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Friday, October 15, 2010

MAHANAWAMI BEING OBSERVED

Kathmandu, 16 Oct.: Mahanawami is being observed Saturday on the 9th day of Dasain.
Devotees queued at Taleju Bhawani in Hanuman Dhoka—opened once a year only-- for worship Saturday.
Bada Dasain is on Sunday.
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FORMER KING VISITS BHAGAWATI TEMPLES

Kathmandu, 16 Oct.: Former King Gyanendra offered worship at Bhagawati temples in the Valley on Mahaastami, the eighth day of Dasain Friday.

He also received Prasad from the priests at the shrines.
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NEPALIS ROBBED AT BORDER BY INDIAN POLICE

Kathmandu, 16 Oct.: Thousands of Nepalis returning home from India for the festive season are being harassed and robbed by Indian police along the open 1,700 km border.
One worker told a television station he was robbed of Indian currency of Rs 1,000 and Rs 500 denominations and Rs 300 was taken from him.
The complaint was widespread.
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Former Gurkha commits suicide

Kathmandu, 16 Oct.: An unidentified retired British Gurkha committed suicide at Cheriton, Folkstone in Great Britain, Friday..

He had knife wounds on his body.
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Pascoe urges swift moves to meet peace process deadline

Kathmandu, 16 Oct.: Under Secretary General for Political Affairs of the United Nations B. Lynn Pascoe has pointed out the need of swift action to overcome Nepal’s political impasse if the country is to meet the January 2011 deadline to wrap up its stalled peace process, The Himalayan Times reports..

Pascoe, who returned from Nepal recently, told the Security Council on Thursday that no breakthrough has been achieved in the country. According to him, it is too early to conclude that the parties are on a course that would see the Four-Point Agreement implemented by the January deadline.

Notwithstanding differences regarding the army integration and amid political crisis, the government and the UCPN-Maoist last month reached a four-point agreement regarding the accomplishment of the remaining tasks of the peace process by mid-Januaary 2011, among other issues. In line with that Agreement, the Security Council voted to wind up the UN’s special political mission in Nepal (UNMIN) on January 15.

Though Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal stepped down in June 30, the Constituent Assembly, which has been set up to write the new constitution and also functions as the country's Legislature-Parliament, has failed to his successor notwithstanding 12 rounds of voting.

“The prolonged political stalemate in Nepal, most vividly symbolised by the continuing failure to elect a new Prime Minister, is compounded by persistent internal divisions within the main political parties, personal interests and calculations, and regional factors,” Pascoe underlined.

“Nepal is undergoing a process of significant political and social transformation and consolidation of its democracy,” he said.

In spite of the many strides Nepal has made, over time, the unity of the parties – both internally and in working together – “has frayed, eroded by the difference of ideology, perspective and the challenges of balancing the rules of competitive democratic politics with the need for sharing power and maintaining a modicum of political consensus.”

The UN political official pointed out that several key commitments have yet to be completed, chiefly the adoption of a new constitution and addressing the future of the two armies. “If the parties fail to manage their difference in order to complete this common agenda it is they and the people of Nepal that stand to lose,” he warned.

UNMIN was set up in 2007 to help Nepal hold elections for the Constituent Assembly, monitor the arms and armies for both the Government and Maoist sides, provide technical assistance to the Election Commission, and assist in monitoring the ceasefire.

Intended to have a limited run, the mission was originally established with a one-year mandate, but its presence has been extended seven times at the request of the parties.

“Each extension request was accompanied by renewed, and ultimately unfulfilled, commitments by the parties and the Government to expeditiously complete the remaining tasks,” the official underlined.

He noted that UNMIN’s continued monitoring and presence are seen as key for stability.

But, Pascoe added, “the mission has found itself subjected to controversies stemming from a deterioration in the political climate, misrepresentations of its mandate and the ensuing mismatch between the parties’ high expectations and the reality of UNMIN’s limited possibilities.”

He said that many of the officials he met with during his visit to Nepal pointed to power-sharing as the most pressing concern, with a solution potentially generating progress in all areas of contention.

They also told the UN official that although the constitution-making process has slowed down, “differences on the nature and shape of a new constitution were surmountable and could be bridged once the political climate improved.”

Dialogue continues along Nepal’s political fault lines, Pascoe said, with the country’s officials having voiced hope that a breakthrough could be possible early next month.

“There is no doubt that the 15 January deadline for UNMIN’s withdrawal has created a new sense of urgency among the parties, and more focused on thinking on how to end the prolonged stasis taking place,” he said.

“It is still possible for the parties to meet their targets in time but, as I stressed to all those I met during my visit, it will require translating this new-found sense of urgency into decision-making and concrete action,” the Under-Secretary-General added. “The sooner these decisions are taken the better.”
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