[Excerpt: In New Delhi about 500 Nepalis carrying red banners gathered
shouting "Down with Monarchy" and "Long live the Republic."...."We are
here to protest against the royal proclamation and the king's assumption
of power," organizer Laxman Pant said....."Our first demand is the
lifting of curbs on the media and restoring fundamental rights and
revoking the emergency. And India and the United States should stop all
aid to Nepal as this has strengthened the monarchy. The solution lies in
an election."]

http://64.94.180.107/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=FPE5SPWWWUBSCCRBAE0CFEY?type=worldNews&storyID=7611643

Nepal Struggles to Break Maoist Rebel Blockade
Sun Feb 13, 2005 09:07 AM ET

    
By Sanjeev Miglani

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - Nepal ordered more troops to patrol highways and
warned against hoarding in an effort to break a Maoist blockade across
the nation, the biggest challenge so far to King Gyanendra's seizure of
absolute power this month.

Traffic was thin on the second day of the indefinite transport shutdown
called by the Maoists to force the king to withdraw his decision to sack
the government, impose a state of emergency and suspend civil liberties.

Information and Communications Minister Tanka Dhakal said soldiers had
stepped up patrols and set up pickets along the highways to bolster
public confidence, shaken by nine years of conflict that has killed more
than 11,000 people.

"People are feeling a little more secure and more are coming out," he
said, adding the government had offered to pay immediate compensation if
any vehicle was attacked while defying the guerrilla ban. So far, there
were no reports of violence.

"We have put out more troops, there are helicopters providing air
patrols along the highways," Dhakal said.

A government official said there were enough fuel reserves for
Kathmandu's 1.5 million people and vowed to punish any retailer found
hoarding stocks.

"We have enough stock, ranging from 15 days to a month, depending on the
oil product," said Dinesh Chandra Pyakurel, secretary in the supplies
ministry.

"The government has four or five monitoring teams and we will take
action against the hoarders."

The Maoists, who have fought for years to replace the constitutional
monarchy with a communist republic, successfully enforced a blockade of
hill-ringed Kathmandu last August through threats alone, without any
physical show of force.

TALKS OFF

King Gyanendra, who blamed the previous government for failing to
contain the Maoist revolt, has ordered a crackdown on the Maoists in
their remote mountain hideouts and thick jungles to force them to resume
talks, cut off since August 2003.  

 The guerrillas said on Saturday the king's Feb. 1 power grab had ended
all possibility of early peace talks.

Instead, they have urged the country's warring political parties to
unite with them to fight the monarchy.

The king's decision this month to take absolute power has prompted
protests from many countries.

In New Delhi about 500 Nepalis carrying red banners gathered shouting
"Down with Monarchy" and "Long live the Republic."

"We are here to protest against the royal proclamation and the king's
assumption of power," organizer Laxman Pant said.

"Our first demand is the lifting of curbs on the media and restoring
fundamental rights and revoking the emergency. And India and the United
States should stop all aid to Nepal as this has strengthened the
monarchy. The solution lies in an election."

Thousands migrate every year from Nepal, one of the world's 10 poorest
nations, to India every year for work.

Life in Kathmandu appeared unaffected, and there was no sign of panic
buying in city markets despite the rebel blockade.

On Saturday, the first day of the strike, only 137 vehicles entered the
capital through the main checkpoint of Nagdhunga, compared with 1,659
vehicles the previous day, the daily Himalayan Times said, quoting the
army.

Residents reached by phone in the towns of Biratnagar and Janakpur in
the east told Reuters there was little traffic in the towns and on the
highways.

"Nobody can travel because long distance buses are not running," said
Madhav Khanal, a resident in the western town of Nepalganj. "There is
confusion and uncertainty among the people, we don't know how long this
will last." (Additional reporting by Unni Krishnan in NEW DELHI)

© Reuters 2005. All Rights Reserved.


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