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Media attacks continue in Nepal
Journalists and media support staff are increasingly feeling insecure in a country where lawlessness appears to be spreading. On June 15, a van carrying journalists to [[Nepalgunj]] in midwestern Nepal was attacked. Kiran Nepal, editor of fortnightly Himal along with reporters Ramehswar Bohara and Indra Shrestha were travelling in the van with Ramji Dahal, Secretary of [[Federation of Nepalese Journalists]]. The same day, a van belonging to Kantipur daily, Nepal’s largest circulation newspaper was attacked and its windscreen damaged. Journalists linked to the Kantipur daily were also attacked, apparently for a front page report that was seen as being against the Maoists. Those carrying out the attacks have also demanded that shopkeepers and home owners remove billboards advertising Kantipur. The [[Unified Communist Party of Nepal]] (Maoist) is behind calls for a Kathmandu Valley-wide strike in protest of the death of one of its members.
Nagarik and its sister publication in English, Republica , reported that the Maoist, Rajendra Phuyal, whose death led them to call a strike on 17 June, has taken his own life. Ever since the Maoist government stepped down a month ago, following a row with its coalition partners regarding the sacking of an army chief, Maoists have been staging strikes that have crippled the country. In the early hours of Saturday 6 June protesters stopped a van carrying copies of The Kathmandu Post and Kantipur daily, set fire to it and destroyed 7,000 copies of the newspapers. On the same day, a motorcycle belonging to Avenues Channel was set on fire. Rajesh Baral, the cameraman of the channel was assaulted. In the post-civil war chaos that is Nepal, the media has become the first casualty. |
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In another incident the next day, copies of the