http://www.terminalx.org/2012/09/us-military-nepal-army-to-conduct-operation-pacific-angel.htmlUS
military and Nepal Army to jointly conduct 'Operation Pacific Angel Nepal'
humanitarian ops Sunday, September 09, 2012
Kathmandu: For the first time, Nepal Army and the US military,
will conduct joint humanitarian assistance operations next week in
Pokhara.'Operation Pacific Angel Nepal' is a six-day
project that will include medical, optometry, and construction programmes as
well as various subject-matter expert exchanges, a US Embassy statement
said.The exercise will commence from September 10 in Pokhara
and will be led by the United States Pacific Air Forces.
Around 150
Nepali and US military personnel along with Project HOPE doctors, local
non-governmental organisations and military doctors from Australia and Mongolia,
will support this operation to help improve the health and quality of life for
Nepali communities and enhance regional cooperation, stability and security, the
statement said.
...
This is the first time Operation Pacific Angel
is being conducted in Nepal. This year, Pacific Angel has also been conducted in
Laos, Vietnam, and the Philippines.
related???:http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/sep/29/nepal-air-crash-uk-investigatorsNepal
air crash: UK investigators head to KathmanduJo Adetunji,
Caroline Davies, Jason Burke in Delhi and Ishwar Rauniyar in Kathmandu
guardian.co.uk, Saturday
29 September 2012 06.29
EDT
Air Accidents Investigation Branch says it will send staff to look
into accident that killed 19 passengers, including seven
Britons...
The Air Accidents Investigation Branch said it was sending
two staff to Kathmandu to assist local authorities looking into the accident,
which killed all 19 passengers shortly after takeoff from Kathmandu
airport.
The Britons, who were on a trekking holiday, were among those
killed after the twin-engine propeller Dornier plane crashed in a
field.
Initial reports suggested the plane had possibly hit a large bird
but pilot error or a malfunction are now being investigated. Ratish Chandra
Suman, an official from Tribhuvan international airport, said the pilot had
reported trouble two minutes after takeoff and appeared to have been trying to
turn back to the airport.
The plane crashed on the bank of the Manohara
river at 6.18am on Friday in clear weather and witnesses said the plane was
already on fire before it hit the ground.
Tributes were paid to the group
of Britons, who included the lawyer Ben Ogden, 27, from Buckingham, an Oxford
University graduate who worked for the international law firm Allen & Overy.
He was on the Everest Base Camp trip to celebrate just having qualified. The
firm said the young lawyer, who lived in London, "had an incredibly promising
career ahead of him".
The Britons, named by the local travel company
Sherpa Adventures, also included Timothy Oakes, 57, a married father and
secondary school adviser for Lancashire county council. He loved mountaineering
and was on the trip of a lifetime with an old school friend, his distraught
wife, Angie Gaunt, said at the family home in Winwick, Cheshire. She added: "He
was going because he always wanted to see Everest. If you love the mountains, it
is the ultimate."
...
http://blogs.hindustantimes.com/kurakani-in-kathmandu/2012/09/11/busy-days-for-uncle-sam-in-kathmandu/Busy
days for Uncle Sam in KathmanduPosted by Utpal Parashar on Tuesday,
September 11, 2012 at 8:38 pm
The US embassy in
Kathmandu is buzzing with activity these days. Not that it remains quiet
usually, but seven mails in my inbox from the embassy in six days indicate
things are busier than routine.
Though Nepal’s two big neighbours
China and India remain in focus for their engagement with Kathmandu, countries
of the European Union and US too enjoy significant leverage in the Himalayan
nation because of their funding and investment potential.
On Monday
US Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert O
Blake landed at Tribhuwan International Airport on a two-day visit. It
is the
first visit by a high-level US official to Nepal since
dissolution of the Constituent Assembly in May. Blake got
busy in meetings with political leaders from various parties soon after landing.
Meetings with President Ram Baran Yadav, Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai and
newly appointed Nepal Army chief General Gaurav SJB Rana are also on the
agenda.
He will also interact with business leaders, human rights
activists, civil society leaders, representatives from the Tibetan community in
Nepal and address a press conference before departing on Tuesday
evening.
Besides bilateral issues,
Blake is concerned at a
recent ordinance sent by the Maoist-led government to President Yadav that many
fear could grant blanket amnesty to those who committed serious human rights
violations during the civil war. Recent closure of
Kathmandu outlets of Pizza Hut and KFC due to labour unrest and the
ongoing political and constitution crisis in Nepal following
dissolution of CA without a constitution also figured in the
meetings.
In most of his engagements, Blake was accompanied by
newly appointed US ambassador to Nepal Peter W Bodde who reached
Kathmandu on Saturday and submitted his credentials to the President on Monday.
He replaces Scott H DeLisi who left in July. Bodde
who was posted in Baghdad prior to the new assignment has already served in
Kathmandu twice (1982-84 and 1994-97). A Foreign Service
veteran,
he speaks Nepali fluently, something which is expected
to help him abundantly while discharging his duties.
Both
Bodde and Blake arrived in Kathmandu within three days of US removing the ruling
Maoist party from its list of terrorist organizations. Washington’s
move came six years after the Maoists signed a peace deal that ended the civil
war and entered political mainstream.
Amid these
developments, 20 Peace Corps volunteers also arrived in Kathmandu on Sunday.
They are the first batch of volunteers from the US government agency focused on
peace and friendship to Nepal since 2004 when they left at the height of civil
war.
The fresh batch of volunteers will receive training for 12
weeks before they are assigned to three districts in the west where they will
work on food security, sanitation and health
projects.
It’s been 50 years since Peace Corps volunteers
started arriving in Nepal and till date over 4,200 of them have served in the
country.
There’s more. From Monday Nepal Army and the US military,
led by the US Pacific Air Forces started a six-day humanitarian assistance
project called ‘Operations Pacific Angel Nepal’ in Pokhara, a scenic lakeside
town frequented by tourists.
Nearly 150 Nepali and US military
personnel and Project HOPE doctors are involved in the project that will include
medical, optometry and construction programmes and also subject-matter exchanges
between experts.
An US embassy release says the project would help
improve health and quality of life of Nepali communities and enhance regional
cooperation, stability and security.
Though the US military
has been conducting Operation Pacific Angel throughout the Asia-Pacific region
since 2007, this is the first time it is being held in
Nepal. For those interested, diplomatic relations between
Nepal and US began in 1947 and Washington set up its embassy in Kathmandu in
1959. Since 1951, US has provided $ 1.2 billion in developmental assistance to
Nepal.
In recent years that assistance has averaged $ 54 million
annually.[ So here we have our guys working along side
pssible Maoists in the Nepal Army
Geez ...]http://nepal.usembassy.gov//pr-09-18-2012.htmlPacific
Angel Nepal helps over 4,000 Nepalis
September 18,
2012Despite the downpour of rain, over 300 Nepal Army, U.S.
military and local community residents attended the closing ceremony of
OPERATION PACIFIC ANGEL at Machhapuchhre Higher Secondary School in Kaski
District, Pokhara yesterday.
Officiating over the ceremony was
Nepal Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Nepal Bhusan Chand, Western
Division Commander Major General Victor, and on behalf of the Commander of the
U.S. Pacific Air Forces, Major General Russell J. Handy, Director of Operations,
Plans, Requirements and Programs, Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam,
Hawaii. “We are honored to have worked alongside
the Nepal Army through our Pacific Angel program, and deeply appreciate the
hospitality our Nepali hosts have extended to us,” said Handy.
“Throughout this past week,
we have been continually impressed
with the professionalism of the Nepal Army, and applaud the Nepal Army
and the Ministry of Home Affairs for their diligent efforts to improve the
quality of life of Nepal’s citizens,” he added.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-17676538Nepal
army 'completes' peace process with Maoists Why do
Nepal's former rebels want to join the army?
11 April 2012 Last
Nepalese soldiers have moved into camps where thousands of former Maoist
rebels have lived for more than five years.
The former rebels have now
come under control of the army in what is seen as a key step to securing peace
six years after the end of Nepal's civil war.
About 9,000 former
fighters have been confined to camps since 2006, awaiting a political
settlement.
About 6,000 of them are to be integrated into the
army. The remainder will get a financial settlement.
...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-15922387Why
do Nepal's former rebels want to join the army? By Sanjaya
Dhakal
BBC News, Kathmandu
When Nepal's ruling
Maoist party signed a landmark deal in November allowing former guerrillas to
retire, retrain in a new career, or become part of the Nepali army, few
predicted that the majority would opt to join their old enemies in the
military...
"If there are more of our comrades who opt to join
the army, then the political parties might need to review their earlier
agreement. They may need to show some flexibility on numbers," said Nanda
Kishore Pun, chief of the Maoist's rebel army