Uroligheder i Nepal

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Political parties and top government officials have called for calm amid concerns over increasing violence and tensions in Nepal’s agricultural and industrial heartland, the lowland Terai region of southern Nepal, according to IRINNews.

Government officials told IRIN on 17 September that civilians and political parties should be wary since they stood to lose most if the Constituent Assembly (CA) elections scheduled for November are disrupted.

LOKALE STRIDIGHEDER

– We will take strict action against anyone trying to disturb social harmony, said a statement by the Ministry of Home Affairs on 17 September, expressing concern after a serious incident between local Madhesi and Pahade groups in Kapilvastu and Rupendehi districts of the Terai region on 16 September.

The Madhesi are indigenous inhabitants of the Terai while the Pahade are originally from the hills but migrated to the Terai for work.

The killing of pro-Madhesi leader Mohit Khan of the Democratic Madhesi Front in Shivapur village of Kapilvastu, nearly 200km southeast of Kathmandu, by an unknown group on 16 September led to a violent riot by Khan’s supporters.

According to local human rights groups, the assailants attacked and vandalised vehicles and shops run by the local Pahade people.

NOGLE VIL IKKE VALG

Over the past nine months, pro-Madhesi groups have been staging demonstrations to demand greater political rights, autonomy and proportional representation.

Radical Madhesi groups want the elections to fail so as to put pressure on the government and political parties, according to rights groups, politicians and government officials interviewed by IRIN.

Rights activists are particularly concerned about the increase in the number of militant Madhesi groups that have been targeting Pahades.

Furthermore, according to a recent security situation update report by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), militant groups like the two factions of Janatantrik Terai Mukti Morcha (JTMM-Jwala Singh and JTMM-Goit) have warned civil servants not to take part in any preparations for the elections.

So far, only the Madhesi People’s Rights Forum (MPRF) and Madhesi Mukti Tigers (MMT) have agreed to participate in the polls, saying they would benefit the Madhesi community.

Kilde: www.irinnews.org