| Me |
Posted
on 22-Mar-02 09:45 AM
I don't understand politics that well and I do not pretend to understand the plight of the people in Nepal which drove them to become Maoists. Whatever they are doing, they are doing it for a cause they believe in, which might not necessarily be a good cause, but I don't believe they became Maoists just to terrorize other people. Some definitely have killed for their belief and I am sure some are there just because they believe in Maoism. So my question is what rights do the Police and Army have to shoot and kill whoever they think is a Maoist? How will they even know if one is and ever did any harm?? They are after all the citizens of Nepal, like the rest of us and must be protected and done justice upon according to Nepali law. I do not think it is ok for anyone to be murdered just because they think some system might give them a better life than the one they are forced to live with now. Just today there was news that said "Five gangsters killed". The police, it says, gave no reason why, the identities of the people murdered were not revealed. Maybe the people murdered were bad, but who gave the police any right to decide that the five people deserved the death penalty without any trial??? This is injustice, pure. I don't believe the Police and the Army should be given the license to kill the very citizens they had sworn to protect. Maoists and gangsters should be brought to justice, but killing them is no justice.
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| Reply1 |
Posted
on 22-Mar-02 10:47 AM
Well, my dear Me, you came to a wrong place to pledge justice for Maoists. Most people in this board believe that Maoists are not sojha-sajha Nepalese. They are those cruel mutant beasts whose sole purpose is to terrorize and kill sojha-sajha Nepalese. They are killer robots. They are supported and trained by unidentified foreign terrorists to destabilize Nepal. And so on. Did you read today’s news about Kanchha Dangol in Kantipur ? Be sure, nobody is going to talk about it in this board. Most of us would like to believe that it is just an isolated case, an exception, an unavoidable error that happens during a situation like a state emergency. Some of us even might believe that Kanchha Dangol got his justice served. Life is like that here, dear Me.
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