Kuwait Times

Nepal convicts 3 soldiers of killing girl during civil war

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Three former Nepalese soldiers have each been sentenced in absentia to 20 years in jail for killing a teenage girl, only the second conviction for crimes committed during a decade-long civil war which ended in 2006. Fifteen-year-old Maina Sunuwar was tortured and killed after she was detained by the army in 2004 for alleged links to Maoist rebels. But a military tribunal the following year ruled that her death was accidental and charged the three soldiers involved in the case with only minor offences.

Maina’s mother brought a case in a civilian court which delivered its verdict on Sunday, a court official told AFP.But none of the three convicted are currently in custody, and rights groups have raised concerns they may never serve their sentences. A fourth soldier, the most senior of all those accused, was acquitted. “We have fought for justice for so many years, I’m glad the court has understood our plight,” Sunuwar’s mother Devi said.

“But our fight is not over. I’m worried the decision might be limited to paper. The state must implement the court’s decision.” Devi campaigned for years for justice for her daughter, who was arrested when soldiers came to their home looking for her mother. Devi had days earlier publicly accused government forces of raping and murdering her niece. “We believed that Maina had been taken, and perhaps killed, only to punish her mother,” said Advocacy Forum Nepal, a legal rights group, in a report about the long-running case.

A military tribunal in 2005 found that Sunuwar had been repeatedly held under water and given electric shocks to her feet and wrists during interrogat­ion. But it ruled that her death was accidental and the three soldiers named in the case were only charged with minor offences, including using improper interrogat­ion techniques and failing to follow procedure. They were sentenced to six months in detention but released immediatel­y because the tribunal ruled they had already served their time while confined to barracks. —AFP

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