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 Government deports two foreign doctors: Report
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Posted on 04-14-06 7:38 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Isnt it too much??? Is Gyane pretending he does not know aything?

Government deports two foreign doctors: Report
German doctor known as "Angel" and an American expert on emergency medicine, Dr. Brain Cobb, have been deported on Thursday afternoon.
According to news reports, police arrested Dr Cobb from Gangabu on Wednesday and detained for six hours. He was not allowed to inform the American embassy while under detention. He was released on condition that he would present at the immigration department on Thursday. He told reporters that the police treated him like 'criminal'.

He was severely beaten by Senior Superintendent of Armed Police Force Madhav Thapa on Tuesday while he was providing treatment to the injured demonstrators and police personnel in Gangabu. He had claimed that Thapa gouge out eye of one to the demonstrators with his baton on that day
 
Posted on 04-14-06 9:07 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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No good deed goes unpunished.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 9:15 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Gyane's really really stupid to be doing this. I wonder what the fuk he is thinking ? That their Govt's are not going to notice this ? And would be very nice for his public image in the international arena. Now they are just going to look at him like another POWER HUNGRY LUNATIC HOLDING HIS _______ at any cost. IS THIS MORON GYANEY REALLY THAT STOOOPID ? MOFO HAS A LOTTA BLOOD IN HIS HAND how the fug does he sleep at night ? I wonder !!
 
Posted on 04-14-06 9:25 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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बल्ल तेरो बुध्दि पलायो? हामीले त उहिल्यै थाहा पाएका थियौं यो कुकुर राजाले देश खतमै पार्छ भनेर।

जाँठोले अझै पनि त्यो कुकुरबाट राम्रो आशा गर्दै रहेछ।
 
Posted on 04-14-06 9:28 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Good to see bathroomcoffee with some sense.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 9:30 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Posted on 04-14-06 10:05 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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It is really sad to know that Nepal govt deported doctors who volunteered on the battle field. The act deserve condemnation for sure.

However, why king gets blamed everytime for any small or big things happen in Nepal? Don't you guys think the blame goes to foreign minister "motu"?
Are you guys sure that kind Gyanendra even knows this fact that foreign doctors were deported?
For me, it appeared that you guys are blaming KG as if the order directly came from him.

Just a thought.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 10:22 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Mr. PURUSH: So, why do we always say Neta's are bad when something bad happens in the country? You raja-ko-ass kisser. If u are in the power u are the beneficiary of any events that takes place. He has the power and control over the army and police .. so he is responsible of everything that goes in the country. So, if something good happens u’ll say because of Raja.. and now when something bad happens u are saying he should not be blamed. Such a contradiction.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 10:36 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Dude PURUSH shouldn't he know about these things ? If he does not then why is he the fuking head of the Government then ? HE IS THE MAN IN CHARGE, THERFORE HE IS RESPONSIBLE. That is one Lame excuse..say you own a pet dog, and it goes and bites someone on the street.....Who's responsiblity is it ?
 
Posted on 04-14-06 10:40 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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EXACTLY!!! If that so called self made King....is not even capable of taking care of his public and doesnt seem to know whats going on around him, should step down from the self made throne.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 10:43 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Exactly, he gotta step down. Its an irony to hear such a sad news. them cops must be getting their anger out on these doctors cause they can't show no anger to the king.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 10:51 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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The anecdote about your dog biting someone does not make sense here.

Ok if you dog bites someone you can kill the dog. You don't kill yourself if your dog bites someone.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 10:53 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Hey Ubiquitious:
You mistook me for the one who supports king's act. You have every right not to buy my opinion however you don't have to come to personal offence. While I have high appreciation for your logics, I was pissed off for your use of "ass-licker." You could have been more effective had u not used such a derogatory word.

My opinion is we should hold responsible for everyone involved for any misdeeds they did. By just blaming king, we are letting others go who were involved in wrongdoings.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 11:20 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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When Abu Gharib went down, everyone pointed to Dubya. Mistreatment of prisoner in Gwantanomo who's responsible ? People pointed to Dubya. Just like dubya assured that involved people would be punished... where is a statement like that from Stoopid Gyaney ?
I can understand the rumble between the cops and the protesters. But these folks are there to HELP US, NOT HARM US. So I do not see the logic in arresting them then torturing them ? What the FUG ?
 
Posted on 04-14-06 11:26 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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. the logic is...there is no logic
 
Posted on 04-14-06 11:28 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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hey Lady;-) long time no C .........Kata harayako? I thougt u were disappeared in FRENCH SNOW......... good to see u back......

Sajha without u was really DULL................... welcome back :-) ani happy new year la.
 
Posted on 04-14-06 12:16 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Hey Purush, I am sorry for makin some harsh comments on you. It was just .. i was really mad to see the situation of nepal and nepalese.. and seeing gyane doing nothing makes my anger worse
 
Posted on 04-14-06 12:53 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Y'all need to stop getting worked up over this. These doctors knew they were interfering with Nepal's internal politics and knew the associated risks they chose to assume. Btw, I'm still looking for info on what a "402 registered nonprofit" (Alliance for Democracy and Human Rights in Nepal) is. Any links?
 
Posted on 04-14-06 1:08 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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See? This was written by the professor doctor, dated March 19, 2006, posted in ideaforum.org:

The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory

By Professor Dr Brian Cobb

Bertrand Russell, the great analytic philosopher, distinguishes several forms of power. Great, widespread respect for the person or institution may be a source of power; power may also be derived from an army or militia. Mohandas Gandhi and Dr Martin Luther King, Jr, had immense power based on the espect they earned through their integrity, wisdom and courage, despite never having held any governmental post. Monarchies and Prime Ministries carry power because of trust in the institutions themselves. But dictators rely on violence and
intimidation to maintain their positions; consider the military junta in Myanmar. Few Burmese respect or support them, so their hold on power extends only as
long as the bullets last.

This naked power, maintained by the gun and the prison, is not sustainable. Sooner or later the dictator is overthrown, assassinated or dies. Yet the
current government is trading the personal and institutional prestige of the monarch for exactly this sort of naked power. This is hardly a wise trade.

The government of Nepal is now locked in a vicious cycle: greater dissent and opposition are met with harsher repression and more atrocities, resulting in
more support for the Maoists and the parties, who have been allied by having a common enemy in Singh Durbar. With each loop of the downward spiral, the
institutional and personal power of the King and government diminish both within Nepal and internationally. The recent elections have detracted from the perceived legitimacy of the government, rather than adding to it as intended—and claimed.

I recently proposed a peace plan calling for free, fair, UN supervised parliamentary elections with participation by all parties including the Maoists, placing the RNA under UN command to supervise voluntary disarmament of the Maoists and the elections, and demilitarizing the country by placing armed authority only in the police and transforming the RNA and Maoist armies into a national corps to build infrastructure, contribute to education and health care, and otherwise assist in reconciliation and progress. This corps would remain, under the 1990 constitution, in His Majesty’s command.

The Maoists and parties have promised great public works initiatives, and have indicated that they might be willing to accept a continued role for the
monarchy. This proposal would transform the monarchy so as to allow it to regain its personal and institutional prestige and eliminate the stigma it has
lately acquired. It would also fulfil the parties’ and Maoists’ promises. By
preserving the current constitution, it bypasses the conflict between palace and parties-Maoists over the proposed constituent assembly.

The proposal also restores confidence in the democratic process by warranting the legitimacy of the parliamentary election. And by demilitarizing the
country, as both Costa Rica and Haiti have done, it allows all government spending to be directed to the benefit of the people. Every rupee spent on a bullet is not available for an anti-TB tablet, and every crore spent on armored vehicles is a crore not available for hospitals or schools.

The most beneficial power any government can have is the power to vanquish illiteracy, poverty, disease and the structural violence of lack of opportunities. A
legitimate government’s real enemies are not dissenting segments of its own population, but suffering, death and deprivation. A government which
realizes and acts upon this insight is extremely unlikely to be troubled with revolutions or electoral defeat. As Dr Abraham Flexner pointed out, “[N]o
nation is rich enough to pay for both war and civilization. We must make our choice. We cannot have both.”

To those who oppose UN involvement, or indeed my proposal, as “foreign intervention,” I point out that this war is partially financed with foreign funds and entirely fought with foreign weapons. It is not a question of whether there will be
foreign assistance, only whether it will be for good or for ill.

As long as the various factions hold rigidly to positions unacceptable to the others, no agreement is possible and thousands of lives will continue to be
sacrificed to ideologies which have become so locked into specific strategies that they fail to find other, mutually acceptable ways to achieve their goals and
they abandon their principles. If we begin with the principles of peace, democracy, justice, respect for human rights and the duty to serve the people, and the goals of free, fair multiparty elections, economic and infrastructural development, improved health and educational services and ending the bloody conflict, we can use our intelligence to find solutions which will appeal to all factions and are in the best interest of those factions and, more importantly, the Nepali people. It is very likely that Nepal as a zone of peace would attract tourists, assistance and investment from abroad.

As Abraham Lincoln said at the end of the American Civil War, “With malice toward none, with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive to finish the great work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan—to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.”

As a foreigner without governmental portfolio, I can do no more than offer a proposal; as a physician who sees war as a public health emergency and a former resident of Nepal who cares deeply for its people, I can do no less.

Send your comments to the Author : drbriannepal@yahoo.co.in
 


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