Oli's petition to amend the commission's recommendation, calling it biased in the incident of Bhadra 23-24

In its report, the Human Rights Commission has recommended action against former Prime Minister Oli and others according to their responsibilities and roles.

Ashad 25, 2083

Kantipur Reporter

Oli's petition to amend the commission's recommendation, calling it biased in the incident of Bhadra 23-24

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UML Chairperson and former Prime Minister KP Oli has submitted an application demanding a revision of the National Human Rights Commission's recommendation. Oli claims that the decision made by the Commission regarding the incidents of Bhadra 23 and 24 under Decision 177 does not align with the Constitution, prevailing laws, and established principles and norms of international human rights. He asserts that the Commission's decision is prejudiced and unconstitutional.

On behalf of Oli, UML Central Committee member Mahesh Bartola submitted the application by meeting with Commission Chairperson Tap Bahadur Magar at the Commission's office in Harihar Bhawan.

The application states that the Commission did not fully provide copies of the requested documents and reports. It also demands a certified copy of the report said to have been submitted to the Commission by the committee led by Lili Thapa for investigating the incident, as well as certified copies of all documents indicating which parts of the report the Commission accepted, which parts it removed or added, and the reasons and basis for such modifications in the decision.

The application further requests certified copies of any reports and documents related to additional investigations, inquiries, or studies conducted by the Commission, as well as certified copies of other relevant documents.

The Commission had made public a summary of the investigation report on the Jen-Jee incident of Bhadra 23 and 24 on Jestha 13. The report mentions that former Prime Minister Oli, former Home Minister Ramesh Lekhak, and former Minister for Information and Communications Prithvi Subba Gurung violated human rights. The Commission has recommended action against them and others according to their responsibilities and roles.

During the two days of turmoil, 76 people died, the then government was dissolved, important buildings housing key national institutions and private establishments and residences were set on fire and looted, and incidents such as the formation of an electoral government occurred.

Kantipur

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