Sunday, June 19, 2011

More than 5 million affected by China flooding


BEIJING – More than 5 million people have been displaced or otherwise affected by flooding in eastern China that is also pushing up food prices, state media reported Sunday. Torrential rains have left huge areas of Hubei and Zhejiang provinces under water, with more than 1 million acres (432,200 hectares) of farmland inundated, the official Xinhua News Agency said. Almost 1,000 businesses have been forced to suspend operations and 5.7 million people have had their lives disrupted, Xinhua said in a brief report. More than 7,000 homes collapsed or were otherwise damaged and direct financial damage was estimated at almost 6 billion yuan ($930 million). The downpour triggered a mudslide that buried houses and killed two people in Zhejiang's Changshan county, while two more were killed and two left missing by flooding in Hubei, Xinhua said. Flooding in eastern and southern China this month has left more than 170 people dead or missing. Roads and railways have been blocked, but aid supplies are arriving and the country's weather bureau says skies are expected to clear up Monday.
Farmers quoted by Xinhua said the flooding was the worst in 20 years, reducing vegetable output by 20 percent and also causing shortages of fruits and grains. Prices for green vegetables were up 40 percent, Xinhua said, adding to an inflation rate of 5.5 percent, a three-year high. The increase in the consumer price index reported last week was in line with expectations but higher than April's 5.3 percent and March's 5.4 percent. The National Statistics Bureau said the main factor was an 11.7 percent jump in food prices. Higher food prices blamed on flooding were also reported in the eastern provinces of Anhui and Jiangxi, Xinhua said.

US mayors say war money should be going to their communities



War in Afghanistan
US mayors have urged Congress to end the costly wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
At a gathering in Baltimore prior to the weekend, a conference of various town and city mayors called on the government to redirect money spent on wars for domestic needs.
The mayors, at their annual US Conference of Mayors, discussed a resolution for a speedy end to US military spending abroad.
Drawing attention to the human cost of the current foreign wars, they argued there were pressing domestic needs for the funds being used to extend operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.  It was pointed out that the wars had cost $126 billion a year with more than 6,000 US soldiers killed.  The mayors cited their needs for job creation, infrastructure rebuilding, aid to municipal and state governments, and an economy based upon renewable, sustainable energy.  The conference involved mayors from 1,200 centres, with populations exceeding 30,000.

UN declares Nepal free of land mines


Nepal – The United Nations declared Nepal free of land mine fields on Tuesday after the last of the anti-personnel weapons planted by the army while fighting communist insurgents was destroyed. Prime Minister Jhalnath Khanal flipped a switch to trigger the last land mine, which had been laid to protect the main civil aviation radio tower in mountains south of the capital, Katmandu. U.N. official Robert Piper declared that the mine field in Phulchoki was the last of 53 areas where the army had planted the weapons. “One more milestone on the road to peace, as we declare Nepal mine field-free," Piper announced. The tower at Phulchoki is used by flight controllers to communicate with planes flying across the Himalayan nation. It was guarded by an army camp, which was surrounded by a land mine field to protect against attacks by the Maoist rebels. "Today is a historical day because Nepal has been liberated from all kinds of land mines," Khanal said.
However, there still are areas where homemade bombs were planted by both sides, and efforts to clear those continue, Piper said. Land mines explode by themselves when someone walks nearby, while homemade bombs are normally set off by a combatant. Government soldiers used land mines imported from India, China and Russia, while the rebels did not have access to any. Soldiers mapped the areas where they planted the mines, making the job of demining easier. The task of clearing the land mines began in 2007 after the rebels signed a peace agreement and abandoned their armed revolt, with the United Nations training Nepalese soldiers to do the task.
The army has cleared 170 of the 275 fields where it laid homemade bombs, but there is no record on the part of the rebels. U.N. arms monitors have destroyed some 53,000 homemade bombs that were turned in by the rebels after they signed the peace deal. More than 13,000 people were killed in the insurgency that began in 1996 and lasted 10 years. Since the Maoists joined the peace process, they have joined mainstream politics and confined their fighters to camps.

Three Nepali women held with drugs


Maharajganj (Uttar Pradesh):Three women from Nepal were arrested here with contraband cannabis worth around Rs.25 lakh, police said Friday. Devmata Vishwakarma, Umbeera and Vipinbhooda -- all in their mid 40s -- were nabbed late Thursday following a joint operation by Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) troopers and district police along the India-Nepal border in Sunauli town.
'The women have been involved in the drug trade since five years. They operated in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Delhi and Haryana,' said police inspector Mahesh Ram Gautam in Maharajganj, some 300 km from Lucknow. The women belonged to Nepal's Baglung district and were on their way to hand over a drugs consignment in Gorakhpur district.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Maoists deny anti-India activities, raise counter-charges


Kathmandu, April 22: Nepal's Maoists have rejected Indian External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna's view that they are involved in anti-India attacks, and have instead raised concerns at "obstructions" to them as Maoist chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda met the Indian minister Friday. The meeting Friday was probably the most crucial during Krishna's three-day visit to Nepal, with the minister raising the issue of Maoist attacks on Indian Ambassador Rakesh Sood as well as on Indian investments in Nepal. After the nearly one-hour-long talks at Kathmandu's celebrated heritage hotel Dwarika's, Prachanda told the media that his party - the largest in Nepal - was keen to consolidate ties with India based on a new foundation. Replying to Indian concerns that his party was opposing Indian joint ventures in Nepal and attacking the Indian envoy, Prachanda said the Maoists too had growing concerns of their own. During the nearly two years of his government, he said the repeated clashes he faced with the then chief of the army, General Rookmangud Katawal - who persistently refused to allow the Maoist fighters into the army despite a peace agreement - raised fears that there were attempts to obstruct the Maoist government. "Even during the prime ministerial election, we felt attempts were being made to obstruct (the Maoists from coming back to power)," he said. Prachanda was referring to the unprecedented 17 rounds of election Nepal underwent to elect a new prime minister after his successor Madhav Kumar Nepal resigned in June 2010. Prachanda's chances of winning the tri-cornered election were nixed after a mysterious audio tape surfaced, recording a phone conversation between the Maoist party's foreign affairs in-charge - and current information and communications minister - Krishna Bahadur Mahara and an unidentified middleman. Mahara was recorded as asking for money from a businessman "well-wisher" in China to buy MPs' votes for Prachanda during the prime ministerial poll. The Maoists allege India's external intelligence agency Research and Analysis Wing engineered the tape after tapping Mahara's phone. Though, Krishna reiterated New Delhi's position that it has not interfered in Nepal's internal matters, both the Indian and Maoist denials have rung hollow at times. Despite the documented attacks on Indian ventures in Nepal, Prachanda said his party was not anti-India. However, he said attempts were being made to weaken his party. The Maoists say India should realise they became Nepal's largest party after the elections in 2008, winning the people's trust. India should, therefore, not try to control them like it did the other parties but treat them as equals. Indian diplomats, however, point out that while accusing India of interference, Prachanda himself urged New Delhi to send an envoy when his party became embroiled in a battle with the army chief. New Delhi, however, declined to do so. Krishna also asked about the Maoist stand on the peace process and the new constitution, that has to be promulgated by May 28.
The Maoist chief, who was earlier calling for a new "People's Revolt", dramatically changed his stand this week, urging his party instead to focus on the peace process and the new constitution. On Thursday, he said that it was possible to ready the new constitution within a week. However, New Delhi realises that the constitution may not be ready by May 28 and is urging all the parties to put their heads together and come up with an alternative to prevent a crisis after the deadline elapses. After the meeting with Prachanda, Krishna flew to Birgunj city on the Indo-Nepal border to lay the foundation for the integrated check post being built with Indian assistance worth nearly Rs.87 crore. The Birgunj-Raxaul check post is the main route for Indo-Nepal trade, accounting for almost 75 percent of it. He will also lay the foundation for PRN120, the highway that is part of the network of roads to be built in the southern terai plains, for which India has pledged assistance worth Rs.805 crore. "These projects aim at strengthening the cross-border connectivity between India and Nepal to facilitate better people-to-people contacts and economic opportunities for the people of Nepal," Krishna said. The fallout of Krishna's visit will be manifest only after the Maoist central committee winds up its meeting, called Friday. If the central committee endorses Prachanda's call for peace and the constitution, India can look forward to better ties with the former guerrillas.However, Prachanda's position is likely to be challenged by his hawkish deputy Mohan Baidya, who is advocating revolt and resuming hostilities against India.

JANA AANDOLAN 2062/63


Introduction to Nepali Food


Chatamari - (Newari) food resembles Pizza or Dosa (south Indian). rice flour flat bread cooked over heat with toppings such as minced meat (with or without some vegetable), egg, sugar or no toppings. 
Choyla -(Newari) grilled /roasted spicy meat. usually eaten as appetizer with liquor
Gundruk - dried and fermented green vegetables leaves. when made to soup gives a slightly sour, slightly tangy.
Kwati - (Newari) soup with many beans. a festival specialty

Momo(cha) - (Newari) a dumplings filled with minced meat (usually buffalo in Nepal, Turkey elsewhere), served steamed or fried. very popular appetizer, afternoon snack or evening meal.
Samay Baji - (Newari) beaten rice with roasted meat, smoked fish, boiled-then-fried egg, black soybeans and diced ginger.usually a ritual food co
Sekuwa - grilled meat usually made from mutton, duck, chicken, buff, wild boar.
Sel - donoght-like shaped dessert/snack made from rice flour
Sukuti - spicy dried meat roasted over a charcoal fire.
Aloo Tama - Potato made with bamboo shoots.
Tawkhaa - (Newari) Jello of meat soup served cold. 
Wo - (Newari) flour patty made of lentils with or without meat/egg topping. used in ritual or festival or used as snack.
Nepali Main Dish
Aloo Tama - Bamboo shoot and potato.
Dal - lentil soup usually eaten with rice. most popular lentils usued as dal in Nepal are black, red and yellow.
Sag -  Green Vegetables - Spinach, mustard greens or broad-leaved mustard. A standard accompaniment to plain rice for lunch or dinner.
Masu - meat with spices (curry) and gravy. usually served with rice. Most Nepalese eat chicken, mutton. Some eat buffalo and pork. Almost no one eats cow. Killing cow is prohibited in Nepal
Bhat - steamed rice
Tarkari - any vegetable or group of vegetables in curry, usually broth. can be made in thousand s ways.
RELISHES
Achar - a sour, spice or seet pickle. can be made in thousand ways. the most poplar are made of ground tomatoes, sliced radish, ground coriander, boiled or diced potatoes.
Sanya Khuna - (Newari) hot, spicy, salty jellotype food made from fish soup.
Dahi - Yogurt/Curd
Juju Dhau - popular creamy curd from Bhaktapur. Juju literally means ‘‘king".
Sikarni - curd mixed with dried fruits. 
Nepali Drinks
Rakshi - liquor (can mean local liquor)
Thon (Newari) or Chhyang (Tibetan) - the milky white beer/liquor made from fermented rice.
Tongba - a popular liquor in the hills. made by pouring hot water into a pot of fermented millet and drunk with a bamboo straw.

Biography for Pushpa Kamal Dahal (a.k.a Prachanda)


 

First Name: Pushpa Kamal
Last Name: Dahal (a.k.a Prachanda)
Title: Chairman,
Organization: Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) CPN(M)
Country: Nepal
Date of Birth: 11/12/1954
Place of Birth: Dhikurpokhri village of Kaksi district in the Himalayan foothills
Family: His father is Muktiram Dahal who worked as a farm hand.
When he was seven, the family migrated to Shivnagar in southern Nepal. At the Narayani High School, he apparently impressed his teachers so much with his intelligence and conduct that they rechristened him Pushpan Kamal after the lotus, a symbol of purity and beauty. "As a child, he never lied or fought with other children. In fact, he was called to mediate and resolve disputes. I thought he'd grow up and join the civil service," says Muktiram, who hasn't seen his son since 1995.
Spouses:
  • Sita Paudal
Education:
  • Rampur Agricultural College
Politics: He entered Leftist politics in 1971 through a faction of the Communist Party, moving on to more radical groups, eventually ending up at the top of the Maoist faction in the mid-1990s.
Hobbies: He is a passionate fan of Karisma Manandhar, the Madhuri Dixit of Nepal, and is known to travel miles to see her new releases.

Nepal's New Prime Minister


Power cuts hits the Businessman adversely


ITAHARI: The entire trade and business here have been adversely affected due to increasing power outage for the past few days. Media workers are also bearing the brunt of the heavy load shedding as they face immense problems in the dissemination of news.
Though the load shedding schedule is 16 hours a day, it is not certain when electricity comes and goes. Dairy farmers have voiced their complaint that their milk is going to waste with milk producers cooperatives refusing to purchase their produce on account of the load shedding. Cyber homes and petrol pumps are also facing the same problem in the absence of electricity.
                 A daily loss worth more than Rs 200 million is being incurred by factories in the Sunsari-Morang industrial corridor only because of power outage, according to industrialists. The health sector has also been seriously affected due to load shedding. Problems are being experienced in the course of treatment. Many patients reaching clinics for x-ray have had to return disappointed. Electricity users and the general public have reached the point of picketing Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) office for not responding their woes. Travel19.tk

Lightning kills three in Sindhuli

SINDHULIMADHI Nepal: Three persons died and two others were seriously hurt when they were struck by lightning on Tuesday evening at Hariharpurgadhi in Sindhuli district.The deceased are Bharat BK, Chamar Singh Ghising and his wife Rumba, said the district police office, Sindhuli.Lok Bahadur Moktan and Maili Moktan were seriously injured in in the lightning. The two are undergoing treatment at a local clinic.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Poisonous mushroom claims two


DHADING Nepal: Two persons have been killed and other three taken ill after consuming poisonous mushroom at Semjong-2 of Dhading district on Friday night.
The deceased has been identified as Sarki Sunar, 63, of Semjong-4. The other one is yet to be identified.
Likewise, Shanti Sunar, Mantha Sunar and Krishna Sunar have been taken ill. They have been undergoing treatment in Dhading.

Sport::National Campus will......Kathmandu Nepal


KATHMANDU :National Campus will take on Prime College in the semi-final of the Fourth U-19 National White House Cup Basketball Championship on Saturday. Riding on 25 points from Bikash Gurung National edged Triton 51-39 in the quarter-final held at the covered hall of the Dashrath Stadium on Friday. Likewise, Aayush Singh scored 18 points as Prime hammered Kaksi 62-36 en route to the semi-final. Morgan too confirmed their spot in the final four with their 60-40 resounding victory over White House 'A'. Saurav Shrestha top scored with 23 points for Morgan. Likewise, Heman Rai led Sunsari's 63-39 thumping of NIMS with his 26 points to take the district team to the semi-final. In the girls' category, NASA, Nobel, NIMS and Morgan sailed to the semi-final. Samikshya Neupane scripted NASA's 41-14 routing of CCRC with her 21 points as NASA dominated in all four sets with 13-3, 9-2, 13-4 and 6-5. Similarly, Nobel downed Saipal Academy 41-36 in the quarter-final. Namrata Thapa contributed 18 points for Nobel.
In the other matches, Bina Nakarmi's 12 points played an instrumental part for NIMS on their way to the semi-final.

Palestinian demonstrators in Syria :Facebook call


Israeli troops fired at Palestinian demonstrators in Syria who rushed to the frontier fence on Sunday in what Israel called a challenge to its sovereignty. Syrian state-run media said 18 were killed."Anyone who tries to cross the border will be killed," Israeli soldiers shouted through loudspeakers at the crowd of several hundred on the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights who rallied to a Facebook call to march to the frontier on the 44th anniversary of the Arab defeat in the 1967 Middle East war.As darkness fell and heavy mist descended on the high plateau, some protesters lit bonfires close to the fence and said they would remain in the area, Syrian television reported. Israel's Channel 1 in Majdal Shams said most of the protesters had dispersed as the cold night air took hold.Israel captured Syria's Golan Heights in that conflict, as well as the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, where Palestinians Hwant to establish a state.Israel has accused Syrian President Bashar al-Assad of permitting the Golan protests to try to divert international attention from his bloody suppression of the popular revolt against his authoritarian rule."The Syrian leadership is encouraging events on the Golan Heights in order to divert the world's attention away from the bloodbath they have inflicted on their own people," Dore Gold, a former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, told Reuters.

Libyan rebels take new villages in Western Mountains

GHARYAN, LIBYA,
Libyan rebels have pushed deeper into government-held territory from their base in the Western Mountains, taking two villages from which forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi had been shelling rebel-held towns.

But the rebels are still a considerable way from Gaddafi's main stronghold in Tripoli, while their fellow fighters on the other two fronts -- in Misrata and in eastern Libya -- have made only halting progress against better-armed government troops.

The rebel advance some 150 km (90 miles) southwest of Tripoli on Wednesday, came as the White House insisted that President Barack Obama had the legal authority to press on with U.S. military involvement in Libya.

Strains have begun to show in the Western alliance trying to topple Gaddafi. The U.S. defense secretary rounded on European allies last week for failing to back the mission the alliance took over in late March.

The White House urged skeptical lawmakers not to send "mixed messages" about their commitment to the NATO-led air war that has helped the rebels push on from their bastion in the east.

"The revolutionaries (rebels) now control Zawiyat al-Babour and al-Awiniyah after pro-Gaddafi forces retreated this morning from the two villages," Abdulrahman, a rebel spokesman in the nearby town of Zintan, told Reuters.

In Gharyan, a Gaddafi-held town that forms the gateway from Tripoli to the mountains, there was an undercurrent of tension as the frontline moves closer to the capital.

Libyan government minders took a group of reporters to the town, which lies about 120 km southwest of Tripoli and about 20 km east of Kikla, which rebels seized from loyalists on Tuesday.

Despite an outward appearance of normality, walls around town on Wednesday had recently painted over graffiti. The windows of one government building were smashed, the sign for another was riddled with holes.

While many traders and people on the streets were reluctant to talk to reporters, one shop owner said the calm in the area during the day was replaced by fighting every night.

"Two thirds of the people here are for the rebels," he told Reuters, giving his name as Mohammed.

Those willing to talk in front of the minders were strongly pro-Gaddafi.

"Sarkozy is stupid, he is fighting this war for petrol," a man called Yunis said in French, referring to the French president, vilified by Gaddafi supporters as the driving force behind NATO bombing. "This is colonialism all over again."

TIME ON OUR SIDE

The NATO military alliance, which has been pounding Gaddafi's military and command-and-control structures for nearly three months, has failed to dislodge him. A series of explosions was heard from Gaddafi's sprawling Tripoli compound in the early hours of Thursday and plumes of smoke rose into the sky.

Russia's envoy to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, said the alliance was "sliding down and being dragged more into the eventuality of a land-based operation in Libya."

Ties are becoming strained in the alliance, with some NATO members complaining that others have been reluctant to commit additional resources.

Tension in Washington itself over the conflict reflects unease over U.S. entanglement in a third conflict in the Muslim world in addition to wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and pressure for Obama to clarify U.S. goals in the North African country.

The cost of U.S. military operations and humanitarian assistance in Libya was $716 million as of June 3 and was projected to reach $1.1 billion by September 30, 2001, according to a White House a report to Congress released on Wednesday.

"We believe that it's important for Congress not to send mixed messages about a goal that we think most members of Congress share," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

Speaking in London after meeting NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, British Prime Minister David Cameron reiterated that time was running out for Gaddafi and that the alliance was as determined as ever.

"I think there is a very clear pattern emerging which is time is on our side, because we have the support of NATO, the United Nations, the Arab League, a huge number of countries in our coalition and in our contact group," he said.

Rasmussen echoed those comments despite senior NATO commander General Stephane Abrial on Tuesday raising questions about the alliance's ability to handle a long-term intervention.

"Allies and partners are committed to provide the necessary resources and assets to continue this operation and see it through to a successful conclusion," Rasmussen said.

GADDAFI DEFIANCE

In a theatrical show of defiance, Gaddafi was shown at the weekend playing a game of chess with a Russian official, but after weeks of ambivalence, Moscow has joined Western countries this month in calling for Gaddafi to step down.

Saad Djebbar, a former legal adviser to the Libyan government, told Reuters Gaddafi would continue to play for time and seek to demoralize and split the coalition.

"Gaddafi's mentality is that as long as my enemies haven't triumphed, I haven't lost," he said.

Gaddafi has said he has no intention of leaving the country -- an outcome which, with the military intervention so far failing to produce results, many Western policymakers see as the most realistic way out of the conflict.

At the United Nations, Britain's ambassador urged the African Union to send a strong message that he should go, adding there could be no ceasefire as long as he remained in power.

Gaddafi's government approved a $31.4 billion budget for the rest of 2011, the official news agency said, in an apparent move to show it was functioning despite air strikes and sanctions.

The Libyan leader has described the rebels as criminals and al Qaeda militants, and called the NATO intervention an act of colonial aggression aimed at grabbing Libya's oil.

Though under attack from NATO warplanes and rebel fighters, Gaddafi's troops have showed they are still a potent force.

A rebel spokesman in Nalut, at the other end of the Western Mountains range from Zintan, said Gaddafi's forces had been shelling Nalut and the nearby border crossing into Tunisia. The rebels depend on that crossing to bring in supplies.

China food costs push inflation to 5.5 pct in May

SHANGHAI 
China's inflation rebounded in May to its highest level in nearly three years, pushed up by stubbornly high food prices, even as interest rate hikes and other controls are cooling the overheated economy.

The National Statistics bureau said Tuesday that consumer prices rose 5.5 percent over a year earlier, driven by an 11.7 percent jump in food costs. That was up from April's 5.3 percent rate and exceeded March's 32-month high of 5.4 percent.

The figure was in line with economists' forecasts, but well above the government's 4 percent target for the year.

The government reported Monday that bank lending slowed in May, indicating that repeated interest rate hikes and increases to reserve requirements may finally be reining in the excess lending that has helped drive prices higher.

But drought and other weather disasters have decimated crops in wide parts of the country, as rising consumer demand pushes prices higher. Strong demand in construction and other industries has added to those pressures, spurred by a bank lending spree meant to fight off the impact of the 2008 global crisis.

In Shanghai, the country's commercial hub, residents are feeling the pinch of surging rent and food prices.

"Everything is becoming more and more expensive. My landlord hit me with a rent increase yesterday, after raising it almost every year. Vegetables and meat are also expensive," said Zhang Shihua, an online clothing shop owner from neighboring Anhui province who has lived in the city for eight years.

"We're now considering moving back to Anhui," she said.

Mindful of inflation's role in eroding the economic gains that underpin their claim to power, China's communist leaders have made taming prices a major priority.

Surging prices for food and other basic necessities have added to frustrations over inequality, abuse of power and suppression of legitimate grievances that have provoked recent protests. The past few weeks have been particularly turbulent, with bombings and street demonstrations from Inner Mongolia in the north all the way to Guangdong in the south.

While seeking to impose social "harmony" and cracking down on dissent, the leadership has sought to steer economic growth from the sizzling 9.7 percent rate in the first quarter to a more sustainable level.

Beijing has hiked interest rates four times since October and ordered companies to hold down prices. So far, inflationary pressures have offset those efforts, but economists say the pace of increases has slowed and they expect prices to moderate in coming months.

May's price increase was the fastest since July 2008, when inflation clocked in at 6.3 percent. It peaked at 8.7 percent in February 2008 but fell back under the shock to export demand from the global crisis.

Food prices are heavily weighted in China's calculation of its consumer price index and as supplies rebound during the summer months, that pressure should ease, economists say.

"Barring any further shocks to food supply, headline inflation should drop to beneath 3.5 percent by the end of 2011," Mark Williams, senior China economist at Capital Economics, said in a report Monday.

So far Beijing's efforts to cool its spending binge have had mixed results.

Lending curbs have constrained funds available to the small and medium-sized companies that are the main drivers of job creation and growth. Authorities recently announced initiatives aimed at encouraging more lending to that relatively dynamic part of the economy.

Investments have remained relatively strong in real estate and in state-dominated heavy industries, where excess capacity remains a big problem.

China's industrial output rose 13.3 percent in May, the statistics bureau reported, while investments in construction, factory equipment and other "fixed assets" rose 25.8 percent in January-May over a year earlier and investment in property jumped a whopping 34.6 percent.

Micro hydel project brings smiles to Arghakhanchi villages

ARGHAKHANCHI - Sahbhana, a remote VDC in Arghakhanchi district that remained in darkness until recently, has been illuminated by a micro hydropower project.
Some 120 households of Wards No 1 and 2 have been enjoying electricity round the clock after electricity was generated from Badhahar Khola.
On the initiation of Roda Programme, Zonal Renewable Energy Service Center chipped in Rs 1000,000, local people contributed Rs 620,000, Sahbhana lent VDC 150,000,  local women’s  group gave Rs 141,500, community forest Rs 10,000 and villagers contributed labour worth Rs  360,000 to generate power from the local river.
The micro hydropower project is producing 8 kilowatt of electricity with the investment of Rs 2,285,680, said Usa Karki, district coordinator of Roda Programme.       
Villagers are all happy now as they can watch TV, listen radios and even run grinding mills. Light has powered students, who used to go to bed early, as they have started studying till late night, according to local people. The compulsion to cook meal in daytime has become a thing of past with villagers busy preparing meal once the dark falls and working till late night,  said Kamala Adhakari, a housewife.       
The trend of people’s migration to the plain areas having electricity facility has come down, said another local Dhundi Raj of Belbase, adding that villagers are enjoying 24-hour electricity at a time some parts in the country are facing load shedding.
Each household have to pay Rs 80 a month for the electricity facility, said Ugarshinga Shijapati, chairman of electricity consumers’ committee.

Prez cautions political bigwigs to save credibility

NEPAL-July -17 - President Dr. Ram Baran Yadav on Friday cautioned the top leaders of major three parties that their credibility would be further eroded if they failed to implement the five-point agreement reached on May 29.
He urged Prime Minister Jhala Nath Khanal, UCPN (Maoist) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal and Nepali Congress President Sushil Koirala to live up to their promises to complete the peace process and prepare the first draft of the new constitution within the extended deadline of the Constituent Assembly (CA). “The credibility of the political parties will come into question if you [political parties] fail to meet the deadline again,” President’s Press Advisor Rajendra Dahal quoted Dr. Yadav as telling the top leaders.
During the one-and-a-half-hour long discussion held at Sheetal Niwash on Friday evening, major party leaders presented their views on creating a basis for the conclusion of the peace process and constitution writing and reiterated their commitment to find a meeting point. Dr. Yadav also made a special request asking the top leaders to reach an agreement on introduction of full fledged budget for next fiscal year.
President Yadav stressed that timely budget is crucial to save the country from the economic disorder that was created because of the failure to introduce the budget in time in the past three years. None of the governments formed after the CA elections of April 2008 have been able to introduce a full budget in a regular time (before the end of the fiscal year). The fiscal year ends on July16.

Four killed in road mishaps

 
Makwanpur, June 16
Two persons were killed in a road mishap at Manahari-3 of Makwanpur along the East-West Highway on Wednesday.
The accident occurred when a truck (Na 3 Kha 6103) en route to the Capital from Hetauda collided with a motorcycle (Ja 4 Pa 5115) en route to Hetauda from Chitwan last night.
The deceased have been identified as motorcyclist Deepak Kumar Chawdhary, 25, and pillion rider Raj Kumar Chawdhary, 23, from Gaurishankar-1 of Sarlahi.
They succumbed to the injuries sustained in the mishap while undergoing treatment at Chitwan Medical College, sources confirmed.
Meanwhile, the truck has been impounded and the driver has been held by the police.
Similarly, a person died in a road accident in Birgunj last night.
Banaya Chaudhary of Birgunj Metropolitan City-13 died in the motorcycle accident along the main road section of the city, according to the deceased family source. However, District Traffic Police Office has not still justified the incident.
Chaudhary’s body has been kept at Narayani Sub-regional hospital for post mortem
Likewise, two persons sustained serious injury in Khairahani of Chitwan when a motorcycle collided with stationary truck from backside on Thursday morning.
The road mishap occurred when a motorbike (Na 13 Pa 2135) collided with a truck (Na 4 Kha 2735) en route to east from west in Simaltandi.
Motorbike rider Uttam Gurung, 31, of Birendranagar VDC-1 and back rider Dilliram Kandel, 21, were seriously injured in the incident, according to Chitwan Police.
The injured are being treated in Chitwan Medical College.
In Saptari, June a man died in a road accident in Saptari district this morning.
The deceased has been identified as Hadis Miya, 50, of Maleth-8 in the district.
According to police, cyclist Miya died on the spot when the bus (Sa 1 Kha 210) heading towards Siraha from Rajbiraj hit him at Maleth VDC.
Relatives of the Miya and locals have obstructed Rajbiraj-Rupani road section, said police.travel19.tk Four killed in road mishaps

Syria crisis: Troops move into towns in north

Syrian troops travelling on tanks, armoured personnel carriers and buses have moved into two northern towns.
They have gathered in Maarat al-Numan and Khan Sheikhoun, which sit on the road linking Damascus and Aleppo.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged Syria to halt the bloodshed and "stop killing people".
The UN says that at least 1,100 people have died as the government has violently sought to quash protests over the past three months.
State television said late on Thursday that President Bashar al-Assad's cousin, Rami Makhlouf, intends to give up his business interests - which span telecommunications, construction and oil - and donate his profits to charity.
"As for his businesses, they will be directed so that they [...] create jobs and support the national economy. He will not enter into any new project that (brings) him personal gain," the television said of the tycoon.
A first cousin of President Bashar al-Assad, Rami Makhlouf is arguably the most powerful economic figure in Syria.
He has been the subject of persistent accusations of corruption and cronyism, and protesters in Syria have specifically targeted his business interestshttp://travel19.tk/

PM calls on President Yadav


 
 Prime Minister Jhala Nath Khanal Thursday called on President Dr. Ram Baran Yadav at Shital Niwas and held talks about the latest political developments.
Talking to media people, Prime Minister Khanal said that he briefed him the current political development and ongoing peace and constitution drafting processes.
Khanal said that the president suggested him to reach consensus to implement the five point pact to move forward the peace and constitution drafting processes.
He also briefed the government’s preparation of new budget for coming fiscal year 2068/69.
President Yadav inquired the implementation status of five-point pact and stressed the role of major parties to implement it.
Dr. Yadav suggested reaching consensus to conclude the peace process and bring out the first draft of constitution within the extended three months. Travel19.tk

Sudan Scam: Sitaula passes buck on cops


Nepali Congress (NC) leader Krishna Prasad Sitaula, who has been implicated in Sudan scam by a parliamentary committee report, has claimed that he was not involved in the multi-billion scam and the Nepal Police officials should be held accountable for it.

This is the first time the former home minister openly passed the buck on police officers after the Sudan scam case landed at the Special Court. 

Sitaula claimed his name cannot be dragged through the mire just because he “did not intervene to stop the APC purchase deal”. The file on the purchase of the APCs, Sitaula said, was never forwarded to him when he was the home minister.

“The documents themselves clearly indicate who was involved in the deal. Who accepted the supplies when the run-down vehicles were purchased? Who approved the payment despite poor quality of supplies and without checking it?” he told the Post on Thursday. “The case ends at the level of Nepal Police itself. It does not reach the political leadership level.”

He also claimed that other former home ministers Bam Dev Gautam and Bhim Rawal, both UML leaders, and former Home Secretary Umesh Mainali were innocent too.

Asked why some accused police officers blame political leadership, Sitaula said they might have said so “out of vengeance and to prove themselves innocent”.

On whether he was unaware of such a big deal as a home minister, Sitaula said he could have been aware of the contract agreement “had he been the type of leader who wants commission on the contracts that the lower level officials seal”. “It is not possible and even necessary for a home minister to know every thing in the lower offices. The issue of Police Welfare Fund is entirely out of the ambit of the home minister.”

Meanwhile, contrary to what Sitaula claimed, State Affairs Committee (SAC) Chairman Ramnath Dhakal flayed the CIAA chargesheet for letting the political and administrative leadership off the hook.

The SAC report states that besides the police officials, both the then home ministers and home secretaries should be held responsible for the scam. “It’s strange that the parliamentary report and the chargesheet filed by the anti-graft body are different,” Dhakal told Sajha Sawal. “Our report has implicated both police chiefs and political and administrative leadership.” “Such a big deal cannot happen without the involvement of political leadership,” he said.

Indian Finance Minister scheduled to visit Nepal

NEW DELHI/KATHMANDU, JUN 16 -
Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, who was scheduled to visit Nepal on Saturday, has postponed his trip, citing growing political crisis in India.

 “The finance minister is preoccupied with issues related to corruption and growing crisis regarding the draft of the anti-corruption Lokpal Bill. So, on Thursday, he decided to postpone his Nepal trip for the time being,” RD Dabral, Mukherjee’s personal assistant, told the Post. He added that Mukherjee will visit Kathmandu very soon. “We are looking forward to make his Nepal trip as early as possible—most probably within this month. Mukherjee—the seniormost minister in the United Progressive Alliance UPA-II government—heads the  committee entrusted with the responsibility to prepare the Lokpal Bill which is supposed to be introduced in the monsoon session of parliament, starting next month.

The deepening rift between the government and representatives of the anti-corruption civil campaign led by social crusader Anna Hazare has left Indian polity to face unprecedented crisis, along with a spate of attacks from the opposition parties. “Mukherjee is considered a troubleshooter in Indian politics. During times of crisis like this, it is not good for him to make a foreign trip,” said a source close to him.

Other sources in New Delhi offered different explanations for the postponement of his Nepal trip. “Though internal crisis is one of the reasons, the crisis in Nepal has also played some role for the postponement of his visit,” a political party source said.

New Delhi understands that within a short span of time, there could be change in government in Kathmandu and it will be wiser for him to make the visit after the dust settles, instead of doing it now and again rabble-rouse that his visit led to the downfall of a government, political sources said.

In Kathmandu, Minister for Prime Minister’s Office Affairs Ghan Shyam Bhusal confirmed Mukherjee was all set the visit Nepal on Saturday and the visit was shelved at the 11th hour.

 “We were assured till Wednesday that Mukherjee would be coming to discuss some India-funded projects in Nepal,” Bhusal said. “Today [Thursday] we received a notice saying he is not coming as per the earlier schedule.”

Recent political developments in Kathmandu, especially the lack of progress on the peace process, and his required presence in New Delhi forced him to postpone the visit, high-level government officials said.

On the invitation of Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Bharat Mohan Adhikari, Mukherjee was scheduled to visit Kathmandu on Saturday. During the visit the two sides were scheduled to sign a bilateral deal on Sunday worth US$ 250 million, a line of credit offered by the Indian government during the visit of President Dr Ram Baran Yadav to India in Feb 2010. Nepal’s Cabinet had also authorised Joint Secretary at Ministry of Finance Lal Shanker Ghimire to sign the deal with his Indian counterpart accompanying Mukherjee.