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Trekkers Asked For Protection Money At Gunpoint

As the instability in Nepal continues, there is at least one report of trekkers being asked for protection money by Maosist guerillas


Posted: 10 December 2001
by Jon

If you're planning a trek in Nepal, particularly in the less popular areas, you should be keeping an eye on the current volatile situation in the Himalayan kingdom.

As we reported recently, the breakdown of the ceasefire between government and the Maoist insurgents has been followed by the large-scale involvement of the Nepalese army for the first time and a declaration of a state of emergency. Previously the police had been responsible for controlling the situation, which they were palpably having a hard time doing.

Armed clashes are continuing, particularly in the west of the country, where at least 50 rebels and four soldiers are reported to have been killed when Maosists attacked an army post in Rolpa.

It's no longer trekking season in Nepal, but it's hard to get a clear idea of what the implications are for trekkers. The Nepali government is only too well aware of the importance of the income from tourism and the trekking companies themselves are understandably reluctant to prejudice their own trade.

In this month's TGO however, Stephen Goodwin recounts how a group he was with trekking in the Kangchenjunga area were stopped by armed Maoists just miles from the access airstrip and invited to make a 'donation' to the cause of 10,000 rupees.

He goes on to reassure readers that there is no sense of lawlessness despite the absence of police in the Maoist-controlled area, but also recounts stories of other trekkers being stopped and robbed at gunpoint by 'Maoists', though some of these incidents may have been opportunist bandits.

The most popular treks in the Everest and Annapurna areas, as far as we're aware have not been affected in any way, though there has been at least one Maoist incident in Jiri, the town where the Everest walk-in traditionally began before the airfield was built at Lukla.

Goodwin concludes that the payment of such 'protection money' may become a fact of life for trekkers in some areas of Nepal, though the Maoists have repeatedly stated that they will not harm tourists. Thjis makes them significantly less of a threat to travellers than, say, Peru's Shining Path Maoists in the 90s, who believed that any measures to destabilise the state were justified including the targeting of tourists - at one poing they attempted to blow up the tourist train to Macchu Piccu.

Nepalnews.com web site (direct from Nepal)

cameronmcneish.com (the nearest thing to a TGO website)


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