POLITICAL AFFAIRS BUSINESS & ECONOMY SOCIAL AFFAIRS LIFESTYLE SPORTS OPINION INTERVIEW INTERNATIONAL THE WEEK
JUST IN
1.
Congratulations Deepak Bista
2.
'Benefits' of being Brahmin
3.
Nepali communists & NGOs
4.
US offers NA support worth $7.7 million
5.
Police enter semifinal
6.
Gold price down Rs 510 per 10 gram in a single day
7.
Four murder accused nabbed
8.
Japanese aid for food
9.
Bird flu scares temples
10.
Nepse down 9.67 points
FILED PAST 24 HOURS
PRINT EDITION
My Republica e-Paper.
MARKET
  Jobs
  Forex
  Stocks
  Cinema
 
Cartoon
Phalano by Rajesh KC
Cartoon Archive »  

ARCHIVES
  Daily News
  Photo Gallery
  CPN UML 8th Convention
  Govt Policies & Programs
  Budget 2009/10 Speech
Wednesday WEATHER
KATHMANDU
Sunny
Low 4oC
High 19oC
Sunrise 6:45 am
Sunset 5:50 pm
 
 
 
 
TRACKING DISCHARGE PROCESS
  Maoists demand Rs 1m for each disqualified; UNMIN says no  
 

KIRAN CHAPAGAIN

KATHMANDU, Oct 26: Maoists on Sunday formally demanded that each disqualified combatant be provided with one million rupees, saying that such an offer would help expedite the discharge and rehabilitation of 4,008 ineligible Maoist fighters.


Maoist politburo member Kul Prasad KC alias Sonam forwarded his party´s demand for the cash incentive for the minors and the late recruits -- disqualified combatants -- during a meeting of the Committee on the Rehabilitation, Monitoring and Coordination of the Disqualified Combatants headed by Peace Minister Rakam Chemjong, sources told myrepublica.com.

But the Chief of the United Mission in Nepal (UNMIN), Karen Landgren and representatives from other UN agencies based in Kathmandu, who were present in the meeting, rejected the demand outright.

"No," the source said quoting Landgren to the Maoist demand in the meeting.

When representatives from the Office of the UN Resident Coordinator, United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Children´s Fund attending the meeting also supported Landgren, KC then pushed for another demand: gratuity to the disqualified combatants if one million rupees was not possible. But Landgren and other UN officials rejected the second demand as well.

Myrepublica.com´s repeated efforts to have comment from KC failed. UNMIN Spokesperson Kosmos Biswakarma said that he was not in a position to comment what Landgren said in the meeting held at the Peace Ministry Sunday afternoon.

The discharge and the rehabilitation of the disqualified combatants is one of major aspects of the peace process that began in November 2006.

The Peace Ministry and the UN agencies are currently working on rehabilitation package. But such a package will only have education and vocational schemes, not any cash incentive.

Sources said that the rejection of the demand has made the Maoist unhappy and is likely to affect the ongoing discharge and rehabilitation process that resumed on October 11 from Dudhauli cantonments in Sindhuli after it was stalled on July 17 following non-cooperation by the Maoists.

In the meantime, the second phase of the discharge and rehabilitation process at Dudhauli has not yet begun even as the first phase concluded on October 15. The second phase -- profiling of the disqualified -- was supposed to begin on October 20 as per the schedule of the process.

Sources said that the Maoists are not willing to begin the second phase in the cantonment, saying that the profiling of the combatants should be started once the first phase in remaining six cantonments is completed.

"The delay on part of the Maoist might be a strategy to bargain for cash incentive for the disqualified," a source involved in the process said.

Discharge beginning in six cantonments this week

In the meantime, the Chemjong-headed committee on Sunday decided to begin the discharge and rehabilitation process in remaining six cantonments later this week. The technical committee headed by Joint Secretary Bishnu Nepal will take a decision in this regard on Monday, according to Minister Chemjong.

"The committee has decided to complete the first phase within a week," Minister Chemjong told myrepublica.com.

Similarly, the meeting also decided to establish an office for the discharge and rehabilitation process very soon. Likewise, Chemjong held a meeting with government secretaries in a bid to identify possible training centers where the would-be-discharge combatants will be kept after they leave their respective cantonments.

kiran@myrepublica.com

 
Published on 2009-10-26 00:00:01
# # Share [Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]

 

PLEASE DESIST FROM ATTACKING THE WRITER PERSONALLY AND BE RESPECTFUL TO OTHER READERS.

Please give your full name while posting your comments. This is not to stifle the free flow of comments but your full name will enable us to print the comments in our newspaper.

 

Maoists Demand Rs 1m For Each Disqualified; UNMIN Says No
Comment on this news #
Name
Email
Comments
   
939
 
   
 
 
Related News
More on Political Affairs
LATEST COMMENTS
This is one more evidence that Maoist are still aggressively the grand design of capturing the state power by the mean of money and power. I guess in-spite of good intention of peace in Nepal of agencies like UN, they are indirectly empowering Maoist for their pre proclaimed revolt. This is a fact most of us know that the real fighter of PLA are outside in the form of YCL and other moist position. They are fooling the peace of Nepal and risking their own existence. This is just height of insensi [more]
  - Suman Basnyat
i think the money has to be provided from the pocket of prachanda. The monthly salary of militants hasn´t been provided because they are storing these money for different purpose. they have this intention ,so no money to maoist militants. [more]
  - Diwakar
LOL to Maoists. Prachanda´s video is still fresh in UNMIN chief´s mind. One million to these poor guys or to Maoist party´s saving account, eventually? All money must be transferred to each person, and kept in the bank account for more than 6 months. Any money transferred to Maoist party whether voluntery or forced donation, should be returned to UNMIN, that should be the clause. Otherwise, how would you make sure that the money really reaches to these poor. This time UNMIN sho [more]
  - GyaRel
Well done Landgren! I can imagine the reason behind her complete NO. Comrades don´t think that as you present yourself as so called Mesiahs, everyone needs to agree with your whatever demands....There is a limit for everything and please stop playing with the future of those youth. Politics has become so immoral that noone is exception there... [more]
  - Nirmal

About us | Contact us | Advertise with us | Career | Terms of use | Privacy policy
 
Copyright © Nepal Republic Media Pvt. Ltd. 2008-09.
Nepal, NepalNews, Republica, myrepublica, everest, kathmandu, katmandu, news of nepal, girija prasad koirala, prachanda, maoist, tibet, pokhara, himalaya, mountain