At Least 14 Killed in New Nepal Violence
02/27/2005
KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - At least 14 people died in a fresh burst of violence in southern Nepal on Sunday, after communist rebels lifted a two-week highway blockade that had crippled the flow of essential supplies in protest at the king’s recent power grab.
The rebels ambushed an army truck carrying soldiers on a regular patrol near the town of Patlaiya, about 250 kilometers (160 miles) south of Katmandu, killing eight of them, police said.
Another 10 soldiers suffered injuries in the attack and have been transported to hospitals, said a spokesman at the army headquarters in Katmandu.
Meanwhile, in the nearby town of Butwal, suspected rebels fatally shot the town’s police chief and his assistant on Sunday. The rebels escaped after the attack.
Separately, insurgents killed four people in overnight attacks on villages in the south, police said. Villagers in the area have shown rare defiance of the rebels, killing 21 guerrillas in the past few days.
The rebels announced Saturday that they were lifting the blockade to ease the discomfort of the common people. However, they vowed to step up their campaign against the army.
“We are going to start a new phase of movement increasing military resistance and mass movement of people,” rebel chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal, also known as Prachanda, said in a statement.
A Nepalese army spokesman declined comment.
The insurgents, who have been fighting for more than eight years to topple the monarchy and install communist rule, had blocked the country’s highways using crude bombs, mines and boulders, disrupting deliveries of basic supplies across the Himalayan kingdom and choking off major cities.
On Sunday, some 40 oil tankers brought much-needed gasoline, diesel and kerosene to the capital, Katmandu, which had been facing a fuel shortage. Dozens of trucks loaded with fresh vegetables and fruits, rice, flour, chickens and milk also arrived in the capital.
Buses and cars that had been parked in garages for days ventured out onto the roads snaking through the mountainous country.
“We have had several telephone calls this morning from people who wanted to make reservations. Finally, it’s business as usual,” said Ram Shrestha, a ticket clerk at the local bus station in Katmandu.
However, a line of vehicles stretched for about eight kilometers (five miles) at a checkpoint west of Katmandu as soldiers checked the highway for explosives.
The insurgents said the blockades were in protest at King Gyanendra’s decision on Feb. 1 to sack the government, impose emergency rule, and suspend civil liberties. The monarch, who says he was forced to act because of the insurgency, has ignored repeated calls from the international community to restore democracy.
Nepal’s key allies, India and Britain, have suspended military aid and the United States says it also is considering similar action. Several countries have withdrawn their ambassadors from Nepal and stopped aid.
Ordinary Nepalese on Sunday expressed relief that the blockade had been lifted.
“I have been waiting for days for the roads to open up so I could visit my sick mother,” said Sharad Kafle, who was among thousands of passengers traveling out of Katmandu.
More than 10,500 people have died in the communist insurgency since 1996.
