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Full Coverage: Nepal

August 2005

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» The OneWorld Nepal Country Guide
The aim of this Guide is to provide a brief introduction to human rights and sustainable development issues in Nepal

Browse the archives by month:

2004
2005
2006
08/31/2005 The UN has reported that an increasing number of people are disappearing in Nepal and this is being done by both - the government as well as the Maoist rebels. In another report, UNICEF has said that an estimated 2.4 million children and women are trafficked every year for prostitution, forced labour and mining work.
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Related: [Children] [Migration] [Poverty] [Human Rights] [Gender]
08/29/2005 Nepal's indigenous people, or Janajatis, are demanding King Gyanendra address societal imbalances and reinstate a year-old law reserving ten percent of government seats for indigenous peoples.
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From: Cultural Survival, Inc.
Related: [Indigenous Rights] [Governance]
08/26/2005 UNESCO Bangkok's Assessment, Information Systems, Monitoring and Statistics (AIMS) Unit hosted and trained officials from the Nepal Ministry of Education (MoE) as part of the Flash Report Method on conducting annual school census at the AIMS office, UNESCO Bangkok.

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Related: [Thailand] [Capacity Building] [Education] [ICT]
08/23/2005 READ - Rural Education And Development, Nepal - has been building community libraries. These libraries are run with the active participation of the community and have their own income generating scheme for meeting operating costs and financial sustainability.
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Related: [Poverty] [ICT]
08/23/2005 The founder and coordinator of a UNESCO-supported community multimedia centre in Nepal was recently recognised for his contribution in disseminating information to society by innovatively using simple and cheap audiovisual technology.
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Related: [Communication] [ICT]
Nepalese Dalits
08/22/2005 Dalits in the village of Syaula, long repressed by Maoist workers, have returned to their homes after human rights activists held discussions with Maoist leaders to resolve the conflict. Maoist leaders have pledged to the Dalits to return their property, take action against Maoist workers who commit excesses, and end the violence.
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From: Advocacy Project
Related: [Human Rights] [Conflict Resolution]
Image: Nepalese Dalits © Suvash Darnal / Advocacy Project
08/18/2005 New government powers are worrying national and international NGOs in Nepal because of fears that the legislation will enable the state to control and regulate NGO programmes.
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From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related: [Civil Society]
08/18/2005 For more than nine years a conflict has raged in Nepal between government security forces and fighters of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). The conflict has had a devastating effect on all sections of Nepali society—but especially on the lives of children. The most fundamental rights of children are being violated routinely, and nowhere is this more apparent than in schools across the country.
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Related: [Children] [Human Rights] [Conflict]
NGOs undertake vital aid and development work in Nepal, particularly in rebel-controlled areas.
08/18/2005 Some national and international NGOs in Nepal have expressed concern over a just passed government law, which gives the state new powers to control and regulate NGO programs and activities.
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From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related: [Development] [Human Rights] [Civil Society] [Governance] [Law]
Image: NGOs undertake vital aid and development work in Nepal, particularly in rebel-controlled areas. © United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
08/12/2005 Killings by the state and by Maoist rebels are increasing in Nepal, human rights activists warned as they called for action by the United Nation High Commissioner for Human Rights.
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From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related: [Justice and Crime] [Conflict] [United Nations]
08/12/2005 A Nepalese human rights group, Insec, says that eversince King Gyanendra took over direct rule of Nepal on 1 February, at least 1,115 people have been killed. The report says 738 have died at the hands of the state and 377, including both civilians and security personnel, have been killed by Maoist rebels.
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Related: [Governance] [Arms & Military] [Conflict]
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08/11/2005 Kastisyrjintä on Nepalin sisällissodan syy ja seuraus, todettiin YK:n ihmisoikeuksia käsitelleessä konferenssissa. Nepalin konfliktin ratkaisu on riipuvainen kastiin perustuvien syrjintäkäytäntöjen lopullisesta kitkemisestä, konferenssissa julkaistussa raportissa todetaan. Raportin mukaan kastisyrjinnästä kärsivät eniten Dalitit, niin kutsutut "koskemattomat".
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From: OneWorld South Asia
Related: [Conflict]
Image: - © Rachna Shrestha
08/11/2005 A report by the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice says that caste discrimination is the root cause of the civil war in Nepal and the conflict will remain unresolved unless a sustained commitment is made to eradicate caste-based abuses.
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Related: [Social Exclusion] [Governance] [Justice and Crime] [Conflict]
Nepal's children have been especially vulnerable throughout the nine-year conflict between Maoist insurgents and the government.
08/04/2005 Government-backed vigilante groups, known as "Village Defense Forces," are worsening Nepal's human rights situation, increasing intimidation of the civilian population through tactics such as forced recruitment, sexual harassment, and beatings, reports Amnesty International.
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From: Amnesty International USA
Related: [Human Rights] [Governance] [War and Peace]
Image: Nepal's children have been especially vulnerable throughout the nine-year conflict between Maoist insurgents and the government. © Refugees International
soldati a Kathmandu
08/03/2005 La presenza delle Forze di difesa dei villaggi - gruppi di vigilantes sostenuti dal governo – sta facendo aumentare il terrore e la violenza nei confronti della popolazione civile del Nepal. E' quanto denuncia Amnesty International con un rapporto basato su una recente missione di ricerca. La situazione dei diritti umani nelle zone rurali del paese continua a deteriorarsi e il paese rimane avvolto in un conflitto brutale, in corso da nove anni tra i ribelli maoisti e le forze di sicurezza. Il rapporto mette in luce numerosi casi di violazioni dei diritti umani da parte sia dei maoisti che delle forze di sicurezza. I delegati dell’organizzazione hanno potuto visitare sospetti maoisti detenuti nelle basi militari e torturati per estorcere confessioni. Numerose anche le prove di efferate atrocità da parte dei maoisti, tra cui il rapimento e l’uccisione di civili e di personale non armato delle forze di sicurezza.
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From: Amnesty International (sezione italiana)
Related: [Civil Rights] [Civil Society] [Democracy] [Conflict]
Image: soldati a Kathmandu © Independent Media Center

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2004
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