Wednesday, November 02, 2005

US Congress Writes To Secretary Rice

October 28, 2005

The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
Secretary
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20520

Dear Secretary Rice:

We, the undersigned Members of Congress, remain extremely concerned about the deteriorating political, economic, and democratic situation in Nepal.

As you implement your FY2006 foreign relations plan for Southeast Asia, we encourage you to convene and chair a high-level interagency group that could include the Secretaries of Commerce, Defense, Energy, and Treasury, the Attorney General, and the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development. Please invite other agencies to join this group as appropriate. The purpose of this high-level group would be to discuss, develop and implement a multi-pronged and multi-year strategy to address the grave situation in Nepal. This strategy could form the basis of collaboration with our allies and other interested nations, multilateral development banks, and chambers of commerce to reverse the tenuous situation in Nepal. We believe that a package that combines diplomatic intervention, economic development, and restoration of civil security is required to persuade King Gyanendra to embrace democratic governance, while addressing the crushing poverty and human privation the people of Nepal face.

We urge you to work with your counterparts in all interested nations, particularly Australia, China, the European Union, India, Japan, and the United Kingdom. We urge you to include the regional and multilateral development banks, international development organizations, and chambers of commerce in this activity. The goal would be to use multilateral action to persuade the King, the Maoists, and the people of Nepal to make permanent the cease-fire, restore multi-party democratic processes and institutions, and security to the entire Kingdom.

In February this year, Members of Congress corresponded with King Gyanendra of Nepal where we conveyed our deepest concerns that democratic processes had broken down in Nepal. While the Maoists have been extremely brutal in their activities and share responsibility for the deterioration of the political and civil situation in Nepal, they have declared a cease-fire in an attempt to settle a nine-year civil war. We believe the United States and other interested nations must encourage the King to resist provocations from the insurgents and show leadership by moving forward with the negotiations towards peace and multi-party democracy.

We are dismayed about press reports of excessive use of force by Royal Nepalese Army and police forces and the arrest of over 400 activists and teachers who have engaged in peaceful protests. The recent restriction on the media and confiscation of broadcast equipment causes us further concern. Peaceful gatherings and demonstrations, and freedom of the press are hallmarks of democracy. These freedoms must be protected.

Recent articles in the October issue of Foreign Affairs (Preview or full text in HRW site) and the November 2005 issue of the National Geographic summarize the situation that Nepal faces. They compels us to request that the United States work with its allies to ensure that all avenues are pursued to resolve this situation before it worsens.

We look forward to hearing from you regarding the development and implementation of this strategy.

Sincerely,
James T. Walsh (R-New York)
Bob Filner (D-California)
Mark Kirk (R-Illinois)
Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts)
Mark Udall (D-Colorado)
Joseph Pitts (R-Pennsylvania)
Chris Smith (R-New Jersey)

cc:Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman
Secretary of Treasury John Snow
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales
Administrator Andrew Natsios



Monday, October 31, 2005

Krishna Pahadi November 6 Sunday 5 PM



What? Public meeting with Krishna Pahadi.
Where? Satya Narayan Temple, 75-15 Woodside Avenue, Elmhurst, NY 11373.
When? Novemeber 6th, 2005, Sunday, 5:00 pm

From: _______
Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2005 12:50:40 EDT
Subject: Krishna Pahadi to visit US
To: _______

Hello friends from Dinesh's tour,

Sorry for the group email, and also sorry if I didn't include everyone I should have! As some of you have already heard, Krishna Pahadi, chairman of the Human Rights and Peace Society, will be visiting the US starting Nov. 6 for about 10 days. Amnesty USA has invited him to be keynote speaker for AIUSA's Northeast regional meeting in Boston Nov. 12, and he will also visit NY and DC. Schedule will approximately be: New York Nov. 7- 9, Boston Nov. 10- 12, Washington Nov. 13- 16

(DC dates might possibly change).

During Krishna's time here, he will be doing a combination of public talks, meetings with govt people, media, and NGOs. Boston public talks are already being organized. Krishna has already been in touch with Nepalis he knows in NY and DC about possible events in those cities. The NY and DC Amnesty offices will be helping, and there are some local Amnesty groups who are very interested. It would be good if we can all be coordinated about possible events. Especially NY and DC people, please let me know if you are interested in helping or organizing something, or if you know of plans already being talked about.

Many thanks,
_______

Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2005 23:16:33 +0530
From: "Dinesh Prasain"
To: _______
Subject: Re: Krishna Pahadi to visit US
CC: __________

I think it would be great to organize a coordinated public speaking events for Krishna Pahadi. We were together for a day and half in Delhi recently. He's the most committed and undeniably one of the most publicly trusted democracy activists in Nepal.

Best regards,
Dinesh

Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2005 13:07:50 -0700 (PDT)
From: _______
Subject: Re: Krishna Pahadi to visit US
To: _________

Dear Julia,

Girish ji (nepalipost) and myself (SEBS-North America) would like to coordinate the event. We have started to scout for venues. I would also like to request involvement of our friends and colleagues from Advocacynet, Peace Brigade, Human Rights Watch and other local Nepali Organizations as well.

We are hopeful that this event will reach a wider audience group.

Kiran (Ron) Sitoula

From: _______
To: _________
Subject: Re: Krishna Pahadi to visit US
Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2005 21:07:57 -0400

In addition to helping him with the crucial lobbying, could Amnesty host him here in Washington for a talk? Is T Kumar involved? That'd be ideal in terms of outreach.

If not, I can get the conference space at my work (the Institute for Policy Studies) and we can start advertising the event from tomorrow!

Kiran, did you have something in mind for the Nepali diaspora as well? Let's coordinate.

_______

Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2005 21:16:51 -0400
From: "Sarahana"
Subject: Re: Krishna Pahadi to visit US
To: __________
CC: ___________

samudaya.org will help as well
thanks

From: _________
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2005 06:50:53 EDT
Subject: Re: Krishna Pahadi to visit US
To: ________

You all are awesome! Thanks for so many quick responses.

For DC event, Kiran and Giresh want to coordinate. Great! Could you please be in touch with T Kumar in AI's DC office, I'll send info separately. We hope that DC local AI groups will want to be involved too.

For NY, we are still looking into possibilities with AI groups at the different universities, so will let you know more on that soon.

Good idea to video events.

More soon,
_____

Subject: RE: Krishna Pahadi to visit US
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2005 10:55:41 -0400
From: _______
To: _________

Todd

Add Sanjaya Parajuli in this group. He is president of Alliance for democracy and human rights in Nepal, USA, and is based in NY. He will be hosting a talk program for Pahari. I have added Sanjaya in this group.

Pramod

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