Nepal Today

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

killed



DRIVER KILLED IN SAPTARI

Kathmandu, 6 Aug.:  A truck driver was killed in an accident in
Saptari on Monday, RSS reports from Saptari..

Police said that the identity of the deceased is yet to be ascertained.

The accident took place when two trucks (Na 3 Kha 6414 and Na 4 Kha 3365) collided head-on at Kusaha VDC along the east-west highway yesterday night.

The driver of the first vehicle died in the accident whereas the second has been absconding, according to police inspector Yogendra Chaurasiya of Area Police Office Kaddarbona said.
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TALIBAN KILL PAKISTANI OFFIERS INVESTIGATING MURDER
OF FOREIGN CLIMBERS, INCLUDING NEPALI WHO CLIMBED EVEREST
THREE TIMES

Kathmandu, 6 Aug.: Pakistan-based Taliban fighters opened fire on a group of police officers investigating a June massacre of foreign climbers, killing
three, officials said on Tuesday, Reuters reports from Pesjwar..

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the June 22-23 pre-dawn attack when gunmen dressed as policemen stormed a base camp on Pakistan's second-highest peak of Nanga Parbat, killing 10 foreign climbers and a local guide.

The attack shocked the international climbing community and several expeditions to Pakistan have been cancelled, depriving its starving economy of much-needed cash at the height of the climbing season.

A group of Pakistani officers investigating the massacre came under attack in the troubled Diamar district of Gilgit-Baltistan province of northern Pakistan late on Monday. Gunmen opened fire on their motorcade.

"Though no major arrests have been made so far related to the June 23 shooting of foreigners, these officials were investigating the killings of foreigners," a senior security official told Reuters.

A Pakistani Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the attack on police.

Victims of the mountain assault included climbers from China, Lithuania, Nepal, Slovakia, Ukraine and one person with joint U.S.-Chinese citizenship. One Chinese climber escaped.

Nanga Parbat, one of the world's highest mountains, is popular among international mountaineers because of its challenging terrain, but growing violence has damaged the potentially lucrative tourism industry.

Once-peaceful areas of northern Pakistan where the mountain is located are increasingly infiltrated by militants seeking to gain footholds beyond their traditional hideouts on Pakistan's porous border with Afghanistan.
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