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March 16, 2006 Thursday Safar 15, 1427


Blockade paralyses transport in Nepal



By Deepesh Shrestha


KATHMANDU: A road blockade called by Nepal’s Maoist rebels seeking to topple King Gyanendra’s royal government paralysed the transport of vital supplies as it entered its second day Wednesday.

The Maoists have ordered all vehicles off the roads heading to and from Kathmandu, district capitals and other towns in a bid to end Gyanendra’s direct rule of the impoverished Himalayan nation that began 13 months ago.

Fear of Maoist reprisals rather than physical blockades was keeping many drivers off the road. Vehicles have been torched and roads boobytrapped during previous rebel blockades.

Those defying the blockade this time round covered their licence plates to prevent being tracked down.

Highways across the nation remained deserted on Wednesday, and police in the capital said they had received no reports of Maoist violence.

“It’s all peaceful. So far we’ve had no instances of violence related to the blockade,” said a police officer on condition on anonymity.

The Maoists initially called the blockade for a week but local newspapers reported Wednesday they might extend it.

Normally congested roads linking cities were virtually empty as soldiers patrolled highways in a bid to prevent rebel attacks on vehicles.

In Gajuri, a town on the highway between Kathmandu and the popular tourist town of Pokhara, there were “very few” vehicles on the usually busy route, said a police officer from the town 70 kilometres west of the capital.

Army convoys accompanied the few private and public vehicles on the road. Inside the major cities and towns, residents reported life was normal except for rising food prices.

“This morning I went to buy vegetables and the prices had already started to go up,” said Kathmandu housewife Indira Shrestha. “I’m really afraid prices will go through the roof if the blockade keeps up and there’s a shortage of food.”

Gyanendra justified his seizure of power by saying the move was needed to end the decade-old Maoist insurgency that has claimed over 12,500 lives.

But analysts say he is no closer to his goal of quelling the revolt and that the monarchy has become increasingly unpopular in the Hindu nation where the king is regarded by some as the incarnation of the god Vishnu, the protector.

Last November, mainstream political parties entered a loose anti-monarchy alliance with the Maoists, leaving the king further isolated.

The strike has come amid a split in top Maoist ranks.

Late Tuesday, Maoist chief Prachanda or “the Fierce One” expelled two top rebel leaders, Ravindra Shrestha and Mani Thapa, accusing them of deviating from party policies and “exposing themselves as royal cronies”.

“The party’s central committee has decided to expel (them for) counter-revolutionary activities and acting as servants of the autocratic monarchy,” Prachanda said in a statement.

His move came a day after local media reported the two Maoist leaders had accused Prachanda and another top leader, Baburam Bhattarai, of nepotism and favoritism.—AFP



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