Snakes the new enemy for Nepal’s Maoists
NEPAL: After battling security forces for a decade, Nepal’s
Maoist former rebels said Wednesday they face a new enemy in the
UN-monitored camps where they are confined — snakes.
“At least 700 snakes were killed by People’s Liberation Army (PLA)
fighters at a cantonment in Kailali in far western Nepal during April
alone,” Ananta, the deputy commander of the Maoist army, told AFP.
Around 31,000 former guerrillas have been registered by the United
Nations in 28 camps around the country as a crucial part of a peace deal
reached late last year between the Maoists and the government.
But the former rebels have frequently complained that conditions in
the camps are dismal.
“Our comrades are living in miserable conditions. Generally, they are
housed in buildings that have thatched roofs and no cement walls,” said
Ananta, who goes by one name.
Rebel leader Prachanda said Tuesday that camp conditions were among
the reasons the Maoists announced a series of mass protests for later
this month.
“The PLA has to stay awake all night just to kill the snakes. These
are the kinds of conditions our army is facing, and the government is
not serious about improving the conditions,” he said.
Kathmandu, Thursday, AFP |