Two dead as supporters of Nepal’s former king clash with police

The government imposed a curfew in the areas where the clashes happened in Kathmandu.

By contributor Binaj Gurubacharya, Associated Press
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Police in Nepal next to a building on fire
Police secure the site of a house set on fire by a pro-monarchist group during a protest in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Friday (Niranjan Shrestha/AP)

A television cameraman was among two people who died on Friday when supporters of Nepal’s former king clashed with police during a rally in the capital to demand restoration of the Himalayan nation’s abolished monarchy.

Several protesters and police officers were injured in the clashes. The Home Ministry said an injured protester died while being treated in hospital, while a local TV station said one of its staff members was killed when a building he was filming from was set on fire.

The government imposed a curfew in the areas where the clashes happened in Kathmandu after the police used tear gas, batons and water canon against the protesters.

People hurling stones at police officers during a protest in Kathmandu
A pro-monarchist group hurls stones at police officers during a protest in Kathmandu, Nepal (Niranjan Shrestha/AP)

Thousands of supporters of former king Gyanendra Shah had gathered at the eastern edge of Kathmandu for the rally organised by an alliance of different groups supporting the ex-monarch.

The gathering on open ground near the airport had been planned as a peaceful rally, but trouble began after some protesters in a white pickup drove at a police barricade, colliding with several officers.

Police resorted to shooting tear gas shells and spraying the crowd with water canon.

On the other side of the capital city, thousands of people who support the present system of a republic nation gathered on Friday for a counter rally. The rally participants were from the opposition parties led by Maoists party, which fought an armed rebellion between 1996-2006 to oust the monarchy.

“It is impossible for the monarchy to come back. It is ridiculous to even thing that some that is already dead … could come back to life,” said Ram Kumar Shrestha, a Maoist supporter.

There has been growing demand in the recent months for the former king to be reinstated and Hinduism brought back as a state religion.

Royalist groups accuse the country’s major political parties of corruption and failed governance and say people are frustrated with politicians.

“We need the country to return to monarchy and the king to come back, because the political parties and system have failed in the country,” said Rajendra Bahadur Khati, one of the participants at the rally.

“When the source is so polluted the entire system has gotten rotten.”

Massive street protests in 2006 forced Gyanendra to give up his authoritarian rule, and two years later the parliament voted to abolish the monarchy.

Gyanendra, who left the Royal Palace to live as commoner, has not commented on the calls for the return of monarchy. Despite growing support, the former king has little chance of immediately returning to power.