- Title: NEPAL: Protests continue in Nepal as curfew is imposed.
- Date: 21st January 2006
- Summary: (BN15) BHAKTAPUR, NEPAL (JANUARY 20, 2006) (REUTERS) CLOSE-UP OF FLAGS OF POLITICAL PARTIES VARIOUS OF PROTESTERS SHOUTING "PRO DEMOCRACY SLOGANS" AS THEY MARCH THROUGH THE STREETS OF BHAKTAPUR TOWN ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF KATHMANDU (3 SHOTS) CLOSE UP OF PROTESTERS FEET AS THEY MARCH MORE OF PROTESTERS SHOUTING "ANTI-KING SLOGANS" ONLOOKERS WATCHING THE PROTEST WOMAN WITH YOUNG CHILD WATCHING PROTEST (2 SHOTS) PROTESTERS MARCHING THROUGH A BUSY MARKET AREA TWO YOUNG GIRLS LOOKING DOWN FROM WINDOW AT PROTEST WIDE OF PEOPLE GATHERED FOR A POLITICAL MEETING CLOSE-UP: BISHNU PRASAD, AN ACTIVIST OF THE PEOPLE'S FRONT OF NEPAL PARTY, ADDRESSING THE RALLY PROTESTERS APPAULDING
- Embargoed: 5th February 2006 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Nepal
- Country: Nepal
- Topics: Domestic Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA1QE00Q0TRBV3DOJSJ0VCYEHY0
- Story Text: Soldiers and armed police enforced a curfew in the Nepali capital on Friday (January 20) and placed leading politicians under house arrest, thwarting a planned protest against the king, who seized absolute power last year.
Armoured personnel carriers mounted with machineguns were stationed across Kathmandu, while thousands of soldiers and police in green and blue camouflage fanned out to guard almost every street, square and junction.
Police said about 200 people had been detained for violating the curfew.
Former Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala and other leading politicians were put under house arrest before dawn on Friday, hours before the rally was due to take place to press King Gyanendra to restore democracy.
The crackdown was effective and the ancient square due to host the demonstration was deserted throughout the day. Police armed with rifles and machineguns sat on temple steps or took shelter from the sun under ornate pagodas.
More than 100 politicians and student activists were also detained on Thursday and mobile phone links cut.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said he was dismayed by the arrests, while the United States, the European Union, Japan and neighbour India joined in the criticism.
At Koirala's house, armed police prevented a Reuters team from entering, or meeting the former prime minister, who is spearheading a multi-party alliance against Gyanendra. Guards said phone lines to the house had been cut.
"This is an extreme form of dictatorship by the king," Koirala's Nepali Congress party said in a statement.
A dozen soldiers marched in single file past ancient temples in the famous Patan Durbar Square, empty of its usual crowd of foreign tourists. Vultures sunned themselves in deserted parks, and a rooster strutted past shuttered shops in the narrow streets of the old town.
The king says he was forced to take power last year to stem a Maoist insurgency that has killed more than 12,500 people since 1996. But his actions have left him increasingly unpopular and isolated, and he has so far failed to contain the rebellion.
Anti-Gyanendra protests have steadily gathered strength, with around 100,000 people demonstrating last week in the southeastern town of Janakpur.
Thousands had been expected to join Friday's rally, despite a government-imposed ban on protests. Party activists said there had been demonstrations in other cities, and threatened more protests in Kathmandu when the curfew was lifted at 6 p.m. (1215 GMT).
A few hundred people carrying party flags marched through the nearby temple town of Bhaktapur, and students burned tyres at Tribhuvan University, just outside the capital.
"Gyanendra, thief, leave the country," they chanted.
As the curfew took effect at 8 a.m., a bride dressed in a crimson red and gold-edged sari hurried home past a group of armed and helmeted policemen. A police van sped past carrying six activists arrested for staging a small protest.
"Down with the autocratic monarchy," the arrested men shouted as they went by.
"This curfew is wrong," said 35-year-old trader Umanath Gilal, on his way home minutes before the curfew went into force. "We can't do our business and earn a living. I won't be participating in the protests but I support the protesters."
The Maoists, who have been fighting to set up a single-party communist republic, have entered into a loose alliance with the country's main political parties against the monarch.
Earlier this week they urged people to join the rally, and last week stepped up the military pressure with coordinated attacks around Kathmandu that killed 12 policemen.
On Jan. 2, the Maoists ended a four-month unilateral ceasefire, saying the government had failed to match it, and vowed to take their revolt from the countryside into the cities. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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