From Issue #310 (11 August 06 - 17 August 06) |
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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| Left to right: Home Minister Krishna Sitaula, Maoist
spokesperson Krishna B Mahara, member of Maoist talks team Deb Gurung, and
acting UN Resident Coordinator for Nepal Abraham Abraham at the handover of the
letter. |
Boots on the ground, it won’t be. But a civilian UN operation to monitor arms
and armies could begin in a matter of weeks, thanks to a joint invitation sent
on Wednesday to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan by Prime Minister Girija Prasad
Koirala and Maoist chairman Prachanda.
Annan announced in New York on Thursday that he was satisfied with the
invitation. Contained in separate but identical letters signed by Koirala and
Prachanda, the invitation is based on a five-point agreement asking the UN to
deploy qualified civilian personnel to monitor and verify confinement of
combatant armies and their weapons within designated cantonment areas. It also
asks that modalities for all arrangements, including of arms and munitions, be
worked out at a later date between the parties and the UN. The deal will confine
both the PLA and Nepal Army in their respective barracks.
It now falls upon Annan, who has been using his “good offices” channel to
nudge Nepal towards a peace settlement, to ask either the UN General Assembly or
Security Council for an expanded UN mandate, sealing the world body’s long-term
involvement. |
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