Nepal Today

Sunday, April 8, 2012

12 CANTONMENTS WILL GO TO ARMY, THREE TO APF SAYS MINISTER PUN CREATING CONFUSION

FINANCE MINISTER PUN CREATES CONFUSION BY BRACKETING CANTONMENTS AND SATELLITE CAMPS INTO CANTONMENTS
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Kathmandu, 8 April: Following a meeting of the special committee for
supervision and integration of remaining 9,900 Maoist former PLA fighters at 15 cantonments and satellite camps, Finance Minister Barsha Ban Pun said
12 of ’15 cantonments’ will be handed over to Nepal and three to Armed Police Force (APF).
To recall, there are seven cantonments and eight satellite camps where the former fighters are kept.
Pun’s statement has created confusion.
The committee decided to vacate the cantonments and satellite camps as earlier agreed between parties.
Pun said teams of the secretariat of the committee have reached cantonments and camps to push agreed procedures entrusted by the special committee
The teams have to complete procedures for integration, retirement, handover of cantonments and weapons
The 1 billion rupees released to implement the procedures have reached camps, Pun said.
The committee meets again Tuesday 10 April 10 to discuss
structure of a directorate, training, bridge course for those opting for integration
and other issues.
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MAOISTS DECIDED THEY WILL BE FLEXIBLE ON INEGRATION
Kathmandu, 8 April: A Maoist sanding committee attended by PLA commanders Sunday decided to adopt maximum possible flexibility’ for ‘ integration of former PLAl fighters in the Nepal Army.
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Narayan Kazi Shrestha said this after a crucial party meeting.
Shrestha reported for work after recuperating for several months following nech surgery in Japan.
He was also government spokesman.
In the absence of Shrestha, Minister for Planning Hridesh Tripathi had mostly been briefing the press o cabinet decisions.
PLA commandants were invited for the meeting demonstrating the seriousness of the issue.
Shrestha said Baidhaya faction didn’t attend the meeting.
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INDIAN PM MANMOHAN SINGH, PAKISTANI PRESIDENT ZARDARI AGREE STRAINED TIES SHOULD BE NORMALIZED
Kathmandu, 8 April: The leaders of India and Pakistan said they agreed in talks Sunday that strained relations between their rival South Asian nations should be
normalized. AP reports from New Delhi.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and visiting Pakistan President
Asif Ali Zardari said their meeting was friendly and constructive.

"Relations between India and Pakistan should become normal. That's our common desire," Singh told reporters after the private talks, at which no aides were present.

"We would like to have better relations," Zardari said.

Singh said he had accepted an invitation from Zardari to visit Pakistan.

"We have a number of issues but we are willing to find practical and pragmatic solutions to all those issues," Singh said. "That's the message President Zardari and I would like to convey."

Zardari arrived in India earlier Sunday on what was called a private religious trip that also gave him a chance to meet Indian leaders amid a thaw in relations between the two countries.

He planned later Sunday to visit Ajmer Sharif, a revered Muslim shrine in India's western state of Rajasthan.

Zardari's visit to India, the first by a Pakistani head of state in seven years, is the most visible sign that the two countries have put behind them the enmity that followed the 2008 terror attack in the Indian city of Mumbai, in which 10 Pakistani terrorists killed 166 people in India's financial capital.

Officials said Singh would raise India's concerns about security and insist that Pakistan show its seriousness about reining in terrorist groups that were behind the Mumbai attack. India has blamed the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group and demanded that Islamabad crack down on them.

This past week, United States slapped a $10 million bounty on Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, the group's founder, who operates openly in Pakistan.

Zardari's visit came a day after a massive avalanche buried about 135 Pakistani soldiers near the Siachen glacier in the high Himalayas.

The two leaders were expected to discuss the situation in Siachen, often described as the world's highest battlefield. India and Pakistan have stationed thousands of troops in Siachen's icy reaches, the control of which remains a simmering dispute between the two neighbors.

Although no major breakthroughs were expected at Sunday's meeting, analysts said it would help keep the momentum going in a dialogue process that began last year.

Trade between the two countries has jumped in recent years. Pakistan recently announced that it was lifting trade restrictions on India and the two countries are working on easing visa restrictions on businesspeople.

But both sides remain far from resolving their conflict over the Himalayan region of Kashmir, which both claim.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since the partition of the subcontinent on independence from Britain in 1947. Two of the wars have been over Kashmir.

Zardari was accompanied Sunday by about 25 family members, including his son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who has been anointed his political heir.

Every day, thousands of believers visit Ajmer Sharif, a shrine to Sufi Muslim saint Moinudin Chishti 350 kilometers (220 miles) southwest of Delhi.
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