Headlines : Feb 10, 2012

Nepal peace process at 'serious point': UN

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This handout photograph shows United Nations' top political official B. Lynn Pascoe talking at a cantonment in Shakitkhor, 175km south of Kathmandu. (AFP/HO/UNMIN)

SHAKTIKHOR, NEPAL , MAR 11 -

Nepal's peace process is at a "very serious point", the United Nations' top political official said Thursday, urging party leaders to act on pledges made at the end of the war.

B. Lynn Pascoe said he was concerned that the peace process had stalled, three and a half years after the decade-long conflict between Maoist guerrillas and the state came to a close.

"We do see things at a very serious point here, the process is just not moving the way it should be," he told journalists after meeting Maoist army commanders at a cantonment, 175 kilometres (110 miles) south of Kathmandu.

"I'm here to see what we can do to push the process along by emphasising that it is very important to move and it's time to take action," said Pascoe, the UN under-secretary-general for political affairs.

More than 16,000 people were killed in Nepal's conflict, and Pascoe warned there was a "danger of moving backwards", pointing out that 50 percent of countries return to war within 10 years of a peace agreement being signed.

He called for action on the integration of more than 19,000 Maoist soldiers currently living in UN-monitored cantonments across the country into the regular army.

The integration is a key tenet of the peace agreement, but military leaders have repeatedly resisted the move.

Pascoe also stressed the importance of completing the country's new constitution, although he conceded that doing so by a May 28 deadline would be a "tall order".

Lawmakers began debating the constitution in 2008, when the first post-war elections were held and the country's 240-year-old Hindu monarchy was abolished.

But disagreements persist on such fundamental issues as the structure of the national government and the creation of federal states where none now exist.

Pascoe visited the Maoist cantonment after meeting political leaders including Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal and Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal, who goes by the nom de guerre Prachanda, on Wednesday.

On Friday he will hold talks with Chhatraman Singh Gurung, the head of the army, before returning to New York.

Posted on: 2010-03-11 09:21

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