February 11: Media update
Friday papers Nepali Times, Bimarsha and Nepali Parta
published as usual but the Nepali Times came with
three 'while holes' one in the letters section, one in
the op-ed page where C.K.Lal used to appear and one in
the Under My Hat column. Military officials have been
reading the paper before publication, and the 'holes'
represent text and pictures that the editors were
forced to purge.
Bimarsha carried an interview with Law, Justice and
Parliamentary Affairs minister Dan Bahadur Shahi,
speaking of the usual issues that government ministers
have been talking about. The paper tried to remain in
the middle and reported that the Wednesday cabinet
meeting has given R.K. Mainali education minister the
task of building bridges with the parliamentary
parties?the leaders of the main ones remained in house
arrest on Friday morning. The paper said the king also
asked the ministers to talk less and talk about the
same issues (or not differently). Its editorial argued
the need to open up the press, saying that the media
sector had not been able to be fully supportive of His
Majesty's wishes because of the gap between the State
and the media. The paper also had some very general
comments of some leaders that had been released from
house arrest on Thursday.
Nepali Patra had a headline saying 'let this not be an
opportunity for those who were unable to amass wealth
for the past 15 years' clearly warning that the
present state of affairs could give the ministers and
government officials a free-for-all opportunity. It
also had another news item asking why the new
ministers had not made their assets public. Its
editorial argued on the need for winning the
confidence of the press, which it said could be done
through a new policy on the media sector.
The dailies appearing on Friday reported about the
Indian, US concerns about the arrest/ detention of
political leaders and also reported the story about
the jailbreak by Maoists in Dhangadi. They also
reported the arrest of about a dozen human rights
activists, from the Human Rights and Peace Society,
who had attempted to protest the takeover by the king.
They also reported the closures of newspapers in Dang
and Dharan by the local administration. The government
has apparently decided to relax control on day-to-day
news flows and focus on controlling the more
analytical and pro-party vernacular newspapers, which
have continued to report visits by army censors.
Among the dailies, Rajdhani had a story about the
visit by NHRC to places where the detained political
activists were being held?it said those belonging to
the NC were being held at Kakani and those aligned
with the left parties in Bhaktapur. It also said that
the NHRC had not been allowed access to the residences
of the top leaders being detained at their homes.