Birendra Shah Explained

Birendra Shah
Birth Place:Inarwasira
Disappeared Date:October 4/5, 2007
Disappeared Place:Pipara Bazaar, Kalaiya, Bara, Nepal
Disappeared Status:Killed
Body Discovered:November 8, 2007
Nationality:Nepalese
Occupation:Journalist
Employer:Nepal FM, Dristi Weekly, and Avenues TV
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Spouse:Umarawati Devi
Children:Bibek Shah
Parents:Deven Shah

Birendra Shah (Nepali: बीरेन्द्र शाह) (Unknown  - November 8, 2007) was a print and broadcast journalist for the Nepal FM, Dristi Weekly, and Avenues TV in Bara, Nepal. Shah was kidnapped October 4/5, 2007, by Communist Party of Nepal Maoists from Pipara Bazaar, Kalaiya, Bara, Nepal, and found dead one month later.[1] [2] [3] The CPN(M) later issued a statement confirming his death.[4]

Personal

Married to Umarawati Devi with two children.

Death

Shah was kidnapped after exposing the Maoists and connections to illegal logging deals. Three members of the Maoists abducted Shah, took him to a forest, and then shot him to death same day he was kidnapped.[5]

Context

Shah exposed illegal logging deals related to the Maoists. Before his death, he had written several reports about the Maoists which resulted in many threats from the party. They abducted and killed him the same day in a forest and threw his body in a swampy forest. Members of Maoist first denied the abduction and killing of the journalist but then after a month admitted to the killing. The abduction and killing was part of a "personal vendetta".[6]

Impact

Shah has been given a television journalism award in his memory from Avenues Television production.[7]

Reactions

His death drew criticism from several press freedom organizations, including Reporters Without Borders,[8] the Committee to Protect Journalists,[9] and the International Federation of Journalists.[10] There were multiple calls for justice and a nationwide protest.

More than a month after the killing, Maoist Deputy Commander Janardan Sharma Prabhakar apologized on behalf of his party, which had previously claimed innocence.[11]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Birendra Shah: Journalist abducted in Bara, whereabouts are still unknown - Protectionline. Protectionline. 2016-05-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20160507025213/http://protectionline.org/2007/10/09/birendra-shah-journalist-abducted-in-bara-whereabouts-are-still-unknown/. 2016-05-07. dead.
  2. Web site: Birendra Shah. Committee to Protect Journalists.
  3. Web site: NEPAL: Sitaula confirms Maoist involvement in journalist Shah's abduction.
  4. News: Nepal Maoist leader apologizes for journalist's murder . BBC Worldwide Monitoring . Lexis-Nexis . 2007-11-08 .
  5. Web site: Funeral Held for Murdered Nepalese Journalist. VOA.
  6. Web site: Outcry in Nepal after Maoists admit to killing journalist. https://web.archive.org/web/20160911183434/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-1378095671.html. dead. 2016-09-11.
  7. Web site: NEPAL: Journalist Shah's last rites performed.
  8. Web site: Reporters without Borders . Maoists confess that journalist Birendra Shah was killed the day he was kidnapped . 2007-11-18 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071030162827/http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=23915 . 2007-10-30 .
  9. Web site: Committee to Protect Journalists . Nepal's Birendra Shah is dead, Maoists say . 2007-11-18.
  10. Web site: NEPAL: IFJ outraged at the death of Birendra Shah . 2007-11-18 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110520085211/http://www.asiamedia.ucla.edu/article-southasia.asp?parentid=81528 . 2011-05-20 .
  11. News: Abducted Nepal journalist's body found. "BBC Worldwide Monitoring . Lexis-Nexis . 2007-11-08 .