Kathmandu: Around 100 people were today injured in Nepal's historical Janakpur town as agitating Madhesis clashed with security personnel, less than two weeks after the country's first woman President escaped unhurt in a similar showdown over the controversial new Constitution.
Tensions were running high throughout the day as the clashes broke out in the southern town of Janakpur, over 225 kms from here and home to the famous Ram Janaki temple.
Around 45 security personnel and 55 cadres of Madhesi Morcha were injured in the stand-off, the Kathmandu Post reported.
Madhesis, largely of Indian-origin, are agitating over the new Constitution demanding more representation. They are also protesting division of their ancestral homeland under the seven-province structure and have led an ongoing blockade of key border trade points with India.
Supporters of Samyukta Loktantrik Madhesi Morcha - an alliance of Madhes-centric parties that has been protesting the new constitution seeking broader rights - hurled stones at Janaki Police Station. In retaliation, security personnel wielded baton and lobbed tear- gas shells, the report said.
The protesters hurled 21 Molotov cocktail (petrol bomb) at police... Security personnel also fired 21 rounds of teargas shells, the report quoted Chief District Officer Kali Prasad Adhikari as saying.
Madhesis have resorted to aggressive protests after Rajendra Mahato, a prominent leader of the Morcha and Chairman of Sadbhawana Party, sustained injuries in a clash between police and Morcha cadres in Biratnagar border on Saturday.
Protests have erupted in various places of Rajbiraj and Janakpur over police action against Mahato, with Madhesi groups demanding action against the security personnel involved in the incident.
Schools and colleges have remained closed for three consecutive days. Business activities and market places have also come to a complete halt.
Meanwhile, Sadbhawana Party's Dhanusa Chairman Sanjay Kumar Singh accused government administration of using undue force at protesters.
On December 16, Nepal's first woman President, 54-year- old Bidya Devi Bhandari, escaped unhurt as agitating Madhesis waving black flags attacked her motorcade with stones and hurled a petrol bomb at the Ram Janaki temple that she had visited.
Tensions were running high throughout the day as the clashes broke out in the southern town of Janakpur, over 225 kms from here and home to the famous Ram Janaki temple.
Around 45 security personnel and 55 cadres of Madhesi Morcha were injured in the stand-off, the Kathmandu Post reported.
Supporters of Samyukta Loktantrik Madhesi Morcha - an alliance of Madhes-centric parties that has been protesting the new constitution seeking broader rights - hurled stones at Janaki Police Station. In retaliation, security personnel wielded baton and lobbed tear- gas shells, the report said.
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Madhesis have resorted to aggressive protests after Rajendra Mahato, a prominent leader of the Morcha and Chairman of Sadbhawana Party, sustained injuries in a clash between police and Morcha cadres in Biratnagar border on Saturday.
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Schools and colleges have remained closed for three consecutive days. Business activities and market places have also come to a complete halt.
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On December 16, Nepal's first woman President, 54-year- old Bidya Devi Bhandari, escaped unhurt as agitating Madhesis waving black flags attacked her motorcade with stones and hurled a petrol bomb at the Ram Janaki temple that she had visited.
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