2007年VOA标准英语-Nepal's Peace Process Slowed by Caution, Mistru(在线收听

By Anjana Pasricha
New Delhi
03 March 2007

Nepal's government and former Maoist rebels have begun negotiations to induct the guerrillas in an interim administration. Anjana Pasricha has this report from New Delhi on how Nepal's peace process is faring.        

Nepal's Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala, left, and Maoist rebel leader Prachanda exchange signed peace accords in Katmandu, Nepal, Nov. 21, 2006
PM Girija Prasad Koirala, left, and Maoist rebel leader Prachanda exchange signed peace accords in Katmandu, 21 Nov 2006
Nepalese officials say Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala wants former Maoist rebels to join an interim government soon, but no time frame has been set. The comment followed a Friday meeting between the prime minister and rebel chief Prachanda to discuss the issue.  

The rebels were expected to be inducted into a transitional government soon after they were sworn in as lawmakers in January. 

But the process has been delayed.  Political analysts say there is concern that the rebels have not fulfilled all the commitments they made during peace negotiations.

The negotiations led the Maoists to abandon their decade-long insurgency and join the political mainstream.  As part of the deal, Maoist combatants have been housed in camps under United Nations supervision, and the weapons they surrendered have been locked in metal containers.

The United Nations says the Maoists have surrendered approximately 3,500 weapons, and have registered about 31,000 combatants.

But the head of Kathmandu's Samay magazine, Yuvaraj Ghimire, says there are worries that the number of arms placed by the rebels under U.N. supervision is too small. 

'When Maoist arms were registered by the United Nations team, the general impression here is it a gross understatement of the number of arms which they possess," he said.  "There is a fear that if Maoists will have arms which they have not registered, that will pose a threat to other political rivals and people who don't conform to what they want." 

Political observers say there are also concerns that the rebels have not yet returned all the land they had seized during their insurgency.

For their part, the rebels are unhappy with their slow integration into the transitional administration.  The administration is to conduct elections by June to choose a special assembly, which will then write a new constitution for the country.

Last month, Maoist chief Prachanda accused the government of seeking to delay elections, and said this could hurt the peace process.

Meanwhile, the government earlier this week appointed a committee to look at ways to nationalize the land and property of King Gyanendra and other members of the royal family.

The man appointed to head the committee is Gopal Man Shrestha.

Shreshta says the King will be asked to identify all his properties, and retain those he held prior to being crowned following his brother's death in 2001.

The king seized full political power in 2005, but a popular uprising against his rule last year forced him to reinstate parliament. The government later stripped him of all his powers, and the future of the monarchy will be decided when elections are held to write the new constitution.

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/3/37398.html