An international pariah
The human rights catastrophe in Nepal has been a decade in the making. Thousands of people have been killed. Hundreds of thousands have been uprooted. Women have been attacked and raped. Farmers walking home from their fields face bombs and ambushes. Children are abducted and forced to join the fighting. A population already living in dire poverty has been further impoverished by conflict, insecurity and bandhs. Critics of the regime have been locked up or killed or 'disappeared'. Over 1000 activists, lawyers, journalists and politicians were arrested for taking part in peaceful protests in January and February alone. Despite these draconian measures, the vitality and dynamism of Nepal's civil society and media have not been blunted.
A year ago, shortly after King Gyanendra imposed a state of emergency and cracked down on political activists, I visited Nepal to assess the situation in the country. I met with the king, who assured me that he would uphold human rights and address impunity. He has patently failed to do either.