Book: UK spies aided torture of Nepal reds

Nepal’s decade-long civil war left more than 16,000 dead

Update: 2014-09-01 06:24 GMT
Flag of Nepal.

Kathmandu: British authorities funded a four-year-long intelligence operation in Nepal that led to Maoist rebels being arrested, tortured and killed during the country’s civil war, according to the author of a new book on Kathmandu.

Launched in 2002, Operation Mustang targeted Maoist guerillas and saw British intelligence agency MI6 fund safe houses and provide training in surveillance and counter-insurgency tactics to Nepal’s army and spy agency, the National Investigation Department, writer Thomas Bell said.

Nepal’s decade-long civil war left more than 16,000 dead, with rebels and security forces accused of serious human rights violations including killings, rapes, torture and disappearances.

“According to senior Nepalese intelligence and army officials involved in the operation, British aid greatly strengthened their performance and led to about 100 arrests,” said Mr Bell, whose book Kathmandu hits stores in South Asia on Thursday.

“It's difficult to put an exact number on it, but certainly some of those who were arrested were tortured and disappeared,” he said.
  

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