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Nepal

27
64-72
13-18
50-56
467-482
604-617
Oct 2001Chance that the death of a pregnant Nepalese is the result of an unsafe abortion: 1 in 2
Source:

The Center for Reproductive Law and Policy (N.Y.C.)

Oct 2001Ratio of the death rate among pregnant women in Nepal to the rate for pregnant women worldwide: 2:1
Source:

The Center for Reproductive Law and Policy (N.Y.C.)

Aug 1999Weight in pounds of a bronze elephant donated to the U.N. last year by Kenya, Namibia, and Nepal: 7,000
Source:

Cast the Sleeping Elephant Trust (N.Y.C.)

Aug 1999Number of days before its unveiling last winter that shrubs and potted trees were positioned to obscure the penis of a bronze elephant donated to the U.N. last year by Kenya, Namibia, and Nepal: 1
Source:

Cast the Sleeping Elephant Trust (N.Y.C.)

June 30, 2009In an attempt to reduce rampant bribery, staff at Kathmandu's Tribhuvan airport were issued pants without pockets.
Source:

BBC

October 8, 2007A Nepalese eighth-grader who felt pity for policemen facing street demonstrations invented a crowd-controlling robot that can “charge at the mob with baton, use water canon, lob tear gas, and even shoot.”
Source:

Nepal News

September 5, 2007 Nepal's state-run airline, after experiencing technical problems with one of its planes, sacrificed two goats to appease the Hindu sky god.
Source:

Reuters

March 27, 2007A Nepalese teenager believed to be a reincarnation of the Buddha began a three-year meditation in a concrete bunker.
Source:

AFP via Yahoo!NEWS Singapore

September 1, 2006A 10-pound, 20-inch-tall, 14-year-old Nepalese boy claimed to be the world's smallest adult.
Source:

AP via Boston Globe

May 26, 2006A Sherpa stood naked on the summit of Mount Everest.
Source:

Indobase

May 19, 2006The Nepal House of Representatives declared the King of Nepal to be powerless.
Source:

The Washington Times

May 17, 2006A man with no legs climbed to the summit of Mt. Everest.
Source:

The Independent

March 8, 2006In rural Nepal fathers were being paid in piglets if they agreed not to sell their daughters into servitude.
Source:

The Christian Science Monitor

January 2, 2006 Nepalese Maoist Pushpa Kamal Dahal announced an end to the four-month truce with King Gyanendra's Royal Nepalese Army.
Source:

New Kerala

September 16, 2005Eighty-seven journalists were arrested for protesting against Nepalese restrictions on the media.
Source:

CTV.ca

September 15, 2005The Supreme Court of Nepal ruled that it was "evil" to force menstruating women to live in cow sheds.
Source:

BBC News

February 27, 2005 Maoists killed fifteen in Nepal.
Source:

Times of India

February 25, 2005 Nepalese soldiers killed dozens of Maoists in Nepal.
Source:

Reuters

February 1, 2005The King of Nepal said he was a proponent of multiparty democracy, then fired the government, sent troops to the house of the Prime Minister, and assumed direct ruling authority.
Source:

The New York Times

January 28, 2005and the government of Nepal shut down the Dalai Lama's offices in Kathmandu.
Source:

BBC News

October 8, 2004Rebels and government soldiers were abducting, torturing, and killing civilians in Nepal.
Source:

Reuters

August 31, 2004Twelve Nepalese hostages were apparently videotaped as they were killed by Iraqi militants.
Source:

Associated Press

August 20, 2004 Kathmandu was being blockaded by Maoist rebels.
Source:

Associated Press

July 4, 2004female rice farmers in Nepal were plowing their fields in the nude to please the rain god.
Source:

Associated Press

May 8, 2004The prime minister of Nepal resigned after weeks of violent street protests against the king.
Source:

New York Times

April 9, 2004 Nepal banned public protests in Katmandu.
Source:

Associated Press

April 2, 2004Fifty thousand protesters filled the streets of Katmandu, Nepal, demanding a restoration of democracy.
Source:

Associated Press

March 22, 2004There was heavy fighting in Nepal and the government claimed to have killed hundreds of rebels.
Source:

Associated Press

March 4, 2003 A three-year-old boy and a six-month-old girl were married in Nepal; the ceremony was briefly halted after the bride got fussy but resumed after both the bride and groom were breast-fed.
December 4, 2001Maoist rebels attacked a Coca-Cola plant near Katmandu.
July 0, 2000Matani, a three-year-old Nepalese girl with thighs like a deer and a neck like a conch shell, a member of the Shakya goldsmith caste, was named as the “kumari,” or incarnation of the goddess Taleju, after spending a night alone with the heads of ritually slaughtered goats and buffaloes. She will wear red, and pin up her hair, and devotees will touch her feet with their foreheads, and upon menarche she will retire and then likely be spurned by all potential suitors, for the man who marries a former kumari dies young. “I feel a bit sad,” said her father, “but since my child has become a living goddess, I feel proud.”
Source:

CNN


December 2009

THE GENERAL ELECTRIC SUPERFRAUD
Why the Hudson River Will Never Run Clean
By David Gargill

THE MASTER OF SPIN BOLDAK
Undercover with Afghanistan’s Drug-Trafficking Border Police
By Matthieu Aikins

MERMAID FEVER
A story by Steven Millhauser

UNDERSTANDING OBAMACARE
By Luke Mitchell

Also: Dave Hickey and Wendell Berry