Nepal | News
Page
of 9
  • Oct 15, 2009
    Press release

    The Nepal government has failed to conduct credible investigations and to prosecute those responsible for thousands of extrajudicial killings, torture, and enforced disappearances three years after the end of the country's decade-long armed conflict.

  • Oct 9, 2009
    Press release

    Governments in countries with caste systems should respond to the call from a top UN official to end this form of discrimination.

  • Jun 22, 2009
    Commentary

    Ganga Baral is among the first of thousands of Bhutanese refugees who will be arriving in the United States during the next several years. She and her family arrived this Spring in Phoenix from a refugee camp in the farthest eastern reaches of Nepal, a landlocked country known to Americans, if at all, as the location for Mount Everest.

  • Mar 9, 2009
    Press release

    The Maoist-led Nepali government should make accountability for human rights abuses before, during, and after the conflict in Nepal an urgent priority.

  • Jan 29, 2009
    Press release

    The Nepalese government should submit the draft Disappearances and Truth and Reconciliation bills to the Constituent Assembly for consideration to ensure transparency and public participation in the legislative process.

  • Dec 23, 2008
    Press release

    Nepalese authorities should promptly and impartially investigate and prosecute alleged ruling party activists responsible for an attack on journalists on December 21, 2008.

  • Nov 25, 2008
    Press release

    The government’s proposed bill to criminalize enforced “disappearances” and to provide for an independent high-level commission to investigate cases occurring during Nepal’s bloody civil war could be a step toward systematic impunity for human rights violations in Nepal.

  • Nov 18, 2008
    Press release

    The Nepali government should urgently address the widespread torture and ill-treatment of children in police custody.

  • Oct 3, 2008
    Press release

    Under a new law signed today by US President George W. Bush, leaders of military forces and armed groups who have recruited child soldiers may be arrested and prosecuted in the United States.

  • Sep 10, 2008
    Press release

    (Kathmandu, September 11, 2008) – The new Maoist-led government of Nepal should investigate and prosecute those responsible for thousands of extrajudicial killings, torture, and enforced disappearances during the country’s decade-long armed conflict, Human Rights Watch and Advocacy Forum said in a joint report released today.

Page
of 9