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Eight killed in Nepal in deadliest clash since ceasefire
Kathmandu, June 22: Seven Maoists and a civilian were killed in a gunfight between rebels and the Army last week in western Nepal during the deadliest clash since the two sides entered a ceasefire in January, an official said today.
Kathmandu, June 22: Seven Maoists and a civilian were killed in a gunfight between rebels and the Army last week in western Nepal during the deadliest clash since the two sides entered a ceasefire in January, an official said today.
A defence ministry official said the Maoists opened fire Wednesday in the western district of Jajarkot after demanding an Army-run humanitarian team retreat from a village that is a rebel stronghold.
"The team refused to retreat and the Maoists opened fire. There were no casualties among the army," he said. "Our team fired in retaliation, resulting in the deaths of seven Maoists including one of their local unit heads. A civilian was killed in the crossfire."
He identified the dead civilian as Purna Bahadurgiri, 30. The Army team was trying to head to the Namidanda area to provide medical treatment to villagers and launch infrastructure projects, including the construction of a facility to bring clean drinking water, officials said.
A defence ministry statement last week detailed the incident without providing a death toll. It said around 300 Maoists were involved in the clash and about half as many in the Army team.
In the statement, the defence ministry accused the Maoists of "irresponsible action" that could "jeopardise the ongoing peace dialogue."
It was the most serious violence between the Maoists and the government since they reached a ceasefire on January 29 and launched peace talks.
Bureau Report