Communism in Nepal

Rick
Rick
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There should be no doubt that communism is a Jewish program, just like Christianity and Islam…

Communism is Continuation of Christianity – Library of Rickandria

I’ve gone over in many articles how almost all of the leaders in communist regimes were Jewish, funded by Jews or very jew influenced. 

For more information visit:


Exposing Communist Criminals:


They all are Jews.


Communism in Nepal started in the form as a civil war, as it did in many other countries. 

The Nepali Civil War (labelled the People’s War by the Maoists, communists always try and make it seem like they are for the people. 

When in reality they do NOT care for the people only what they can gain by using them!) this was an armed conflict between government forces and Maoist rebels in Nepal which lasted from 1996 until 2006 [They say]. 

Both sides have been documented to have committed atrocities against the people of Nepal.

“We were stuck in between.

If the Maoists said to ‘give food’ and we refused, they were angry.

But if we helped the Maoists, the army was angry.”
 

This war started by the communists are responsible for grave human rights abuses, including unlawful killings, torture, and enforced disappearances.

They have documented at least 17,800 causalities, at least 1,300 people missing, and an estimated 100,000 to 150,000 people were internally displaced as a result of the conflict (They did the same thing in Russia, and in Cambodia, forcibly removing people from their homes).

Communism in Cambodia – Library of Rickandria

In November of 1990 the Communist Party of Nepal was formed, the new party adopted a line of 

“Protracted armed struggle on the route to a new democratic revolution.”

and that the party would remain an underground party.

In 1994 Communist Party Nepal was split in two, the militant faction later renamed itself the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist).

The Maoists labeled the government forces “feudal forces,” and this included the mainstream political parties.

The armed struggle began soon afterward with simultaneous attacks on remote police stations and district headquarters.

Controversy grew regarding the army not assisting the police during insurgent attacks in remote areas.

War was launched by the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) on February 13th, 1996, after being denied participation in a national election.

This situation changed dramatically in 2002 when the first session of peace talks failed, and the Maoists attacked an army barracks in Dang District in western Nepal.

Overnight, the army was unleashed against the insurgents, mobilizing both tanks and artillery.

The government responded to the rebellion by banning provocative statements about the monarchy, imprisoning journalists, and shutting down newspapers accused of siding with the insurgents. [It’s the same situation over and over]

Pushpa Kamal Dahal, also known as, Prachanda (Which means the fierce one) was a communist who pushed the war and was involved with the:


Communist Party of Nepal (Fourth Convention)

Communist Party of Nepal (Masal) (1983–1984)

Communist Party of Nepal (Mashal) (1984–1991)

Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre) (1991–1994)

Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) (1994–present)

The Maoist guerrilla leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal was basically created and funded by Rothschilds (Jews).

Rothschild Bloodline – Library of Rickandria

Prachanda was completely unsympathetic and showed no remorse about the deaths that his unfinished/failed revolution had caused.

Pushpa Kamal Dahal (Nepali: पुष्पकमल दाहाल; born Ghanashyam Dahal, 11 December 1954), alias Prachanda (Nepali: प्रचण्ड, pronounced [prʌˈt͡sʌɳɖʌ], meaning "fierce"), is a Nepalese politician currently serving as the Prime Minister of Nepal.[1] He previously held the prime ministerial post from 2008 to 2009 as the first prime minister of the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, and again from 2016 to 2017. Dahal was born in Lewade, Dhikur Pokhari, a VDC 20 KM north from Pokhara, and spent most of his childhood in Chitwan, where he received a diploma of science in agriculture from Institute of Agriculture and Animal Science (IAAS) in Rampur, Chitwan. He joined left-wing political parties after seeing severe poverty in his youth. In 1981, he joined the Communist Party of Nepal (Fourth Convention), and later became general secretary of the Communist Party of Nepal (Mashal) in 1989. This party later became the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). Dahal was the leader of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) during the country's civil war and subsequent peace process and the 1st Nepalese constituent assembly. In the 2008 elections, CPN(M) emerged as the largest party, and Dahal became Prime Minister in August of that year.[3] He resigned from the post on 4 May 2009, after his attempt to sack the then army chief, General Rookmangud Katawal, was opposed by then President Ram Baran Yadav. Dahal was sworn in as Prime Minister for the second time in 2016, as per an agreement to form a rotational government by Congress and CPN (Maoist Centre). He resigned from the post of Prime Minister on 24 May 2017.[6] Following the 2022 Nepalese general election, with an alliance with political parties including CPN (UML), Rastriya Swatantra Party and Rastriya Prajatantra Party, Dahal was sworn in as Prime Minister once again in 2022. 571 KB View full-size Download

He described meeting with the relatives of young policemen and soldiers his party had killed. 

He said he had told them:


“We are sorry, but this is a political process.”

Also, industrialists called a general strike in protest at Maoist “extortion,” but Prachanda describes the payments as “voluntary donations”.

Baburam Bhattarai was underground and a leading figure of the Nepal Communist Party (Maoist) that has been waging the people’s war.
 

Baburam Bhattarai (Nepali: बाबुराम भट्टराई, pronounced [ˈbaburam ˈbʱʌʈːʌrai̯]; born 18 June 1954), also known by his nom de guerre Laaldhwoj, is a Nepalese politician and former Prime Minister, who presently serves as leader of the Nepal Socialist Party. Bhattarai was a long-time leading member and deputy chairman of the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) prior to founding a new party, Naya Shakti Party, Nepal. He subsequently embraced democratic socialism. 2.17 MB View full-size Download

His younger brother, Gyanendra, a Communist, was part of a scandal to assassinate the royal family.

Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev (Nepali: ज्ञानेन्द्र वीर विक्रम शाह देव; born 7 July 1947) is a monarch who is the last King of Nepal, reigning from 2001 to 2008. As a child, he was briefly king from 1950 to 1951, when his grandfather, Tribhuvan, took political exile in India with the rest of his family. His second reign began after the 2001 Nepalese royal massacre. Gyanendra Shah is the first person in the history of Nepal to be king twice and the last king of the Shah dynasty of Nepal. Gyanendra's second hero reign was marked by constitutional turmoil. His brother King Birendra had established a constitutional monarchy in which he delegated policy to a representative government. The growing insurgency of the Nepalese Civil War during Gyanendra's reign interfered with the elections of representatives. After several delays in elections, Gyanendra suspended the constitution and assumed direct authority in February 2005, asserting that it would be a temporary measure to suppress the Maoist insurgency after civil governments had failed to do so. In the face of broad opposition, he restored the previous parliament in April 2006. He was deposed two years later by the first session of the Constituent Assembly, which declared the nation to be the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal and abolished the 240-year-old Shah dynasty. 346 KB View full-size Download

He was absent from the palace at the time of the massacre and of all those who stood between him and the throne.

Gyanendra became king after the massacre and the death of King Dipendra


Dipendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev (Nepali: दीपेन्द्र वीर विक्रम शाह देव; 27 June 1971 – 4 June 2001) was the King of Nepal for three days from 1 to 4 June 2001. For the duration of his three-day reign he was in a coma after he shot his father, King Birendra, his mother, Queen Aishwarya, his younger brother and sister, and other members of the royal family before turning the gun on himself in an event known as the Nepalese royal massacre. As the eldest of the three children of King Birendra and Queen Aishwarya, Dipendra was the crown prince. Under the Nepalese constitution, the privy council named Dipendra king upon the death of his father. Upon Dipendra's death, his paternal uncle Gyanendra became king. 4.43 MB View full-size Download

(Jewish media said he had shot himself)

Global Media Control – Library of Rickandria

Eyewitness Reports from the Hidden and the Forgotten


Rape victims from the Nepal Civil war share their stories


Researchers met with dozens of women, a few of whom described rape and sexual assault that occurred when they were still children, including one who was 12 years old at the time.

Maoist combatants raped women who stood up to them and refused to support their party’s activities.

In some cases, we documented, women were targeted if they were found alone; in other instances, male relatives were nearby and could not or did not intervene.

Nepal’s government has acknowledged that women suffered rape during these years.

Yet it has failed to deliver on its promise to end impunity for abusers, or to seek justice and reparations for victims of human rights violations.

These include victims of sexual violence who are excluded from the Interim Relief Program that compensates individuals whose family members were killed or disappeared during the war.

A few women also described horrifying physical attacks, often preceding the rape.

When Rekha resisted her attacker, a Maoist combatant, in 2003, he hit her so hard that the skin from her skull and forehead came off and hung “like a curtain” in front of her face.

She received 36 stitches.

Meena angered the Maoists because she refused to join their indoctrination programs.

She was abducted in April 2004 while gathering wood in the jungle.

She spent about four months with the Maoists, moving from place to place with them, and said she was repeatedly raped, including gang-raped, before she escaped.

“The first time I was raped was the day after my capture, in one of the goatherd huts.…Three of them came into the hut, and immediately one of them told me to take my clothes off.…

They all three took turns raping me. 

Afterwards, they told me that I’d be killed if I dared tell anyone…."

Villagers said that Maoists demanded food and shelter and provided very little opportunity to refuse.

The Maoists forcibly recruited people—including children—into combat.]

Some women and girls recruited by the Maoists, forcibly or willingly, reported rapes by Maoist.

During her time in captivity with the Maoists, Nirmala said she was raped several times. 

The first time she was raped was by a lake, in a hut set up by local goatherds. 

She described the first episode of sexual assault:


“I was raped by two Maoists that time.

I recall another two kept sentries outside the hut.

It was probably around 10 at night when three or four men entered the hut, I was in.

I was not asleep, just sitting there.

One of the men told me to take my clothes off, and they slapped me when I refused.

Then one of them grabbed my wrists and another one started to take my clothes off.

I don’t remember who raped me first, but they took turns—one holding me down by my hands on the floor, while the other one raped me.”

In 2012 the parliament was setting up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to investigate wartime killings, torture and forced disappearances and is debating proposals to grant an amnesty for abuses by government and rebel forces [That means murderers and rapists get away with their crimes].

For victims who dare to report being raped, Nepal’s criminal justice system also acts as a barrier by imposing a 35-day reporting limitation rule from the date of the rape.

Acknowledging that such a rule hampers access to justice, the Supreme Court of Nepal ordered the government to revise the rule, but there has been no progress to date.

After the so-called end of the war…

Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai, who also heads the Army Integration Special Committee, told the committee on April 10th, 2012, that the NA was going to move into all 15 PLA cantonments, take full control, and seize more than 3,000 weapons locked in containers lying there.

In the first phase (November 18th to December 1st, 2011) of regrouping, a deal provided three options to former PLA combatants – integration, voluntary retirement and rehabilitation.

9,705 combatants opted for integration, 7,286 chose voluntary discharge, and six combatants registered their names for rehabilitation packages.

Not to mention the rape victims who still suffer physical ailments from being raped, and nothing to help people deal with the psychological traumas.

As a result of the civil war, Nepal’s greatest source of foreign exchange, its tourism industry, suffered considerably.

iExplore, a travel company, published rankings of the popularity of tourist destinations, based on their sales, which indicated that Nepal had gone from being the tenth most popular destination among adventure travelers, to the twenty-seventh.

Adventure Tourism - Experiential Travel Guides | iExplore

The communist’s war destroyed the economy and left many people broken; this is what communism does.

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