Nepali Times
Nation
Peep-eye


JB PUN MAGAR in PALPA



JB PUN

The Maoists say their 'People's Liberation Army' (PLA) is 35,000-strong. Why, then, did the UN team, led by General Jan Erik Wilhelmsen, see barely 200 soldiers at each of the proposed cantonment sites in Kailali, Surkhet, Rolpa, Palpa, Kabhre, Sindhuli, and Ilam?

In Palpa (pictured), there were supposed to be 7,000 Maoist fighters. When just a couple of hundred showed up, the explanation was that the rest were on home leave, all 6,000-plus of them. In Dahban in Rolpa, district commissar Hemant Prakash Wali said he had 8,000 soldiers under his command but again, the team met with only about 150.

Across the country, there are reports of a massive new recruitment drive in a bid to show more numbers for the arms management process. Poor, unemployed civilians-many of them school students-are being asked to join the PLA and attend training in exchange for a month's salary of Rs 10,000 in Rupandehi and Rs 7,000 in Ilam.

Where are the remaining 33,000 fighters, and who will be in the camps is anyone's guess. The commanders, Baburam Bhattarai, and Pushpa Kamal Dahal say they won't join the government, and will focus instead on different aspects of the peace and arms management processes.



MOST POPULAR
• Who says Nepal is divided?, NEW!
• Kathmandu Spring, NEW!
• Identity crisis
• Truths, half-truths and damn lies
• In the name of the father, NEW!

ADVERTISEMENT



Help Nepal

Tickets 2 Nepal


More ways to connect

Follow us on Twitter

LATEST ISSUE
591
(10 FEB 2012 - 16 FEB 2012)

SPECIAL
Travel Nepal

himalkhabar.com            Wave            

NEPALI TIMES IS A PUBLICATION OF HIMALMEDIA PRIVATE LIMITED | ABOUT US | ADVERTISE | SUBSCRIPTION | TERMS OF USE | CONTACT