Widespread protests against new Nepal Constitution

Widespread protests against new Nepal Constitution
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Highlights

Widespread Protests Against New Nepal Constitution. Nearly 200 hardline Maoists were today arrested in Nepal as they torched vehicles and forced schools and shops to shut down in a nationwide strike against the drafting of a new Constitution and a deal between India and China to boost border trade through Lipu-Lekh Pass.

Kathmandu: Nearly 200 hardline Maoists were today arrested in Nepal as they torched vehicles and forced schools and shops to shut down in a nationwide strike against the drafting of a new Constitution and a deal between India and China to boost border trade through Lipu-Lekh Pass.

Public vehicles remained off the roads while major markets and educational institutions were forced to shut down in Kathmandu and other major cities in the strike called by hardline CPN-Maoist (Chand), led by Netra Bikram Chand.

Hundreds of security personnel were deployed in Kathmandu and surrounding areas to prevent violence during the protest, the first national strike since a devastating quake hit the country in April.

Police have rounded up 190 agitating Maoist activists from Kathmandu and other surrounding areas for blocking roads and resorting to vandalism, police said.

The agitating activists torched several vehicles during the protest, police said, adding that no casualties had been reported so far.

The nation-wide strike was called to oppose the Constitution drafting process initiated by the four major political forces, the Nepali Congress, CPN-UML, UCPN-Maoist and Madhesi Peoples Rights Forum Democratic after inking a 16-point deal.

Nepal's Maoists struck a deal with rival parties on the new Constitution last month after years of bitter disagreement.

But the breakaway faction of the party said the deal betrays the principles of the Maoists, who fought a decade-long civil war with the state that ended in 2006 and led to the abolition of a centuries-old feudal monarchy.

The demonstrators alleged that the Constitution does not address the problems of the ethnic, racial and gender discrimination.

The Maoist activists were also opposing an agreement between India and China to boost border trade at Qiangla/Lipu-Lekh Pass, close to an area which Nepal claims to be part of its territory.

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