A woman cross the deserted road during the general strike called by the hardliner faction from the former Maoist rebels to protest against the first draft of the new constitution that has been published in Kathmandu, yesterday.

AFP
Kathmandu

Nepalese police arrested nearly 250 demonstrators yesterday as they torched vehicles and forced schools, shops and businesses to shut down in protest over government plans to pass a new constitution.
Police said they had arrested 247 Maoist activists over the violence and deployed heavy security during the first national strike since a devastating quake hit the country in April.
“Seven vehicles have been torched and another 19 vandalised,” police spokesman Kamal Singh Bam said, adding that no casualties had been reported so far.
Nepal’s Maoists struck a deal with rival parties on a new constitution last month after years of bitter disagreement, spurred by an earthquake that killed more than 8,800 people in the Himalayan nation.  
But a breakaway faction of the party says the deal betrays the principles of the Maoists, who fought a decade-long civil war with the state that ended in 2006 and led to the abolition of a centuries-old feudal monarchy.
“The draft is against the people and the spirit and hopes of the people’s war,” their spokesman Khadga Bahadur Bishwokarma said, referring to the
conflict.
“The constitution does not address the problems of the ethnic, racial and gender discrimination that we fought against.”
Dozens have been injured this week in clashes between police and protesters angered by the terms of the draft constitution, after a public consultation process began on Monday.
A key sticking point concerns internal borders, with the opposition pushing for new provinces to be created along lines that could favour historically marginalised communities.
Other parties have attacked this model, calling it a threat to national unity.  
Yesterday’s strike emptied Kathmandu’s usually packed roads of traffic and many Nepalis expressed frustration over the impact on livelihoods
already devastated by the quake.
“I am tired of strikes. It is people like us who suffer ... whenever there is a strike, there is no work and we go hungry,” said daily wage labourer, Karma Tamang.
Bank official Nisha Shrestha said she was on her way to work in defiance of the strike.
“It makes me angry that at a time when we are trying to recover from an earthquake, these people want to trouble us more with strikes,” the 28-year-old said.


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