Daily News logo Newsletter logo   Search News    

UN Rights Office Again Deplores Excessive Use of Police Force

  Share This Story

United Nations human rights officials have called on the Nepalese Government to end its "deplorable" excessive use of force against demonstrators, including severe beatings, indiscriminate attacks on bystanders, some of them women and children, and "seriously unacceptable" detention conditions.

"It is time for the Government, and for all commanders of police and other security forces involved in policing demonstrations, to recognise that this level of violence against civilians is not acceptable and is against the obligations of the State," the Nepal representative of the Office of the UH High Commissioner for Human Rights (<"http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/424e6fc8b8e55fa6802566b0004083d9/18bf54bb3bde0ee4c125714d0048a28b?OpenDocument">OHCHR), Ian Martin, said, also citing violent provocation by demonstrators.

"I urge the Government to reconsider its position on the right to peaceful assembly, and to give the security forces the clearest instructions to act only with the minimum necessary force in policing demonstrations," he added in the second such statement in four days on the protests against King Gyanendra's suspension of parliamentary rule.

"And I urge demonstrators and demonstration leaders to only use peaceful means of protest," he said, noting that security forces had sometimes shown restraint in the face of provocation and violence by demonstrators throwing rocks and bricks, destroying public property and attacking individual officers, resulting in many injuries.

"OHCHR-Nepal does not condone in any way acts of violence committed by some demonstrators."

In Kathmandu, the capital, OHCHR monitoring teams have increasingly observed police using excessive force, including firing rubber bullets, long baton charges often aiming at the head and sometimes causing serious injury, and attacks on peaceful assemblies.

Police have also beaten people after they have been brought under control and when
attacking bystanders, charging into houses, engaging in indiscriminate beatings and causing gratuitous damage to property, according to the OHCHR.

OHCHR-Nepal noted that its earlier statement had already voiced grave concern at shooting by a soldier from the top of a building into a crowd of demonstrators throwing stones at police in the town of Pokhara last Saturday, killing one person and injuring at least one other. Two others were reported to have died after being shot by security forces on the same day.

Citing police figures that 2,300 people had been arrested, of whom over 1,300 remained in detention, the Office said conditions "are seriously unacceptable, due to overcrowding, lack of provision for decent food and clean water, and inadequate toilet and washing facilities.

"Medical visits are infrequent and arrangements for taking those in need of medical care to hospital are delayed, which is of increased concern in a context where many of those detained have been severely beaten in the course of arrest," it added.

Source: United Nations News Centre


 
Support Wikipedia

NeswBlaze top writers

Find more stories recommended by Stumbleupon.

newsletter logo

What's Hot?
1 .Relationships At Work, The True Key for Success - 39
2 .Supermodel Bar Refaeli Adorns the Cover of the 2009 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue on Newsstands Today! - 36
3 .Waterless 'Air Cooler PLUS' Beats Summer's Heat Without Making Your Home Muggy - 13
4 .The Ill Effects of Chewing Gum - 9
5 .Very Young Girls Movie Review: Sex, Class and Ho Daddies - 9
6 .How Kids Can Succeed In Hollywood - 12
7 .Latest Developments in Mickey Shunick Case: Suspicious White Pickup Truck! - 10
8 .These 10 Comfortable Walking Shoes Are a Step in the Right Direction - 9
9 .Kalio Enables Consumers to 'Touch' Products with New KalioTablet Extension for iPad and Android - 10
10 .Access to Low-Cost Energy Vital to Eradicate Extreme Poverty - 7
Updated: 5:59 PDT     1437

NewsBlaze Editors

editors

NewsBlaze Writers

news writer images

Writers Wanted

Help NewsBlaze provide daily news, including top stories, Home and Garden, Technology, The Environment and more. NewsBlaze Writer

Follow NewsBlaze

NewsBlaze Social Media Logos NewsBlaze Facebook NewsBlaze LinkedIn NewsBlaze Twitter NewsBlaze YouTube NewsBlaze MySpace NewsBlaze Fan Page NewsBlaze StumbleUpon NewsBlaze Political Cartoons NewsBlaze Editorial Cartoons
NewsBlaze 
Copyright © 2004-2012 NewsBlaze LLC
Use of this website is subject to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy  | DMCA Notice |         Press Room