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ID153846
Title ProperNepal's comprehensive peace agreement
Other Title Informationhuman rights, compliance and impunity a decade on
LanguageENG
AuthorJeffery, Renée
Summary / Abstract (Note)In November 2006, the Government of Nepal and the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist signed a Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) designed to bring more than a decade of violent conflict to an end. At its heart stood a commitment to ending impunity for the significant number of human rights violations perpetrated during the conflict. In particular, by refusing to grant amnesties to perpetrators of human rights abuses and by agreeing to impartial investigations of alleged human rights crimes, Nepal seemed willing to embrace globally accepted anti-impunity and accountability norms. A decade on, however, impunity for human rights violations continues to prevail in Nepal, while accountability efforts are routinely resisted and even obstructed by members of the ruling elite. With this in mind, this article examines the range of factors that have allowed impunity to prevail over accountability in post-conflict Nepal. It argues that despite the efforts of the international community, civil society actors and local human rights activists to remove impunity guarantees from Nepal's peace agreement, shifting political dynamics, competing interests, and a genuine lack of political will have allowed impunity to flourish in the post-conflict period.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Affairs Vol. 93, No.2; Mar 2017: p.343–364
Journal SourceInternational Affairs Vol: 93 No 2
Key WordsHuman Rights ;  International Criminal Law ;  Transitional Justice ;  Peace Processes


 
 
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