Text Only
Search

 
UN Warns of Humanitarian Crisis in Nepal


18 March 2005
Pasricha report - Download 282K - Download (Real) audio clip
Pasricha report - Download 282K - Listen (Real) audio clip

The United Nations and other international agencies are warning that Nepal stands on the brink of a humanitarian crisis, due to the deepening conflict between security forces and communist guerrillas. The United Nations is urging both sides to protect civilians.

The United Nations, the European Union and other aid donors say fierce fighting between communist rebels and Nepal's new royalist government has disrupted the flow of essential aid and medical help to civilians.

A written statement says there have been increasing reports of women dying in childbirth because they could not get proper medical care, and children lacking vitamins, vaccines and essential drugs.

The U.N. statement says, "insecurity, armed activity and Maoist blockades are pushing Nepal towards the edge of a humanitarian crisis."

In recent months, the rebels have stepped up their nine-year fight against the monarchy, and brought the insurgency to the capital with road blockades. Aid workers have been forced to suspend activities in many rural areas controlled by the rebels.

The United Nations is urging the rebels and the government to protect civilians and ensure free passage of relief.

Several human rights groups have also expressed concern about the plight of civilians following the imposition of emergency rule on February 1.

Nepal's King Gyanendra seized power last month, and clamped down on civil freedoms, vowing to end the flaring communist insurgency, which has claimed more than 10,000 lives since 1996.

The secretary-general of the International Commission of Jurists, Nicholas Howen, recently visited Nepal. He says the suspension of civil liberties has worsened the conflict and created a "climate of fear."

"The tragedy is that this suspension of these rights and the assumption of direct power has deepened the conflict," he said. "It has emboldened the Maoists politically; it has not given military advantage to the Royal Nepalese Army."

The international community has been pressuring the king to restore democracy and work with political parties to end the insurgency.

In a visit to India earlier in the week, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged Nepal to restore democracy "very, very soon."

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
US Pushes Democracy Agenda At UN Human Rights Commission
Nepal Asks International Community To Support State of Emergency
Nepalese Police Detain Hundreds of Protesters
Human Rights Groups Demand International Intervention in Nepal
 
  Top Story
Obama Ends Ghana Visit With Trip to Former Slave Center

  More Stories
Obama Addresses Africans from Ghana  Audio Clip Available
Iraqi Shi'ite Lawmakers Protest British Troop Extension
Iranian Foreign Minister Says Tehran Preparing 'Package' for West
Pakistan: Trial of Mumbai Attackers to Start Next Week
Obama Urges Patience on Economic Recovery
Report: Bush Administration Surveillance Program Legally Questionable
New York Times: Bush Team Discouraged Probe of Mass Taliban Deaths
China Increases Police Presence on Xinjiang
Honduras Talks End with No Agreement
Space Shuttle Launch Delayed
US Braced for H1N1 Swine Flu Return  Video clip available
Michael Jackson's Hometown Pays Tribute
Republic of Congo to Hold Presidential Election
Catholic Church in Kenya Promotes Alternative to Female Circumcision  Video clip available
Obama Using New Media to Reach Ghanaians  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available