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Posts Tagged ‘Nepal’

Nepal probes elephant ‘attacks’

By Joanna Jolly
BBC News, Kathmandu

Indian elephants

Nepalese officials are visiting an area in the far east of the country to investigate attacks by elephants migrating from neighbouring India.

More than 200 elephants are believed to have entered the region and have been blamed for destroying crops and killing villagers in border villages.

With the onset of the annual monsoon, herds of wild elephants have crossed into Nepal from the forests of India.

They are following traditional migratory routes.

The routes lead them to rich paddy fields and fruit trees that lie over the border.

The Nepalese government decided to send a team to the area after local villagers reported that crops were being destroyed and, in some cases, people killed by rampaging elephants.

After Nepalis began shooting at the animals, the situation threatened to turn into an international incident.

Last week the chief minister of the Indian state of West Bengal – which shares a border with Nepal – described the shooting as a crime.

The Nepalese government say they will now pay compensation to villagers who have lost family members or been injured in attacks.

A government official said he hoped these measure would help local Nepalis cope better with the annual migration of elephants to this area. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Gorkhas stall NHPC project in Darjeeling

Demanding separate state for gurkhas, the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM), called a halt to project work of the National Hydroelectric power Corporation (NHPC) at Kalijhora in West Bengal’’s Darjeeling District.
“We have called for this strike because this project is a central government project in Bengal. Through this strike, we want to pressurize not just the [...]

Nepal to save royal massacre home

Former King Gyanendra

The Nepalese government will restore the house in which King Birendra and his family were gunned down eight years ago, PM Madhav Kumar Nepal has said.

The king, Queen Aishwarya and seven others were killed at a family dinner by a drunk Crown Prince Dipendra who later turned the gun on himself.

He is believed to have been angry about a failed arms deal and his family’s rejection of his chosen bride.

After the king’s brother took power, he ordered the demolition of the house.

Only a small brick wall of the Tribhuvan Sadan, where the massacre took place, remains.

An official inquiry into the killings later concluded what was widely reported at the time – that the crown prince was responsible.

King Gyanendra, who succeeded to the throne after the massacre, was ousted from his royal seat in 2008 after the monarchy was abolished.

Absolute power

"The Tribhuvan Sadan must be rebuilt. It will be restored to its old position," Nepal’s prime minister said on state-run Nepal Television late on Wednesday.

Prince Dipendra

He had earlier visited the pink pagoda-roofed palace that was turned into a museum after the monarchy was abolished last year.

Correspondents say that the he massacre was a turning point in Nepal’s history, leading to Gyanendra’s decision to give himself absolute power in 2005.

But his direct rule was met with street protests the following year, bringing the Maoists – who had been waging a civil war against the monarchy since 1996 – into the political mainstream.

The former rebels won a surprise election victory last year and speedily abolished the 239-year-old monarchy.

In May, they resigned from the government after President Ram Baran Yadav refused to back their decision to sack the country’s army chief, plunging Nepal into a new round of political uncertainty.

Speaking to the Singapore-based New Paper in March, former Crown Prince Paras Shah said that Prince Dipendra had three reasons for wanting to kill his own father.

The first was because he was angry that his father was blocking an arms deal from which he hoped to get a cut, the second was his unhappiness at the decision of King Birendra to end absolute monarchy and the third was his family’s veto of his wish to marry Devyani Rana – who they considered to be unsuitable for him. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bangladesh favours reopening rail link with India: Sheikh Hasina

Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has expressed her government’’s interest in reopening a rail link between Bangladesh and India to establish stronger connectivity between the two neighbouring countries in the fields of trade, investment and people-to-people contacts.
The railway link was severed following 1965 India-Pakistan war and has been non-operational since then.
She conveyed this at [...]

Eclipse casts shadow across Asia

The eclipse was first sighted at dawn in eastern India near the town of Guahati before moving north and east to Nepal, Burma, Bangladesh, Bhutan and China
• Datablog: every eclipse until the year 2200

Tourists, astronomers and residents across a swath of Asia turned their eyes to the heavens today as the longest eclipse of the 21st century arrived.

Viewing for many was marred by heavy clouds and rain, but the drama of the total eclipse – as darkness swept a narrow path across the continent – was unmistakable.

Jiaxing in Zhejiang province, picked out by China’s National Astronomical Observatory as one of the best spots to view the phenomenon, was drenched by rain after days of fine weather. Forecasters had warned all eight of the selected sites could suffer bad weather.

Thousands of foreign tourists had come to the little-knownn city of 3.5 million inhabitants. They reportedly included a party from India who had feared monsoon rains might obscure their view at home.

Around a thousand gathered in a public square for an official ceremony to mark the occasion. There were cheers when a glimpse of sun briefly broke through the clouds, shortly before the eclipse was due to begin at 8.22.20.

Visitors grabbed their darkened glasses in anticipation, following reminders that viewing with the naked eye could damage their eyesight.

But they would have little chance to use them: shortly afterwards the heavens opened and torrential rain hit the six viewing spots across the city.

Said Jin Qinlong, director of the tourism administration, said it was the most popular event in the city.

Despite the stress of organising it, he added, he felt “a deep calm and peace” as darkness swept across the land.

The phenomenon began at dawn over the western coast of India, passing over Surat, Indore, Bhopal, Varanasi and Patna, Nasa said. It moved east across Nepal, Burma, Bangladesh and Bhutan and then along China’s Yangtze river valley, home to 300 million.

Thick cloud cover over India obscured the sun when the eclipse began but the clouds parted in several cities, minutes before the total eclipse took place at 6.24am.

In neighbouring Bangladesh, people came out in droves.

“It’s a rare moment, I never thought I would see this in my life,” said Abdullah Sayeed, a college student who traveled to Panchagarh town from the capital Dhaka to view it.

He said cars in the town needed to use headlights as “night darkness has fallen suddenly”.

One of the best views, shown live on several television channels, appeared to be in the Indian town of Varanasi, on the banks of the Ganges river, sacred to devout Hindus.

Thousands of Hindus took a dip in keeping with the ancient belief that bathing in the river at Varanasi, especially on special occasions, cleanses one’s sins. The eclipse was seen there for three minutes and 48 seconds.

From there it passed to southern Japan and across the Pacific Ocean, where it would reach its maximum length of six minutes and 29 seconds.

In Jiaxing, the sun began to slip behind the moon at 8.22.20 and reemerged completely 11.00.21, with total eclipse from 9.35.01 to 9.40.57.

According to Nasa, a total eclipse, when the moon passes between the earth and the sun, is only visible from a narrow strip – about 150km wide – of the Earth’s surface at any one time.

Humans have recorded eclipses for thousands of years, but they were often sources of fear rather than fascination. China’s cabinet – the state council – recognised their enduring power when it issued a directive urging local officials to ensure social stability during the event and urged academics and the media to explain the scientific principles behind it lest it caused blind panic.

Historic Chinese documents suggest that they are portents of change.

“There’s a long tradition in China’s past of the natural world and human world being interconnected so developments in one speak to the other,” said Professor Jeffrey Wasserstrom of the University of California.

“From 2,000 years ago or so, the imperial family was interested in any kind of astronomical knowledge that could help predict eclipses. It’s an early version of spin … if you knew in advance the heavens were displeased you could interpret that as being about bad officials who needed to be reprimanded as opposed to the dynasty being imperilled.

“To what extent anyone thinks in those terms now is another matter.”

On a more prosaic note, Chinese authorities in many towns turned on street lights and ordered all police officers to remain on duty, fearing traffic accidents and other problems.

Yan Jun, director of the National Astronomical Observatories, told the official People’s Daily newspaper that the abrupt blackout might inflict dangers on road transport, shipping, air travel and even medical services and other activities. He suggested telecommunications and power transmission might also be affected due to sudden changes in astronomic gravity and light intensity.

In Jiaxing, residents expressed disappointment at the low visibility but tourists appeared to be taking it in their stride. Pupils from Southend boys high school struck up a rousing chorus of their school song and a briefer rendition of It’s Raining Men as they huddled beneath umbrellas in the square.

“Unfortunately, everything’s eclipsed now,” said Dr Mahamarowi Omar, an amateur astronomer who had brought a tour group from Malaysia just to see the phenomenon.

“It’s something so great that humans should experience it. It’s not only science. We are Muslim and after this we will go and pray to God together. He has brought us the beautiful sky and earth and sun.”

There was still no sign of the sun when the rain cleared, but the sky was darkening second by second as the moon swept across its face somewhere behind the clouds. Grumbles and sighs of frustration turned to gasps.

Moments later Jiaxing enjoyed its second dawn of the day. This time, as the sky lightened, glimpses of an upside-down crescent of the sun could be caught through viewing glasses.

“There’s nothing greater than a solar eclipse,” said Sammy Grech, who had travelled all the way from Malta, where he heads the astronomical society.

“Except the rain,” he added thoughtfully.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Asia watches long solar eclipse

Total solar eclipse photographed in Egypt, 2006 (Darren Baskill)

Millions of people in Asia will see the longest total solar eclipse this century on Wednesday as swaths of India and China are plunged into darkness.

Scores of amateur stargazers and scientists will travel long distances for the eclipse, which will last for about five minutes.

The eclipse will first appear in the Gulf of Khambhat just north of Mumbai.

It will move east across India, Nepal, Burma, Bangladesh, Bhutan and China before hitting the Pacific.

The eclipse will cross some southern Japanese islands and will last be visible from land at Nikumaroro Island in the South Pacific nation of Kiribati.

Elsewhere, a partial eclipse will be visible across much of Asia.

The previous total eclipse, in August 2008, lasted two minutes and 27 seconds. This one will last six minutes and 39 seconds at its maximum point.

Alphonse Sterling, a Nasa astrophysicist who will be following the eclipse from China, scientists are hoping data from the eclipse will help explain solar flares and other structures of the sun and why they erupt.

"We’ll have to wait a few hundred years for another opportunity to observe a solar eclipse that lasts this long, so it’s a very special opportunity," Shao Zhenyi, an astronomer at the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory in China told the Associated Press news agency.


Will you be watching the eclipse You can send us your pictures and videos of the eclipse.

Send your pictures to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to +44 7725 100 100. If you have a large file you can upload here.

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Special flight provides lifetime experience to eclipse chasers

Around 30 astronomy enthusiasts boarded a chartered plane at the Indira Gandhi International Airport on Wednesday to chase the total solar eclipse up to Gaya above the clouds at a height of 41,000 feet
It was an initiative of travel agency Cox and Kings India, under the guidance of Eclipse Chasers Athenaeum (ECA), a wing [...]

Millions witness longest solar eclipse

People across the continent are preparing for a solar eclipse

Scientists, students and nature enthusiasts acrossn Asia were preparing for the longest total solar eclipse of the 21st century so far, while millions planned to shutter themselves indoors, giving in to superstitious myths about the phenomenon.

The eclipse was first sighted at dawn in eastern India near the town of Guahati before moving in a broad swath moving north and east to Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan and China.

Visible only in Asia it reached its peak in India at about 6:20 am local time (0050 GMT), and will last 6 minutes and 39 seconds at its maximum point.

It is the longest such eclipse since 11 July 1991, when a total eclipse lasting 6 minutes, 53 seconds was visible from Hawaii to South America. There will not be a longer eclipse than today’s until 2132.

The eclipse was seen for 3 minutes and 48 seconds in the eastern Indian village of Taregna, where scientists say residents would have the clearest view.

Over the past week, this village has been swamped by researchers who will study scientific phenomena ranging from the behaviour of birds and other animals to atmospheric changes affected by the eclipse.

Hotels in Patna were fully booked while taxis raised their rates sensing a brief opportunity in the sudden interest in the village. Scientists set up telescopes and other equipment in Taregna a day in advance to make the most of the window of opportunity provided by the eclipse.

“We are hoping to make some valuable observations on the formation of asteroids around the sun,” Pankaj Bhama, a scientist with India’s Science Popularization Association of Communicators and Educators, said.

A 10-member team of scientists from the Indian Institute of Astrophysics in Bangalore and the Indian air force would be flying and filming the eclipse as it becomes visible in different parts of the country, an air force press release said.

Thousands of people lined up outside a planetarium in Patna yesterday to buy solar viewing goggles. The goggles, costing 30p , are supposed to act as filters and allow people to look at the sun without damaging their eyes.

But millions across India were shunning the sight and planned to stay indoors, gripped by fearful myths.

Across India, even in regions where the eclipse was not visible, pregnant women were advised to stay indoors in curtained rooms over a belief that the sun’s invisible rays would harm the fetus and the baby would be born with disfigurements, birthmarks or a congenital defect.

Krati Jain, a software professional in New Delhi, said she planned to take a day off from work to avoid what she called “any ill effects of the eclipse on my baby.”

“My mother and aunts have called and told me stay in a darkened room with the curtains closed, lie in bed and chant prayers,” said Jain, 24, who is expecting her first child.

In the northern Indian state of Punjab, authorities ordered schools to begin an hour late to prevent children from venturing out and gazing at the sun. Others saw a business opportunity: one travel agency in India scheduled a charter flight to watch the eclipse by air, with seats facing the sun selling at a premium.

Additional police and paramilitary troops were posted around Patna and Taregna after Maoist rebels called for a strike Wednesday to protest increases in the price of gas and other essentials.

The rebels, who say they are inspired by Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong, often target police and government workers.

“Adequate numbers of forces have been deployed at Taregna where top scientists and researchers are gathering to view the celestial wonder,” said R Mallar Vizhi, a senior superintendent of police in Patna.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Liya Kebede: We Need a Global Fund for Moms

Each mother who dies leaves behind a devastated family and weakened community that will eventually, somehow, affect each of us.

Solar Eclipse on July 22 may be most viewed ever

The total solar eclipse passing over some of Earth’s most densely populated regions on Wednesday, July 22, 2009, may become the most viewed eclipse ever.
People across central India and in parts of Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Myanmar will briefly find themselves in daytime darkness before the solar eclipse proceeds into China.
Most of the best [...]

21st century’s longest eclipse

BANGKOK (AP) — Millions of people across Asia will witness the longest total solar eclipse that will happen this century, as vast swaths of India and China, the entire city of Shanghai and southern Japanese islands are plunged into darkness Wednesday for about five minutes.
Streams of amateur stargazers and scientists are traveling long distances to [...]

Laurence Leamer: Return to Shangri-La

When I flew into Kathmandu in a Royal Airlines DC-3 in September of 1964, the old plane wheezed its way across the mountains and into…

Nepal child soldiers being freed

File image of Nepal's Maoist rebels, January 2004

Nepal has begun the process of freeing thousands of child soldiers from camps holding former Maoist rebel fighters.

Officials visited one of the camps in southern Nepal to brief the young people ahead of their planned transfer to rehabilitation programmes.

The release of the child soldiers – estimated at about 3,000 – is a key part of Nepal’s peace process.

The UN welcomed the move as a "significant milestone" for the Himalayan nation.

Maoist rebels ended a 10-year armed insurgency in November 2006, signing a peace deal that brought them into the government.

They won the most votes in elections in 2008, but then left the government earlier this year in a row over their leader’s attempt to fire the army chief.

Training and support

About 24,000 former fighters have been confined to UN-monitored camps since the peace deal was agreed.

Of these, the UN has identified about 3,000 as being under the age of 18, as well as 1,000 as having joined the Maoists after the peace process began.

In a statement, the United Nations mission in Nepal said it welcomed the government’s move to begin the discharge and rehabilitation process for these two groups.

It said it was ready to provide support to the programme, and urged the Maoist leadership to work with the government to ensure it was successfully completed.

A spokesman for Nepal’s Ministry of Peace and Reconstruction said a team had begun meeting young former fighters at one of the camps.

The BBC’s Joanna Jolly, in Nepal, says the young people will be offered a rehabilitation package that includes vocational training and psychological support.

They will also be allowed to stay in specially-built transit camps for up to 45 days before returning home, our correspondent says.

The government says it wants all the child soldiers to be released by the beginning of November.

The question of what to do with the adult fighters – and whether to integrate them into the national army – remains a more difficult question and a key stumbling block in the peace process. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Michael Strong: The Most Progressive Movement on the Planet

What if we could apply the power of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship to the problem of poverty reduction?

Missing backpacker found alive

Jamie Neale survived by eating seeds and wild plants after becoming lost in Blue Mountains

A British backpacker has been found alive 12 days after going missing in the Australian bush, having apparently survived by eating seeds and wild plants.

Jamie Neale, 19, from Muswell Hill, north London, disappeared on 3 July when he left his hostel in the town of Katoomba, New South Wales, and went for a walk in the Blue Mountains.

He was found by two walkers about nine miles from where he disappeared. His father, Richard Cass, said Neale had eaten seeds and grass to stay alive. At night he slept by huddling up in his jacket and on one night sheltered under a log. Neale was taken to Katoomba’s Blue Mountains hospital suffering from exhaustion and dehydration.

“He did think he was going to die, he was that scared,” Cass said at a press conference after visiting his son. “He has come back from the dead.”

Cass flew to Australia to join the search but had given up hope that Neale would be found alive. He was told the news while preparing to leave Sydney on a flight today and after holding a “little closure ceremony” and lighting a candle in the park to say goodbye.

He said his son was “gaunt and scrawny” and had been losing hope he would be rescued as search helicopters failed to spot him waving at them. “He’s still a bit depressed, a bit dazed about what happened to him. He said he was losing faith in the idea there was a God every time the helicopter flew over and he was waving and shouting and nothing happened. He thought he was going to die.”

Cass said he had thought his son had “probably fallen off a cliff” and he would get a talking-to about the trouble he had caused.

“When I’ve seen the mistake after mistake he’s made – I can’t say I’d kill him because it would just spoil the point of him being back. [But] I’m going to kick his arse ‑ the millions that have been spent on this search, the man hours and woman hours that have gone into it … all because he goes out on a walk without his mobile phone. The only teenager in the world who goes on a 10-mile hike and leaves his mobile phone behind.”

Officials said Neale was found near the Narrow Neck fire trail. Narrow Neck, south-west of Katoomba, is around 1,000m above sea level and surrounded by forested hills. Night temperatures in the area over recent days have been close to or below freezing.

Cass said his son survived by foraging in the bush. “He was eating seeds. He ate some sort of weed which was like rocket, as he described, a kind of lettuce,” he said. “What he was saying was he would go up on a height and see where the cliffs were and where he had to go, but as soon as he went down he couldn’t see where he was.”

A hospital spokeswoman said Neale was in a stable condition.

Neale went to Australia on 22 June as the first stop on a trip that was due to include Laos, Vietnam and Nepal. He was due back in the UK in September before starting a government and politics degree at Exeter University in October.

He checked into a youth hostel in Katoomba on Thursday 2 July and was last seen about 9.40am the next day.

A check of his room at the hostel revealed he had not taken any of his belongings with him including his mobile phone and personal papers. He booked and paid for a tour of some nearby caves for the Saturday but never turned up. His bank and email accounts had not been touched since his disappearance.

A wide-ranging air and ground search carried out by police, fire, mountain rescue and the park service failed to find Neale, despite the use of dogs.

New South Wales police said in a statement: “About 11.30am today, two bushwalkers alerted emergency services to advise they had come across a man who identified himself as Jamie Neale near the Narrow Neck fire trail, near Katoomba. Police rescue officers, using a rural fire service vehicle, made their way to the location and confirmed the identity of the man.”

Police inspector Carl Clark described the terrain as “extremely rough”, saying dozens of searchers advanced no more than a mile or so on some days. “We always hoped it might be one of those miracle scenarios,” Clark told Sky News.

Two officers spoke to Neale briefly as they were taking him to the hospital.

“At this stage we have no evidence other than what we believe to have have happened, which is that he was genuinely lost,” police spokeswoman Joanne Elliott, said. “Once he is well enough police will be seeking to obtain a formal statement from him simply to clarify the circumstances.”

The Sydney Morning Herald quoted local radio as saying one of the bush walkers gave Neale first aid.

Neale’s mother, Jean Neale, told Sky News: “I never gave up hoping, I always knew he’d be coming home. He’s determined and if he sets his mind to something, he will do it.

“I told all the family and his friends that he was coming home and I had no doubts about that. That kept them strong and in turn that kept me strong.”

Her son had been tearful and exhausted when they spoke on the phone, she said. “I spoke to him in hospital and he said he didn’t think he’d ever see me again and he just wanted to hear my voice. I told him, ‘you don’t get rid of me that easily’.”

She said that as far as she knew he had simply become lost. The trip was the first time that he had been travelling, his mother said, after working as a lab technician to save for the journey.

Mrs Neale spoke to her son in hospital bed. “He said to me ‘All I wanted to do was hear your voice’,” she said. “He said that thinking of me helped him get through this ordeal.”

In 2006 an Australian teenager, David Iredale, died in another part of the Blue Mountains park near Mount Solitary after becoming separated from his friends during a bush walk.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Max Blumenthal: Feeling The Hate In Tel Aviv: The Sequel To The Censored Video

On May 27, journalist Jesse Rosenfeld and I set out on the streets of Tel Aviv to probe the political opinions of young local residents….

Rep. Steve Israel: Roll Back the Darkness in a Sustainable, Cost-Effective Way

One of the smartest foreign assistance initiatives the United States could undertake is to jump-start promising solar-powered efforts around the world.

Laurence Leamer: A Tale of Two Houses: Congress Debates the Peace Corps

Often debates in the House of Representatives are little more than ideological diatribes before a largely empty assembly. Thursday, the House was galvanized by a…