Friday, February 4, 2011

Enforced disappearance and torture of Jit Man Basnet from February to October 2004



Jit Man Basnet
The case
In February 2011, TRIAL submitted an individual communication to the United Nations Human Rights Committee regarding the enforced disappearance and torture of Jit Man Basnet in February 2004. In this case, TRIAL also represents the victim’s cousin, Top Bahadur Basnet.
Jit Man Basnet is a journalist and a lawyer in Kathmandu. On 4 February 2004, he was arrested by security forces and brought to a detention camp known as Bairabnath Battalion barracks.

During this time period (2003-2004) the Bhairabnath Battalion Barracks run by the Royal Nepali Army (RNA) became notorious. In May 2006, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights published a 
report after an investigation of the Maharajgunj RNA barracks in Kathmandu. The Bhairabnath Battalion, quartered at these barracks, played the primary role in the arrest, illegal detention, torture, extrajudicial killing and disappearance of hundreds of people suspected of affiliation with the Maoists, in 2003 and thereafter.

During the first three days of detention Jit Man Basnet was extensively tortured and beaten. There was no fixed routine, the soldiers would come for him at any time of night or day. Beyond the physical pain inflicted by the severe beatings, not knowing when they would come again provoked an ongoing mental distress. The guard accused him having contacts with the Maoists, when he explained he had no information about Maoists, the torture would only get worse. The detention conditions were inhuman. During 258 days Jit Man Basnet was continuously blindfolded and handcuffed.

On 18 October 2004, Jit Man Basnet was finally released. He was strictly forbidden to reveal the existence of the barracks and was forced to sign a paper stating that he was kept in detention for only 90 days, in accordance with state of emergency laws.

More than seven years have passed and, no ex officio, prompt, impartial, thorough and independent investigation has been carried out by Nepal authorities and no one has been prosecuted, judged and sanctioned for the enforce disappearance and torture of Jit Man Basnet, thus fostering an ongoing climate of impunity
In February 2011, TRIAL thus submitted an individual communication to the United Nations Human Rights Committee asking it:
General context
In February 1996 the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) overtly declared war against the official governmental authorities of Nepal, which at the time was ruled in the form of a constitutional monarchy.
The conflict rapidly spread all over the country. In 2001, when violence truly escalated into a civil war, a state of emergency was declared. The state of emergency allowed the State to increase its repression against persons who were suspected of helping the Maoist insurgents and to derogate from fundamental rights and liberties. The recourse to enforced disappearances, torture, summary executions and arbitrary detentions by State agents and Maoists was generalized during this period. Arbitrary detention and torture were used years after the end of the state of emergency against all those suspected of affiliation with the Maoists. It is within this context that Jit Man Basnet was detained and disappeared for over 8 months.

http://www.trial-ch.org/en/activities/litigation/the-advocacy-center-trial-act/acts-cases/nepal/basnet-case-february-2011.html

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

CA panel asks ministry to release Guthi report

EKANTIPUR REPORT    

KATHMANDU, JAN 29 - The Commission on Natural Resources, Financial Rights and Revenue Sharing (CNRFRRS) of the Constituent Assembly on Friday directed the Ministry of Land Reforms (MoLR) to release the report of the High-level Commission on Scientific Land Reform (HLCSLR). 
A meeting of the panel members, MoLR representatives and land rights activists on Friday came up with two other decisions related to land. The panel directed MoLR to present a study report on the relevance of Guthi land within 15 days. It also decided to visit eight districts including Sindhupalchowk, Dhanusha, Mahottari, Palpa and Dang to study the land distribution patterns there and plan suitable measures for land reform in those districts.
“We asked MoLR to do a study on Guthi land amid growing complaints that many farmers are deprived of land ownership due to dominance of Guthi sansthans in many districts,” said CNRFRRS chairperson Santa Chaudhary.  “Besides, we asked MoLD to immediately release the report of the land reform commission.”
The government had formed HLCSLR in 2008 with a view to managing land ownership and access. Though the commission submitted the report to the government on May 5 last year, the latter has not made the report public yet. Among other things, the report has recommended joint ownership (of both spouses) of land and distribution of land to freed Kamaiyas, Haliyas and other marginalised communities.
 Human rights bodies including Informal Sector Service Centre and Community Self Reliance Centre had filed complaints at CNRFRRS and the Office of the Council of Ministers on Dec 24 last year demanding the immediate release of the report. Issuing a 35-day ultimatum to the government, the rights bodies had warned that they would release the report on their own if the government failed to do so.
Posted on: 2011-01-29 11:57          

http://www.ekantipur.com/2011/01/29/top-story/ca-panel-asks-ministry-to-release-guthi-report/328836.html

For more
http://www.csrcnepal.org/index.htm

PLA integration: Not against PLA integration: Army

  • Says it will abide by any decision taken by parties
POST REPORT
KATHMANDU, JAN 28 -
The Nepal Army (NA) has said it is not against the integration of former Maoist fighters into the national army, adding that the Army has conveyed its willingness to abide by any decision taken by the parties for concluding the peace process.

The NA position, expressed during a press conference on Friday, comes at a time when the three major political parties are holding serious negotiations that will last some days on the integration and rehabilitation modality of over 19,000 PLA combatants. This is the first policy statement in regard to the integration made by NA after the departure of UNMIN on Jan. 15. 

During his meeting with UN Under-Secretary General of Political Affairs B Lynn Pascoe last year, Chief of Army Staff Gen. Chhatra Man Singh Gurung had said NA was ready to accept the integration of combatants so long as the entries were on an individual basis. Opposing bulk integration of combatants, Gen. Gurung had then stated that the time-honoured “honesty, impartiality and organisational integrity” of NA could be compromised by “politically motivated individuals.”

“We don’t have an independent position on the issue of integration. The Nepal Army, as common citizens, desires peace in the country. So, we will always stand for anything to resolve the issue,” said NA Spokesman Ramindra Chhetri at the press conference organised by the Army Headquarters. He said the handover of Maoist combatants to the prime minister-headed Special Committee was an important step in the integration process. 

When asked to offer NA’s position on the standards that should be considered while determining modality, Gen. Chhetri said the NA won’t take any stand that might evince that it is trying to influence the authorised institutions. He said the Army is committed to the provisions of the Interim Constitution, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), the Agreement on Management of the Arms and Armies (AMMAA) and other documents signed by the parties during the peace process.

“These legitimate documents themselves have defined the benchmark of the integration process,” he said. “We want to let the Special Committee and its secretariat to take a call on this issue.”  

Gen. Chhetri said the concept of bulk integration was beyond the scope of the Interim Constitution and the peace agreements.

He said a “consensus model” determined by the parties would be the basis to conclude the peace process.

Commenting on the democratisation of NA, as committed in the CPA and the Interim Constitution, Gen. Chhetri said it will support the Action Plan on Democratisation of Nepal Army proposed by the cabinet committee headed by Defence Minister Bidhya Bhandari. The plan, now under discussion at the State Affairs Committee of the Parliament, proposes a three-year programme for the democratisation of the Army.

The plan covers eight areas including civilian supremacy, government control, organisational restructuring, enhancing civil military relationship, amendment in law, transparency and accountability, promotion of human rights, coordination between Ministry of Defence and the Army and inclusiveness. “The Nepal Army is one of the most inclusive institutions of the country,” he claimed, adding that the recruitment process is voluntary and recently 45 percent of the total vacancies were reserved for Madhesis, Dalits, women, Janajatis and other minority groups.  

Army officers in barracks, not jailed NA’s legal department Head Maj. Gen. B A Kumar Sharma said nine officers currently facing court martial for their alleged involvement in political lobbying are being held in the Army barracks and not jailed. He said they have been kept there for security reasons and are allowed to meet relatives.

A Summary Military Court has been formed to look into the charges against Brig. Gen. Kiran Barjracharya and eight other officers who allegedly lobbied against the term extension of Maj. Gen. Naresh Basnyat. Sharma said the punishment for the offence could vary from a warning to seven years imprisonment.
Posted on: 2011-01-29 08:17

http://www.ekantipur.com/the-kathmandu-post/2011/01/28/top-story/pla-integration-not-against-pla-integration-army/217768.html

Baglung is landmine free

BABURAM KHAREL

BAGLUNG, JAN 28 -
Nepal Army (NA) on Friday declared Baglung a landmine free district with the clearance of Bhimgitthe-based land mines that were laid around the NA barracks during the decade-long internal conflict. 

Now, the total number of minefields cleared so far has reached 38 with 15 more minefields in different districts across the country left to be cleared, NA said. The Army had laid thousands of landmines at 53 different places during the insurgency. Working for the last one-and-a-half month, NA’s specialised bomb de-mining platoon in coordination with UN Mine Action Team (UNMAT) and the British government cleared the Bhimgitthe-based minefield that was laid on the land of local inhabitants. British Ambassador to Nepal John Tucknott on Friday handed over the certificates of the cleared land to the respective owners amid a function attended by representatives from the Danish Embassy, UNMAT, Ministry of Peace and Reconstruction, NA, local inhabitants and local administration. The land owners, who were living under constant threat from landmines, can now utilise their land without fear.  Tucknott described the clearance of minefield as a token that peace had returned to the country. “There is no need of landmines anymore in the country,” Tucknott said, urging the government to sign on the Mine Ban Treaty and Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons.
As per the Comprehensive Peace Agreement and the Agreement on Monitoring of the Management of Arms and Armies signed in 2006, the Nepal Army Mine Action Coordination Centre (NAMACC) along with UNMAT and other donor agencies has been conducting de-mining activities since 2007. NA officials said that the four specialised platoons under NAMACC will clear all remaining minefields at the earliest. Many people have been killed and scores injured in landmine blasts in the country.

http://www.ekantipur.com/the-kathmandu-post/2011/01/28/top-story/baglung-is-landmine-free/217769.html

War victims boycott felicitation function

Added At:  2011-01-31 12:03 AM  

HIMALAYAN NEWS SERVICE
MYGDI: The families of those people, who died in this district at the hand of the state’s security forces or the Maoists during the decade-long insurgency, refused to attend a programme scheduled today to mark the Martyrs’ Day to protest the state’s apathy towards their plight.

According to Durga Prasad Acharya, secretary of the Network for the War Victims’ Rights, the war victims boycotted the Local Peace Committee’s felicitation programme as it is futile to receive the honour at the expense of self-respect.

The government’s responsibility does not end by distributing Rs 1 lakh to each family of the victim, Acharya said, demanding that livelihoods of the victimised families be guaranteed.

He lambasted the local

administration for not providing scholarships to the martyrs’ children in local schools despite government’s directives.

“We lost our guardians during the war,” KP Adhikari, a war victim, said, termed the government’s act of offering shawls to the victimised family members insensitive.

The training session started at 1 pm. Rudra Kisan, a secretariat member of the peace committee, informed that they had to cancel the felicitation following strong criticism and pressure from the victims.

While a former coordinator of the committee, Netra Mahat, said the felicitation programme was cancelled after some victims said they will not attend such a programme unless the guilty are brought to justice.

http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/rssReference.php?headline=War+victims+boycott++felicitation+function&NewsID=274683

KMC to build Martyrs' Park

Added At:  2011-01-31 11:04 PM  

HIMALAYAN NEWS SERVICE
KATHMANDU: Kathmandu Metropolitan City is planning to construct a park, Shahid Batika, on a ropani of land near Maitighar (next to Department of Urban Development and Building construction ) to commemorate martyrs.

The 101-member committee, formed to celebrate Martyrs’ Day decided to construct the park to commemorate their historic contribution to the country and its people.

Member Secretary Dhanapati Sapkota said the decision was made while remembering national heroes who sacrificed their lives for democracy and the people. “The park will be completed within a year and will be open to the public,” he added.

A weeklong programme had been organised to honour the four martyrs—Sukraraj Shastri, Dharma Bhakta Mathema, Ganga Lal Shrestha and Dasharath Chand, who were killed by the erstwhile Rana rulers.

At the concluding event of the programme today, Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal, ministers, government secretaries and heads of constitutional bodies honoured all the martyrs known and unknown at a memorial in Lainchaur, while the military offered guard of honour to the martyrs. They also garlanded the statue of Dharma Bhakta at Shifal.

Earlier this week, the committee headed by CA member and coordinator of the committee Dhyan Gobinda Ranjit had paid tribute at Tekupachali where Shastri was hanged on a tree; and Shova Bhagawati, where Shrestha and Chand had been shot dead.

Following the declaration of Republic Nepal, Martyrs’ Day programme is not observed at Shahid Gate, as it has the statues of the martrys, along with the statue of late King Tribhuvan Shah.

http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/rssReference.php?headline=KMC+to+build+Martyrs'+Park+&NewsID=274657