New York, September 1, 2004The Committee to Protect
Journalists deplores today's attacks on newspaper and television offices
in Nepal's capital, Kathmandu, during violent protests that followed the
slayings of 12 Nepalese contract workers by militants in Iraq.
At mid-day, crowds set fire to vans and motorcycles and wrecked equipment
inside the premises of English-language Kantipur Publications and the
affiliated Kantipur Television, according to another affiliate, Kantipur
Online. Mobs also destroyed vehicles, cameras and computers at the
offices of Space Time Network and Channel Nepal, according to local journalists.
Protesters accused the government of not doing enough to secure the release
of the 12 workers, who had been held hostage for nearly two weeks, according
to international news reports. Some shouted for revenge as they attacked
sites connected to Muslims, who constitute about 4 percent of Nepal's
population.
Kantipur Online reported that police ignored the news agency's
repeated calls for assistance. A source at Kantipur Publications told
CPJ that several journalists there were injured, and speculated the attack
was related to its reports defending the Nepalese Muslim minority.
At Channel Nepal, a CPJ source suggested the group might have targeted
the news offices because the channel's owner, Jamim Shah, is Muslim.
"CPJ condemns the violent and unprovoked attack on news agencies in Kathmandu,"
CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "We call on authorities to ensure
the protection of news facilities and journalists at this volatile moment."
Demanding revenge for the killings, thousands of demonstrators also attacked
the capital's only mosque today, breaking windows and setting fire to
carpets. One protester died as a result of wounds received during the
rioting, according to international news reports.
The violence came a day after a video was released showing Iraqi militants
slitting the neck of one Nepalese worker and shooting 11 others. The 12
contract workers disappeared soon after entering Iraq from Jordan on Aug.
19.
A curfew has been imposed on the city, and Prime Minister Sher Bahadur
Deuba has called for restraint as the nation mourns the murdered Nepalis.

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