WAIT THIS IS NOTHING WHAT KIND OF BREACHING YOU GUYS WILL SEE ,YOU WILL SEE .MAOIST SUPPORTERS AND MAOIST SHOULD ALL BE HANGED!!!!
35 CRORE ????WHERE DID IT GO ???HMMM...MAY BE TO BUY WEAPONS.TO KILL SPA LEADERS..AFTER KING.
THEY ARE DIGGING THEIR OWN GRAVES , THESE CIVIL SOCIETY LEADERS WILL BE THE FIRST ONE TO BE KILLED .
Maoists breached arms pact: UN
‘Return to cantonment without delay’
Kantipur Report
ITAHARI, Feb 22 - Concerned at Maoist combatants registered with the United Nations starting to leave their cantonment, the UN Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) said Wednesday that it's a breach of the arms agreement reached between the government, the Maoists and the UN.
"UNMIN is concerned that large numbers of Maoist combatants have left the 3rd Divisional cantonment site in Chitwan today," said Kieran Dwyer, the UNMIN spokesperson, in a statement. "This is a breach of the Agreement on Monitoring of Arms and Armies of 8 December 2006."
UNMIN has also urged the respective Maoist commanders "to ensure that combatants under their command return to the cantonment site without delay".
The Maoist combatants had announced on Tuesday that they would walk out from Shaktikhor cantonment in Chitwan, and threatened that their colleagues in all seven cantonments would begin deserting those camps from Wednesday to earn a living.
Maoist spokesperson Krishna Bahadur Mahara has said that the party leadership allowed the Maoist combatants to go outside the cantonment sites to arrange their own food and lodging. Mahara said they would return to the cantonments "after basic facilities are provided" to them.
The UNMIN statement has also said "the breach" will be reported to and discussed at a meeting of the Joint Monitoring Coordinating Committee (JMCC) chaired by UNMIN. The December 8, 2006 arms agreement formed JMCC to serve as a "dispute resolution mechanism".
"It is important to note that weapons storage and monitoring at the 3rd Divisional cantonment site, and the perimeter security arrangements, remain in place," said the statement.
UNMIN has already expressed its concern to the government about the "poor living conditions" at the Maoist cantonment sites, "and again calls on the government and Maoists to work together to make immediate arrangements to improve these conditions". "The United Nations remains ready to assist if requested."