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Nepal Rebels Agree to Join Parliament
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=15B2B3E:A6F02AD83191E160B986587092BFAD949574F7DCC14957C0 UN arms monitors
have arrived in country to oversee one major provision of agreement,
the surrender of rebel arms In Nepal, the stage has been set for
Maoist rebels to join the political mainstream, moving one of South
Asia's most violent insurgencies another large step towards
conclusion. As Anjana Pasricha reports from New Delhi, United Nations
arms monitors have arrived in the country to oversee one of the
agreement's major provisions, the surrender of rebel arms.

Nepali officials say 73 Maoist rebels will join an interim parliament
next Monday (January 15), when a temporary constitution comes into
force.







UN arms monitor chief Brig. Gen. Jan Erik Wilhemsen, right, briefs
United Nations monitors in Katmandu, 5 Jan. 2007Simultaneously, United
Nation monitors will begin the task of locking up rebel weapons. Rebel
fighters have already begun moving into seven camps that have been
established to accommodate the Maoist army.

The insurgents signed a power-sharing pact with the government in
November. But the agreement's implementation was delayed while the two
sides bickered over how to manage rebel weapons and fighters.







Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala, left, and Maoist rebel leader
Prachanda sign a formal peace accord in Katmandu, 21 Nov 2006Under the
final agreement, the rebels will retain the keys to containers where
their weapons are to be stored. Much of the country's regular army
will also be confined to barracks, and will surrender an equal number
of weapons to the U.N. monitors. This system will be in place until it
is superseded in June, when elections are to be held, and a new
permanent constitution is written.

Ram Chandra Poudel, a senior leader of the Nepal's largest party, the
Nepali Congress, says the rebels will join an interim government once
they give up all their weapons.

Mr. Poudel says peace is gradually returning to the country, and
senior rebel leaders appear to be committed to abiding by the deal
they signed with the government.

That optimistic assessment is shared by political analysts. Lok Raj
Baral, the head of Kathmandu's Center for Contemporary Studies, says
the rebels are serious about joining the political mainstream because
they managed to get much of what they fought for - an agreement to
write a new constitution, and a popular vote to decide whether the
monarchy should be abolished.

"I don't think they will go back to the jungle again. Of course they
have also achieved their goals, and the republican agenda is also more
or less accepted by almost political parties. There is pressure going
on across the country for declaring Nepal a republican state," Lok Raj
Baral.

The rebels and the mainstream political parties began discussing
cooperation last year after King Gyanendra seized power and dismissed
parliament. Peace talks began in earnest following mass protests that
forced the king to restore democracy and return power to a multi-party
government.