| Username |
Post |
| MadMax |
Posted
on 25-Jan-03 10:12 PM
He was one of my favorite uncle... will miss him dearly. May his and aunt's soul rest in peace. Armed Police Force Chief shot dead KOL Report KATHMANDU, Jan 26 - Unidentified gunmen have shot dead the Inspector General of the Armed Police Force Krishna Mohan Shrestha along with his wife and a guard. According to sources, Shrestha was shot dead while on a morning walk at around 7 a.m. Sunday morning near Bhanimandal area of Lalitpur. The assailant also shot dead his wife and a body guard walking along with him. People living near the area said they had heard at least eight round of gunshot. It is not clear who carried out the attack but initial suspicion falls on the Maoists against whom the Armed Police Force has been deployed. (rk) DEATH TO THE TERRORISTS (MAOIST).
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| Vision |
Posted
on 25-Jan-03 11:31 PM
Madmax, First of all, I extend my condolences to you and your relatives. Please understand we share in your pain and sorrow with all due respect. Maoists have commited yet another barbaric crime. How long are we gonna continue to watch something like this happen? Perhaps, we all should pause for a moment to think how can we prevent from something like this happening again. I am just disgusted.
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| eyefusion |
Posted
on 25-Jan-03 11:37 PM
May he and his wife rest in peace. God bless nepal
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| love_bites |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 12:56 AM
Another shocking atrocities of maoist.
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| Kalanidhi |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 01:34 AM
Sad news..... Really sad :-( Kalanidhi UC Berkeley
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| Paschim |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 04:40 AM
Sincere condolence to the families and relatives of Mr and Mrs Shrestha, as well as their body guard, Mr. Regmi, who were shot dead this morning in Kathmandu. ---- In all likelihood, this was done by Maoist criminals. With yet another heinous addition to a litany of their crimes, they are sending a perverse political signal that, i) they are upping the ante, and ii) they will do so by low-cost-high-damage type of attacks (as opposed to investment-heavy raids on remote barracks). This is their most high profile case of individual murder to date. If I were the Home Minister today, I would have instinctively *considered* resigning on moral grounds. Of course, I suspect, neither the Raja who's running the show in Nepal (or is he?) nor his unelected nominee to Griha, Dharma Bahadur Thapa, will be showing anything more than some platitude over this tragic assassination of one of the country's top three security heads right in the capital. Punaha, Shrestha dwaya tatha shri Regmi ko haardik shraddhanjali.
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| SITARA |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 08:47 AM
Mad Max, sorry to hear such tragic news. I am in a state of shock....Mrs. Ngudup Shrestha was my colleague at L.S in Kathmandu. Gosh, she was one of the sweetest persons I ever worked with. May their soul rest in peace!
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| czar |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 10:45 AM
Condolences to the bereaved families. Max, my condolences to you. Sitara, a horrible way to lose a friend, please accept my sympathies. The Maoists have progressed to selective assassination now. This is psychological warfare and very sound tactics for them. With a few shots, they have further demoralized their enemies and reduced their effectiveness in battle. Chaos and fear are useful weapons. Several more such acts and the little administration that still exists will head towards collapse. It likely the cops will go on a rampage in their collective fear and anger, which will create yet more supporters and martyrs, albeit unwillingly, for the commies. The cops do not have much good will in the populace to start with and their actions hereon will reduce it yet more. One immediate affect is going to be a reduction in usable intel that is gathered due good will of the people. That will make a difference in the battlefield. Successive governing coteries and their ilk alienated the people a long time ago. I do not see the present lot doing anything to turn that around. Its not guns and bullets that will ultimately decided this war. The real battle is for hearts and minds, and the government has lost that one a long time ago. What’s left is the military conflict to lose as well.
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| najar |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 11:16 AM
What a disgusting action! Very sad news. My heartfelt condolence to the family and friends affected. May the deceased souls rest in peace.
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| vivid |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 11:50 AM
May the deceased souls rest in peace. Condolences to the bereaved family members.
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| tick |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 11:54 AM
Nepal has come to this stage. Every one, all parties sould unite to take care of the maobadi problem. Once the problem is resolved then they can fight their heads off on who gets the power...
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| chipledhunga |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 12:10 PM
MadMax, my sincere condolences to you as well as the Shrestha and Regmi families. May the departed souls lie in peace. I was totally shocked and disgusted as well as I read the news.
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| sadabichar |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 12:15 PM
It would be really nice for the Country if things would run as Tick above has been longing for. For yes there is a grand design prevailing as Girija claims... but this shit guy himself is one of the actors/participants of this Grand Design. Who took the responsibility of the vicious murder of IGP of armed police Force? No one yet claimed so far. This is totally an irony. Many killings occur these days in Nepal, Govt./Media tell us those are the deeds of Maoists... Maoists neither say Yes nor No. If they cannot display accountability by letting people know if they really did the killings (actions?) or not, how can we expect them to be accountable when they would gain the reign of the country? Man these guys are as well turning from The Good, The Bad.. to The Ugly. I learnt that there are so many gangsters in Nepal operating exactly as in Bihar/UP/Bengal these days and the various parties' leaders have connections with these gangsters. Just recently in broad daylight people were killed in front of Yak and Yeti Hotel in Durbar Marg (so close to Royal Palace) and no one was caught. It turned out the killing was carried out one of the leader of a gang, and this person is roaming freely as he has been supoorted by Girija. If Maoists not gonna claim for the responsibiity of this recent assasination, who is behind it. My first guess will be Girija!!!!! Like it or not.
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| Biswo |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 01:01 PM
First, my condolence to Chief Shrestha, SI Regmi and their family. Also to aggrieved Sitara and Madmax. I don't understand how chief Shrestha felt so sure about the safety of his morning constitutional. We are in a different time,and chief Shrestha should have been the first one to know this. This should also teach the monarch and his company a lesson: that they are now dealing with those people who are more barbarians than them. In the past, monarch and company relished in the fact they could railroad opposition members to jail, kill them in the name of transfering to another jail, and ignore protest and demands of thousands of people. Increasingly, it has been proven that the only language Gyanendra and company are capable to understand is violence because they don't understand the protests of armless innocent people. No wonder, they find it so easy to ignore the plea of people to restore the democracy, no wonder the trodded on the constitution and flattened it to suit their taste.
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| Robert Frost |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 01:22 PM
What a horrible act of barbaric violence. My sincere condolences to the family of the deceased Mr. and Mrs. Shrestha. May their soul rest in peace. I heard they have 3 daughters. Two of them being the twins. I got the news from one of my friend here and Mr. Shrestha was his mama. So he was looking very pale. I asked him what had hapenned and he told me the shocking news. Ha..re mero shanti chetra Nepal.
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| suva chintak |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 02:16 PM
May the soul of IGP Shrestha, his wife, and Mr. Regmi rest in peace! And my sympathies are with MadMax, Sitara and all the family and friends of IGP Shrestha. I didn't know him, but some of the people who knew him say he was a very fair and dedicated police officer. Last year the Maosits terrorists bombed his home in Chainpur to intimidate him. But he remained steadfast in his duty to the country, and yesterday he paid the ultimate price for fighting for our rights, democracy and country. The Maoists just proved again, if proof was neede any longer, that they are pure and simple evil. Folks who are basking in the prospect of a grand UML/NC/Maoist alliance should realize that marriages of convenience will prove very costly in the long run...don't we say 'Arkalai khane baghle afulai pani khancha'? I waiting to see if the Human Rights and Civil Society wallas will make any stink about this cold blooded murder...or do they only respond when the security forces are to be blamed?
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| Dr. No |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 02:32 PM
My condolences to the Shresthas and the family of policeman Regmi. The dastardly act of the Maoists should be an eye-opener to the rest of us that these Maoists really mean business and have upped the ante. We should nip them in the bud. The wrath of the nation should be unleashed to crush this menace to society.
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| deep |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 03:05 PM
Assuming Maoists were behind the attack on Mr. and Mrs. Shrestha and Mr. Regmi, I strongly condemn such disgusting act. My condolences to the family and friends of the victims. Even the chief of armed police was insecure in the valley then how are the people supposed to feel all over the kingdom? when I read a news such as this, I feel like there is no need to sit and talk with these butchers. Just shoot them down one by one lining them up in tudikhel or in rangasala. what the murderers are engaged is in no socio-economic or political justice struggle but in a rampant and cruel violence, which has nothing to do with the upliftment of the poor status of the majority of us, the Nepalis. Nepal is going thru a tough time. No leadership, a strong and definite, is visible. Even though, it may sound contradictory to what I have written above and what I really want but I seriously think the only way to wipe out the Maoists is to let them rule. They will be gone soon but the problems won't be solved. in fact, they will be more tangled. People who claimed to be leaders did not lead but destroyed the very principle of leading and now every one is pointing finger to others and the murderers are shooting us down one after another. Sad!
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| forget-me-not |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 03:15 PM
My heartfelt condolences to the family and friends.. I do agree with you deep...that so called moaists must be shot dead..aati bho aba ta...
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| 13-thum |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 03:54 PM
My sincere condolences to the family of Krishna Mohan dai, Bhauju and Sub. Ins. Regmi. May their soul rest in peace. I am shocked............ Is this the beginning of assasination series by Maoist? Where are we heading?
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| noname |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 05:05 PM
Hardik SHRADHANJALI ! **** And that so called home minister was busy portraying those terrorists otherwise. **** May lord help all the bereaved to overcome this trauma.
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| mack |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 05:54 PM
My Heart Felt condolence to the family, friends and relatives.
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| toilet paper |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 08:35 PM
I am not quite sure if it is really the Maoists or some other force that killed the IGP, his Wife and the Body Guard. It could be a grand design (as Girija likes to call) of someone. But still, if it is the maoists then, all maoists need to be killed. No second talk. You don't negotiate with criminals, you punish them. But I pray, the souls of the deceased rest in peace.
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| M.P. |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 09:26 PM
Condolences to the families and friends of Regmi and the Singh couple. I don't like the Maoists, except their republican agenda, but THIS could be the act of anyone--extreme rightists, extreme leftists, or some personal enemy of late Singh. As the power of dominating the sojha sajhaas switches slowly from the King to the Maos, as revealed by exponentially increasing abduction, rape, and murder, five things are worth dwelling into: 1) We have to wait for the three day celebration of Sahid diwas--when Radio Nepal presents a series of naataks based on Okhaldhunga incident-- to hear about the heinous crimes the Panches committed. The Panches did it secretly. The maoists do it openly. 2) The criminal should be punished even if it is a 2 year old from Sri Siddha Ne Ra Primary School in Arghakhanchi. The government should take the responsibility over what happened. If it can not protect its own servants, better not promise us too much. And I think life of the chief of Sasatra Police is important, even to me, than myself--a useless idiot talking big in the name of his country. 3) The fact that we do not have any account of embezzlement of funds by the Ranas and the Shahs does not make them innocent/clean. The palace needs a lot of money because it has to prove it is powerful and worthy of existing. And because it thinks the people are not humans. The leaders of the 'democratic' parties needed to take bribes perhaps because Nrs 12000 was not enough to maintain a descent living standard in Kathmandu. In a way, they did so because they were too lazy to drag their asses to their constituencies, their home. The Maoists need to loote banks, and raise money from poor farmers and businessmen because they think Mao will someday do miracles. Mao is the God to the Maoists, Gyanendra is the God to the Panches. How do they differ? Well, one group of doots commit crimes in open. Another group of doots do in secret. They basically do the same thing. 4) Rolpa-is-in-Mars attitude of Narayanhity and Simhadurbar should change. And that attitude would have changed by now if the Maoists did seven years ago what they are doing now--i.e. if they are behind the scene in this crime like in most cases. I do not mean to underestimate the suffering families of Singh and Regmi must be going through right now. But jaankaari bhayaa-- Rolpa is not in Mars, if some of us did not know already. Teraibasis are not Indians. Hinduism is not the only religion in Nepal. And Pravin Gurung has the right to live. If Krishna Sen deserved to die in jail, so does Gyanendra--both of them were going against democracy: Janadesh and Rastra Bachaau Abhiyaan were not much different! 5) My eye sight is 6/6, as of June 2001. If I am seeing too much conspiracy going on around, it's the doctors fault, not mine--just like the present turmoil is due to the fault of 12 years of quasi-democracy and not that of the 12 generation of Shah rule, as some people say.
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| M.P. |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 09:38 PM
Please read Singh as Shrestha.
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| Biswo |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 10:25 PM
While I strongly condemn the murder, there is one question I still find difficult to answer. How wrong are Maoists in this case?Of course, they are wrong, but how wrong? Who was the first one to break the 'unspoken' rule of non-political-assassination? Wasn't the announcement to pay hundreds of thousands of rupees to those who bring 'severed head of Maoists leaders in a bag' wrong? Or at least unconstitutional and provocative? Wasn't that the acquiescence of the politics of assassination from government level? Wasn't that a strategy adopted without any thought, and purely in hubris? It was obvious that the day RNA/APF guys get the Maoist leaders, they would execute them anyway, or at least wouldn't caress them with love, so what was the point behind the call to bring severed head? Now, we are definitely embarking on a dangerous path, path of political assassination of famous persons, a tool KTM's power wrestlers stopped using after 1903, except on 1942 BS when Bir Shamsher and brothers used it for only one day to kill Ranoddhip and progeny of Janga Bahadur Rana. Welcome to the time machine, folks!
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| mack |
Posted
on 26-Jan-03 10:46 PM
Present turmoil was destined to happen. Panchayat was destined to die sooner or later, thank god it finally did 12 years ago. In the similar manner, this is going to be the final episode of melodrama of the king as well. Beacuse the king or anyone CAN NOT rule me with out my permission, I am sure there are plenty of people who think in the similar manner. The monarchy is speeding towards the dead end in a full speed and the fate is obvious to everyone except to the one behind the wheel, cause the poor guy is dellusional.
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| VillageVoice |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 12:12 AM
My sincere and heartfelt condelences to the families and friends of the deceased. I came across a girl today who was heatbroken and I felt terrible myself all day. I knew Mr. Shrestha personally and he looked like a fine police officer himself. Hey, we don't yet know who's the killer. Let's not jump to conclusions. On a different note, I want to tell everybody: ours is a society whose standandards on security and tolerance is on a free fall. So let's help each other - everyone of us in our smalls ways - to tell each other that human lives do hold a very high value. It's sacred. Nothing justifies violence. Czar, quite liked what you wrote :) It's an all-out war out there. Let's not just blame Maoists, though, even if one one's to assume that they are the killers. The moment one sees the other side as inhuman, you close the doors for any meaningful dialogue. The world is not so black and white, I think. Look at the worsening situation in Iareal, for example. Who do you blame? "Many Israelies defend the killing of Palestinian children whose only crime was to throw rocks at armored patrols, while many Palestinians applaud the murder of Isreali children by suicide bombers ... We speak of those who fight only in the abstract; we strip them of their human qualities. It is a familiar linguistic corruption." -War is a Force That Gives us Meaning, Chris Hedges. (Public Affairs, New York, 2002.) Hedges is a New York Times veteran "who has been to the worst places and seen the worst things human beings can do. So when he tells you that war is an addiction that kills, when he tells you that patriotism is as dangerous when it is American as when it is anyone else's, when he tells you to wake up and pay attention to just how frightening the world actually is, you should listen." (Michael Ignatieff, Carr Professor of Human Rights Policy, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University).
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| as101 |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 12:52 AM
My heartfelt condolence to the Shrestha family and friends affected. May the deceased souls rest in peace. This is too much now, we all nepali need to be united and think deep about future of Nepal
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| Lalupate*Joban |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 12:52 AM
Revolutions achieved through genuine mass mobilization rock. Protracted civil wars suck.
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| Maahili |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 03:03 AM
My sincere and heartfelt condolences to Shrestha and Regmi families,their friends and relatives. This is really shocking. Atti bhayo aba ta yo maobaadi haru ko annyaya :(
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| Bahudaliya Panchayat |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 03:41 AM
But it is heard that Krishna Mohan is shot dead by two man and one woman in Army dress. They flew away in Army's vehicle in the south direction. This is done by neither Girija nor Maoists but either by Nepali Army or by other army.
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| rajunpl |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 04:30 AM
Condolences to the chief shrestha. Moreorless I am with the MP ji.The legend of nepal is remains only as conspiracy.You can see the killings in a broad daylight.You can see the peoples bribing right infront of your eyes.What's going on? IN PANCHAYAT atleast there was some degree of secrecy of killing ,looting,kidnapping but now its just like movies anywhere at anytime.The present king is the well known descendent of the rnans.KING G HAS A RANA'S BLOOD.He may think he could do the activities like junga bahadur but he wont. It is not like then when ranas use to employ 1500 straight neplese citizen in the singha durbar wihout a single rupees. Democray brought highest advantages for the govt. chiefs.MPs and minister.Once they got chance they will loot as much as they can its once-in-a-lifetime oppurtinuty for them.They can kill the people and set out freely to the killeres.They enter the weapon of distraction from bihar in the time of election to kill the nepalese citizen.They are not nepalese cos they are minister.King himself is not nepalese cos he is king. There is no safe for king, chiefs and the average citizen, then what is it? is it a civil war without an ambition?BABURAM BHATTARAI AND PRACHANDA are some sort of fool.They are in the shining path of mao invented by the marx.It was then not now world has reached too far away now.It was in the 18th century and the early 50's.Even in europe women were not allowed to vote in europe then.Now you can see the freedom let to women by the time.KING IS ANOTHER MAJOR FOOL.He think nepal is still in the stone age.Each citizen know about nepal better than the king g does. I think the policy of ranas were to opress the citizen as much as they can never let them up and rule them for ever.King g you are not like JBRANA when he came to england thewife and daughter kiss him and want in their heart for ever.He was great of all his seven brother and great of all the rulers.He brought some sort of modernisation in nepal.But king g you are better than next to none. GIRIJA is another major bug in nepalse history.He looted democracy he is the longest time PM after the democracy he use to be shoulder to shoulder with the king and the indian president but opress the nepalese citizen.He went to kenya but never learnt the way of lifeand same to the europe.He didn't want to change the RANA'S CULTURE.That is the biggest catastrophe in democracy. KILLINGS IS BECOMING THE NORMAL HAPPENINGS IN KTM. YOU NEVER KNOW WHO WILL BE THE NEXT.
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| DHUMBASSE (DUMBASS) |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 09:33 AM
My heartfelt condolences and sympathies to late Shrestha and Regmi families, and also to all beloved sajhaites who are affected by this heinous crime. May the departed souls rest in peace, and may lord Pashupati nath bring peace to all nepalese living in Nepal and abroad.
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| baadal |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 09:54 AM
my heartfelt condolences to the friends and family members. i remember nudup aunty as a gentle person.
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| whine and chij |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 12:59 PM
sc, >'I waiting to see if the Human Rights and Civil Society wallas will make any stink about this cold blooded murder...or do they only respond when the security forces are to be blamed?? well, if those wallahs (what's in YOUR wallah?!) think that the security forces are inhuman, then it would make sense not to waste time advocating rights they don't acknowledge in the first place.
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| suva chintak |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 01:36 PM
wc, If our fundamental assumption is that security forces are inhuman, so they do not have human rights. Fine, so be it. But the human rights wallahs could at least shed a tear or two for Mrs. Shrestha, she was not a security force member. Or is she also condemened into inhumanity by her marital association with the IGP? But then, she was a teacher...which is a even greater crime according to the righteous morality of the Maoists. I am a little suprised by the 'blame the victim' tone in some of the postings dedicated to the memory of the three dead, same way rape victims are often harassed by the public moralists and the judiciary (if you hadn't gone out that, you would have been fine; if you had not worn that kind of dress, etc etc). It is not as if the three were hit by an truck in an accident, or killed in a friendly fire. It was an intentional hit, people were planned for it, worked out the details, and then ambushed. It was only a matter of time, they could have done it in the temple, in the home, or in their vehicle. When ruthless people consciously, willingly murder someone, it is only a matter of time: whether you lock yourself in your room or walk in the streets. Who was that author who said something like: 'Do not ask for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee.' Some sought to give the benefit of the doubt to the Maoists and said they are not responsible for this heinous crime. The BBC report says a wounded Maoist attacker was caught hiding in a nearby house (cops followed the blood trail, literally) and this chap happens to be the local area commander. Hopefully IGP Shrestha's death will not go in vain, hopefully all the terrorists willl face the law they deserve. For peace and justice!
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| whine and chij |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 02:35 PM
sc, i wonder if the blame-the-victim guy blames himself when he cuts off his own nose to spite his face. food for thought for the condolence figleaf crowd.
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| Nepe |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 03:45 PM
My sincere condolences and sympathy to bereaved family and respect to souls of Shrestha dampati and Regmi. My sympathy to Madmax and Sitara for the shock they are in. I know what it feels like. I have been there. It's been years but feels like yesterday when one of my close friend told the news that his jwain, a police officer, popular among local people as well as among his jawans, got killed in a Maoist attack leaving his young wife and kids supportless. We had cried together. It was a profound experience for me. Because my friend did not blame Maoists. I think he could not do it because it would cheapen that tragedy for it was a real thing for him. We have every reason to call Maoists criminal. We have every reason to hate those who planned and executed this cold crime. But somehow I can not bring myself to play a game of blame. I can not stand somebody promoting their agenda using the blood of Shresthas and Regmi. Let us respect them, let us leave their souls in peace. Let us not cheapen this tragedy for it is real for some real people out there. It's time for reflection. It's no time for cheap gaalis. Because there have too many such tragedies already happened and many more are waiting to happen. Among these, there are many, hundreds in number, yes, hundreds in number, stories of such a dreadful nature and extent that you would never want to let your children know about. Imagine a teacher being skinned in front of children, women being raped in front of their family, several days of indescribable torture to death, a constant terror, helplessness and demoralization of otherwise proud men and women happening all the time. Some by Maoists, others by the security forces, some reached to the press, others to be known to everybody's horror after the war is over. One day history will judge everybody. Until then, let us not disgrace the solemn gravity of the victim's tragedies by dragging them to serve our individual interests. Shreshtha dwaya and Regmi bandhu, you will be remembered by pure hearts of Nepalese for long. May you rest in peace !
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| Suna |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 07:57 PM
Sitara, It was Ngudup Di?? Until I read your posting, I had no idea who it was! Yes, she was really a sweet sweet person. GOSH!
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| SITARA |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 08:03 PM
Suna, Yes! It was Ngudup Di....! When words are not enough.... I can't even express much!
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| gokul |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 08:48 PM
There is no revolution Only evolution. Unless we evolve, -Personally, collectively, We will only revolve Around the circle of ignorance and stupidity. Ignorance -not knowing we are our worst enemy. Ignorance -not knowing we are our best friend. Stupidity -where are Hitlers and Changej Khans? Stupidity - not knowing the recurrent theme Of follies, miseries and sorrows In the history of mankind. Evolution is a long and painful way. But it is the only way. Unless the words of Buddha We whisper, and see the impossibility of changing hearts Without compassion. We will be making mistakes In the name of revolution In the name of justice There will be thousand Marxs and Maos But there is only one Budhha For he already said what is there to be said. There is no revolution Only evolution.
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| Nepe |
Posted
on 27-Jan-03 11:09 PM
Gokul ji, Wow ! A profoundly prophetic poem. If there is the ultimate truth, then that must be it. Indeed there is no revolution, for it is only a part of the evolution. Truth is never a part. It is whole. There may be a resting time, but it is a part only; there may be even a devolution, but it is still a part only. The whole is evolution. The truth is evolution. The nature is evolution. Viva la evolution
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| Biswo |
Posted
on 28-Jan-03 12:38 AM
>There will be thousand Marxs and Maos >But there is only one Budhha >For he already said what is there to be said. Very well said, Gokulji.
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| utopian |
Posted
on 28-Jan-03 12:47 PM
Really sad to see IGP of Nepal killed by Maos (if it is true) and really scary too. If the person of such level does not have required security, what about rest of the country?? Another question that arise from this incident is, if maos can kill IGP, how come they HAVE NOT TOUCHED ANY OF THE CORRUPT POLITICIANS/FORMER MINISTERS??? Is it because they have been fed by them and not the IGP???? I wonder...
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