New York, March 20, 2000 --- Jagdish Bhattarai, editor of
the Nepali-language weekly Nava Janachetana ("New Public Conscience"),
was released yesterday from Palpa Jail, where he had served one week
after being found guilty of contempt of court.
The charge stemmed from an editorial about corruption in the local
judiciary, headlined "Saviors of Justice Corrupt," that appeared in
the January 11, 1999, edition of Nava Janachetana. The Palpa
District Court initiated contempt proceedings against Bhattarai on
January 16, and delivered the guilty verdict on August 12. Judge Raghu
Nath Aryal sentenced Bhattarai to seven days in prison and ordered
him to pay a fine of 500 rupees (US$7). The court told Bhattarai that
the sentence would be waived if he published an apology within six
months.
Bhattarai stood by his story and refused to publish an apology. The
court had notified the journalist, who is also Palpa district correspondent
for the English-language daily Kathmandu Post and its sister
paper, the Nepali-language Kantipur Daily, that he could be
arrested after February 10, 2000. On March 12, Bhattarai turned himself
in at Palpa Jail to serve his sentence.
"No journalist should spend even one day in prison for what he or
she writes," said Kavita Menon, CPJ's Asia Program Coordinator. "The
court's ability to imprison a journalist on contempt grounds is a
legacy of British colonial rule, and has no place in a democratic
system in which government organs must accept public scrutiny and
criticism."
Upon his release, Bhattarai addressed a Palpa meeting called by the
Nepal Journalists Federation. "I hope my jail term will further embolden
journalists to use their pens against the distortions existing in
our society," he said, according to the Kathmandu Post.
END