in Kashmir
DMI - India

MORE >>

Latest news

•  Fresh curfew in Nepal towns after bloody unrest

•  UN to approve new political mission for Nepal

•  GLOBAL: Fight for your rights, despite globalisation, women urged

•  Two killed as Nepal protesters clash with police

•  Bollywood plots AIDS message despite stars' apathy

MORE >>

Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Tue Jan 23 04:37:45 2007