Tuesday May 21st, 2013, 1:58 pm (EDT)
Featured Books!
Socialist Register 2013: The Question of Strategy edited by Leo Panitch, Greg Albo and Vivek Chibber
Capital Accumulation and Women’s Labour in Asian Economies by Peter Custers with a new introduction by Jayati Ghosh




























Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)
on the Successful Attack on the Fortified Army Base in Kalikot on August 7th-8th, 2005
The revolutionary forces in Nepal led by the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) have been engaged in a country-wide people’s war (“jana youdha”) against the royal government. Much of the country has been liberated. The palace and the Royal Nepal Army now retain control over the central valley of Nepal and areas adjacent to their fortified bases in the district towns in the countryside, and few other areas.
On the evening of Sunday, August 7th, the People’s Liberation Army marked a new stage in the conflict by launching, for the first time, a direct frontal attack on a major fortified base of the RNA.. The “Pili” base of the RNA was established last month near the village of Pakha, close to the headquarters of Kalikot District in the valley of the Tila, a branch of the Karnali River in the western hills of Nepal. The district lies adjacent to the core revolutionary base region of Jajarkot. Establishing the base was a forward move into liberated territory by the RNA, part of a strategy to increase the RNA’s mobility by driving a military road along the line separating the heart of the revolutionary zone and a more recently liberated region, and between the two RNA controlled and fortified airstrips of Surkhet and Jumla. By August 8th this strategy lay in ruins, with the base demolished, and of its garrison of 200 the RNA admits at least 50 are dead, and the PLA has announced it has taken 52 prisoner. The PLA announced that it had lost 22 soldiers in the attack.
The RNA propaganda office in Kathmandu enjoys a direct line to the world’s media, and faced with the unavoidable fact of a significant strategic defeat responded by making the accusation that some of the dead soldiers had been shot after surrender. This unsubstantiated slander was duly picked up and repeated by the established global media.
On August 10th Monthly Review, along with many other far more prosperous media outlets, received a press statement from the revolutionaries emphatically denying the report. The statement is also of importance for setting out a policy of co-operation with the UN in regard to the investigation of human rights abuses, and of co-operation with the UN and with certain NGOs and INGOs in regard to questions of construction and development. As far as we can tell, this press statement (unlike the slander it rebuts) has not been reported on the internet. We therefore set it out here, edited for grammatical clarity. This edit is of course unauthorized, as we cannot communicate with the source of the original, but we believe it fully represents the sense of the Nepalese original.
Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)
Central Committee
Press Statement
This press statement has been issued to clarify party policy in connection with human rights, and development and construction.
August 10, 2005
Prachanda
Chairman
Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)
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