Kathmandu, June 6, 2002—In a press conference today, a delegation
from the Committee to Protect Journalists announced that it had met with
Nepalese prime minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and Information Minister Jaya
Prakash Gupta to raise concerns about press freedom abuses that have occurred
since the government declared a state of emergency in November 2001. The
CPJ team specifically brought up the illegal detention of journalists
and the alleged torture by authorities.
Deuba told the CPJ delegation that, "We have instructed the army and the
police not to violate human rights," and added, "democracy can only be
saved in a democratic way." He pledged to look into cases where abuses
have occurred.
CPJ also urged the government, which has been fighting Maoist rebels in
a brutal civil war since 1996, to facilitate media access to conflict
areas and to schedule weekly military briefings to keep journalists better
informed about the fighting. Deuba and Gupta both agreed that it was important
to improve the flow of communication between the security forces and the
media.
At a crossroads
"Nepal is at a crossroads," said Pulitzer Prizewinning reporter Josh
Friedman, a member of CPJ's executive committee. "The press here has made
great strides in just 12 years of freedom but remains extremely vulnerable
to pressure from the state."
Friedman was accompanied by Kavita Menon, CPJ's Asia program coordinator.
Together, the CPJ team has spent two weeks in Nepal, interviewing dozens
of journalists, human rights activists, and government officials to identify
the challenges facing the Nepalese press.
During the last six months, local human rights and press freedom groups
have reported the arrests of more than 100 journalists. CPJ representatives
met with many of the journalists who had been detained and discovered
that the majority of arrests were carried out illegally, and that there
appeared to be a pattern of abuse.
The journalists' arrests have created a climate of fear, and self-censorship
is widespread. Journalists described being literally abducted by security
forces and held incommunicado, without charge.
In numerous interviews, journalists also told CPJ that the army's lack
of transparency has made it virtually impossible to get accurate information
about the military offensive and complained that casualty figures provided
by the Defense Ministry were often unreliable.
Background
After Maoist rebels stepped up violent attacks last fall, the Nepalese
government declared a state of emergency on November 26, 2001. Many civil
liberties, including press freedom, were suspended. Under the emergency
regulations, anyone suspected of supporting the Maoist rebels can be charged
as a terrorist.
On May 22, 2002, King Gyanendra dissolved Parliament on the recommendation
of the prime minister, who faced a possible losing vote on his bid for
a six-month extension of the state of emergency. Fresh parliamentary elections
are scheduled for mid-November. The emergency was reimposed days later,
on May 27, when the king approved the prime minister's request for three
more months of emergency rule.
CPJ will release a full report on press conditions in Nepal at a later
date.

|