Indigenous Newar communities in Khokana and Bungamati call on UN mechanisms in Geneva for immediate actions to protect their rights threatened by the construction of Fast Track Expressway and other infrastructure projects

1 December 2020, Kathmandu

Indigenous Newar communities – affected by the Kathmandu-Terai/Madhesh Fast Track (Expressway) Project and other ongoing or planned infrastructure and urbanization projects in historical settlements of Khokana and Bungamati in the south of Nepal’s capital city, Kathmandu – have called on two UN experts in Geneva to take prompt actions for safeguarding their rights against the serious threats of displacement of the communities, violations of their land and resource rights as well as cultural rights and other impacts on them due to the ill-planned projects.

In separate letters sent today to the UN Special Rapporteurs on the rights of indigenous peoples and in the field of cultural rights, two local groups (Janasarokar Samiti of Khokana and Bungamati) representing the affected communities have urged the Rapporteurs to jointly examine the information submitted and correspond with the Government of Nepal to protect and promote the rights of the indigenous communities to their lands, resources, sacred places and culture in the context of those projects. As stated in the letters, besides the Fast Track Expressway, other ongoing or planned projects, including Bagmati River Basin Improvement Project (Bagmati Corridor), Kathmandu Outer Ring Road and Thankot-Bhaktapur Transmission Line Project and one of the four “Smart Cities” proposed in Kathmandu valley, will entirely displace the indigenous communities from the historical settlements. Asian Development Bank has directly or indirectly supported many of those projects.

The groups have requested that the Special Rapporteurs write to the Government to

  • immediately halt the ongoing construction of the Fast Track Expressway and revise its alignment to preserve the arable and communal (Guthi) lands as well as historical and cultural sites in Khokana and Bungamati,
  • remove the camp and other structures of the Nepal Army, which is assigned to construct the Expressway, installed in Khokana and return the occupied lands to the concerned landowners,
  • ensure the right to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression of the affected communities to voice their concerns against the Fast Track Expressway and other projects and create an amicable space for meaningful dialogue on their concerns, and
  • obtain the free, prior and informed consent of the affected communities for the Fast Track Expressway and other projects affecting their lands and resources.

Earlier, the groups had sent similar letters to the country offices of the International Labour Organization (ILO), UNESCO and the UN in Kathmandu. The representative of those offices had also undertaken field visits to Khokana and Bungamati to understand the concerns of the communities. However, the Government has not responded positively to the correspondence from those offices to facilitate a meaningful dialogue with the affected communities.

Over the years, the Khokana and Bungamati locals have organized various gatherings, protests and demonstrations to express their opposition to the various projects Those protests and demonstrations have often been responded with brutal police repression. In July, a clash erupted between protestors and police when the authorities intervened in a “paddy transplantation protest” organized in Khokana at the proposed zero point of the Fast Track. Over a dozen protestors were injured when police lobbed tear gas shells and charged batons while four police personnel were also injured. Recently, on an almost daily basis, the locals engage in heated arguments with the sub-contractors of the Fast Track Expressway who seek to undertake construction in private & communal lands of the communities amidst prohibitory orders for the general public to stay indoors due to Covid-19 pandemic.

In February, more than fifty affected locals and communities’ representatives of Khokana and Bungamati had filed a writ petition at Nepal’s Supreme Court calling for the protection of the historical settlements and the communities therein against the multiple “development” projects. However, the Court has repeatedly postponed hearings on the petition while the construction of the Fast Track Project progresses continuously. In their letters to the Special Rapporteurs, the groups have alleged violations of their rights guaranteed in national and international laws, including the ILO Convention 169 and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples that apply to Nepal.

Click here to read the annex to the letters submitted to the Special Rapporteurs for more information.

For further details or inquiries, contact Janasarokar Samiti, Khokana at khokanajanasarokarsamiti@gmail.com.   

Joint submission on the human rights situation of indigenous Newar communities made to the UN for the 3rd Universal Periodic Review of Nepal

Community Empowerment and Social Justice Network (CEMSOJ), Himalayan Human Rights Monitors (HimRights) and Save Nepa Valley movement today made a joint submission for the 3rd Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of Nepal. The UPR is a unique process which involves a review of the human rights records of all UN Member States and is held under the auspices of the UN Human Rights Council. The submission presents key human rights challenges faced by indigenous Newar communities, particularly in the context of “development” projects in Nepal and examines the compliance of the Government of Nepal with seven recommendations received during the 2nd UPR cycle of Nepal related to the rights of Newar and other indigenous nationalities.

The groups making the submission have expressed concern that Nepal’s legislative processes and development policies and projects as well as private investments in the country violate the rights of indigenous Newar and other communities and their overall well-being. While those affected indigenous groups, particularly indigenous women, have limited participation in decision-making processes in Nepal’s State structures, they are further alarmed by restrictions on freedom of assembly in Nepal manifested through the use of excessive security force to supress protests, which makes it further difficult for those groups to demand remedies for the harms they suffer.

While discussing the human rights challenges faced by indigenous Newar communities, the assessment in the submission demonstrates that the Government has failed to effectively or fully implement the recommendations related to the rights of indigenous peoples and freedom of assembly as well as redress for discrimination in post-earthquake reconstruction, among others. Accordingly, following recommendations are made in the submission to address to ensure sustainable development with respect for the rights of individuals and communities.

  1. The Government should recognize the rights of indigenous peoples to maintain and develop their own customary systems and institutions such as Guthi of Newars with separate legal arrangement and autonomy for Guthis, including full ownership and control of their lands and resources and management of their internal and local affairs.
  2. The Government, in conjunction with the concerned indigenous communities and their customary and representative institutions such as the Guthis of Newars, should undertake appropriate measures to identify, demarcate and title their traditional lands and resources as well to return such lands and resources lost by the communities to State, business or other actors, where feasible, or provide effective remedy for such loss if return is not possible.
  3. In the context of “development” projects such as Kathmandu Valley Road Improvement Project, Kathmandu – Terai/Madhesh Fast Track Project, Kathmandu Outer Ring Road, Smart Cities, Bagmati River Basin Improvement Project, Thankot – Bhaktapur Transmission Line Project and Chobhar Dry Port affecting indigenous Newar communities, the Government, in line with the recommendations of the UN’s Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD), Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) and the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, should
    • adopt appropriate measures to ensure that the concerned indigenous communities are meaningfully consulted, through their own representative institutions, and to obtain their Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) before launching any development project as well as in the planning and undertaking of such project that affects their traditional land or resources.
    • provide redress to the communities or affected families for their loss of land or access to natural resources (such as fair and adequate compensation for those forcibly evicted or whose houses were demolished for road expansion or return of land already seized for Fast Track highway) incurred without their free, prior and informed consent when that loss has occurred by the establishment of development projects’.
  4. With regards to private and communal lands and resources of Newars and other indigenous communities acquired in the past for various State such as in relation to the Chobhar dry port, business or other projects, the Government should return them to the original landowners if those lands and resources are not used in their original purpose or the concerned landowners or communities do not agree with the changed purpose of the land or resource use in line with national and international legal obligations of Nepal.
  5. The Government should, in conjunction with representative institutions of indigenous peoples, undertake a comprehensive program for amendments to the constitution and existing laws or formulation of necessary new laws, policies and plans for implementation of Nepal’s commitments under the ILO Convention 169 and the UNDRIP. Such program should particularly ensure the rights of indigenous peoples to their lands, territories and resources, to development and to self-determination, including for indigenous women, in line with the recommendation of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW).
  6. The Government should halt reversal of affirmative measures such as existing legal provisions for reservation/quota for indigenous peoples and other marginalized groups and should strengthen implementation of those provisions to ensure access by members of marginalized indigenous communities, particularly indigenous women, to employment in civil service and public institutions.
  7. The Government should immediately adopt multilingual policy for its official languages at federal, provincial and local governments with provision of necessary resources to promote use local indigenous languages in its works.
  8. The Government should invest more resources to promote mother-tongue based multilingual education in public/community schools as well as to support indigenous communities or their representative institutions to set up their own educational institutions and systems.
  9. The Government should undertake targeted measures with provision of adequate resources to support marginalized groups such as indigenous peoples in post-earthquake reconstruction of their private and communal properties with meaningful consultation with the concerned communities to obtain their consent on the reconstruction policies.

Click here to download the full submission

Campaign to restore archaeological Kamal Pokhari in Thamel urges ILO and UN to protect rights infringed due to construction of Chhaya Center

Campaign to Restore Archaeological Kamal Pokhari in Thamel has drawn attention of the ILO and UN offices in Nepal to the encroachment of traditional lands, including a historical pond and its banks, of indigenous Newa community in Kathmandu’s tourist district of Thamel for construction of Chaya Center business complex. The Campaign has thus called the ILO and the UN to push Nepal’s government for promotion and protection of the rights of the community. more “Campaign to restore archaeological Kamal Pokhari in Thamel urges ILO and UN to protect rights infringed due to construction of Chhaya Center”