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Nepal Human Rights Panel urges the Indian counterpart to guarantee justice for Kiit’s victim

Nepal Human Rights Panel urges the Indian counterpart to guarantee justice for Kiit’s victim

According to the complaints received, the commission also sought information from the Nepal Embassy in India about the incident and the status of the students, according to the statement.

As reported that the Nepalese students who were forced to abandon the campus due to the circumstances that arise from suicide cannot yet return in a free environment, the commission urges the Nepal Government to take more diplomatic initiatives in this regard and create a environment where students can study, he said.

Nepal’s Foreign Minister, Dr. Arzu Rana Deuba, on February 22, spoke with Odisha Prime Minister Mohan Charan Majhi, on the phone and insisted that the teachers and employees who behaved badly with the Nepalese students They were retired from Kiit.

The state government, meanwhile, also issued instructions to the Kiit authorities to take quick measures to restore the confidence of the nestals who have not returned to the campus so far.

The riots began on the Kiit campus on February 16 when the Nepalese students wanted to see the woman’s body and demanded justice. After this, a section of Kiit employees attacked them, and the institute ordered its hostel eviction.

Nepal’s prime minister, KP Sharma Oli, has also expressed concern about the incident and took two Embassy officials to Bhubaneswar to take stock of the situation.

Previously, during an argument at the Odisha Assembly, BJD member Ganeswar Behera had claimed that there has been a violation of human rights in Kiit and the incident has earned a bad name for the State and the country.

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