Extrajudicial killings continue in Nepal, reveals report

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kathmandu, March 13 There were several reports that the government or its agents committed arbitrary or unlawful killings, states annual
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices-2020, released by the US Department of State. On June 20, Nepal Police in Sarlahi killed a local
leader of Netra Bikram Chand (Biplav)-led Communist Party of Nepal
Police reported they shot Kumar Paudel after he fired at them
A preliminary investigation by the National Human Rights Commission suggested the death was suspicious and the human rights NGO, Advocacy
Forum-Nepal reported it as a staged encounter
As of September, no police personnel had been charged. According to the report, the August-2018 case of police killing two men suspected
in the kidnapping and death of an 11-year-old boy, Nishan Khadka in Bhaktapur remained unresolved
Human rights activists and local media said the suspects were already in police custody and that the police staged the encounter to justify
their killing
In August 2018, the Armed Police Force opened fire in Kanchanpur on a crowd that had gathered to demand justice after a 13-year-old girl,
Nirmala Panta, was raped and killed
The APF shooting resulted in the death of a 14-year-old boy and injury to 24 protestors
As of September 2019, eight police officers were suspended and two terminated based on the recommendation of the probe committee of the home
ministry on the APF shooting. The NHRC investigated the September-2018 death of Ram Manohar Yadav in police custody following his arrest a
week earlier during Free Madhesh Movement
Human rights activists claimed police tortured Yadav and failed to provide adequate medical attention after he fell ill
The MoHA denied the claims but admitted Yadav was taken to four different hospitals in search of an intensive care unit
In July the Home Ministry reached an agreement to compensate the victim family with Rs one million and the NHRC closed the case, but no
police personnel were punished. The High-Level Enquiry Commission, formed to investigate allegations of excessive use of force by Nepal
Police and APF, completed its probe in more than 3,000 complaints, received in 2017 related to protests over the promulgation of the
constitution in 2015
The 2015 protests left 45 individuals dead, including nine police officers
The HLEC was disbanded after it completed its report, but the government had not made the report public by the year end. The report said the
condition of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment was bleak
The constitution prohibits torture, and the criminal code criminalises torture and enumerates punishment for torture
The Torture Compensation Act has provision for compensation to the victims of torture. Citing human rights activists and legal experts, the
report stated that police resorted to severe abuse, primarily beatings and forced confessions
Advocacy Forum-Nepal reported no evidence of major changes in police abuse trends across the country, but AFN stated that police
increasingly complied with the courts& demand for preliminary medical checks of detainees. Both AFN and Tarai Human Rights Defenders
Alliance stated that torture victims were often hesitant to file complaints due to police intimidation and fear of retribution. The post
Extrajudicial killings continue in Nepal, reveals report appeared first on The Himalayan Times.