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Elizabeth Dalziel

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Elizabeth Dalziel

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  • A young soldier from the second battalion already marked by injuries of war listens to speakers during a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 09
  • A soldier from the  2nd Battalion extends a salute with the Maoist greeting, a clenched right fist, to villagers gathered to welcome them after they descended from the mountains to take part in a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 03
  • Troops from the 2nd Battalion dance alongside villagers after descending from the mountains in to the valley to take part in a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 06
  • A villager shows a picture of the late King Birendra of Nepal, who was murdered in alongside 10 other members of the royal family in 2001, is seen in  a heart shaped window in the wallet of a villager in the district of Rukum, viewed as the Maoist heartland Friday April 23, 2004. The Maoists, who say they are inspired by Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong, have been battling since February 1996 to replace the monarchy with a communist state. The current Nepali King Gyanendra, faces besides tackling the insurgency, daily protests in the capital for dumping a democratically elected government in 2002.
    NEPAL MAOIST 11
  • Villagers and Maoist soldiers dressed in civilian clothing play carrom ball after some troops belonging to the 2nd batallion made descended from the mountains  in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Wednesday April 21, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 12
  • A Nepali farmers rest under a tree as they treck their way along the narrow paths that lie between villages instead of roads in the Maoist controlled district of Rukum . Among the conditions that Nepal offers for a revolution, not only is there no democratically elected government, but farmers still have few roads or schools and live under a feudal systemwhere a handful of rich landlords exploit millions of poor. (AP Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    NEPAL MAOIST 05
  • Armed Troops from the 2nd Battalion dance alongside villagers after descending from the mountains in to the valley to take part in a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal, Thursday, April 22, 2004. Although more than 600 people have been injured in battles with the police and the street protestors, the five major political parties continue their demonstrations, demanding that King Gyanendra dismiss the government appointed by him, and allow new elections or form a government led by the major parties in the last Parliament.
    NEPAL MAOIST 10
  • A statue of the late King Birendra of Nepal, who was murdered in alongside 10 other members of the royal family in 2001, stands in the a roadside town in the district of Dang, Saturday, April 24, 2004. Although more than 600 people have been injured in battles with the police and the street protestors, the five major political parties continue their demonstrations, demanding that King Gyanendra dismiss the government appointed by him, and allow new elections or form a government led by the major parties in the last Parliament.
    NEPAL MAOIST 08
  • A young farmer trecks home in the Maoist controlled district of Rukum Friday April 23, 2004. Farmers in the lush rebel heartland of this poor Himalayan kingdom say they joined Maoists in their revolution to topple the monarchy as they yearn for their children to have more. That revolution began in the hills of Rukum and the three surrounding districts, which are among the country's poorest. There are no roads, few schools and people subsist on farming.
    NEPAL MAOIST 07
  • Kaila Sah, a mother of 9, comforts her young child Sunil Kumar as he cries in pain from injuries suffered during an explosion set off in a market by Maoist rebels, at the Disaster ward in the Hospital of the southern Nepali town of Nepalganj Tuesday April 13, 2004. Although more than 600 people have been injured in battles with the police and the street protestors, the five major political parties continue their demonstrations, demanding that King Gyanendra dismiss the government appointed by him, and allow new elections or form a government led by the major parties in the last Parliament.
    NEPAL MAOISTS 02
  • Nepalese homes stand in a lush green valley of  rice fields spared by the raging lanslide waters next to the ravaged area of the natural disaster that is the single most deadly monsoon caused incident this year in South Asia, in the Nepalese village of Thapru Friday Aug. 23, 2002. 41 people remain missing and are presumed dead, 13 bodies have been rescued,  and only 28 villagers survived Wednesday's himalayan disaster that destroyed most of the foothill village.
    NEPAL LANDSLIDE 01
  • Defaced picture images of Nepal's King Gyanendra and Queen Komal adorn a wall bearing advertisements for Noodles near the town of Sita Parthy, in southern Nepal Friday April 23, 2004. The nation of 26 million seems to offer laboratory conditions for a revolution: an undemocratic government under a feud-riven royal family; poverty exaerbated by a perceptiuon of government is remote and corrupt; a feudal system where a handful of rich landlords exploit millions of poor. In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. (AP Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    NEPAL MAOIST 04
  • Soldiers from  2nd Battalion of Maoist army dance holding their weapons in the air as they prepare to leave for the mountains after a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal Thursday April 22, 2004.  In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. The doctrines of Mao, the Chinese communist leader who believed in communism via an empowered peasantry, have found new life in the farm fields of this Himalayan kingdom. The rebels contend their revolution _ which has cost more than 9,500 lives _ is only possible through the barrel of a gun.
    NEPAL MAOIST 001.jpg