Nepal's Colonel Kumar Lama Held After Court Appearance
Colonel Kumar Lama is accused of committing the alleged crimes in Nepal during the country's civil war in 2005.
The 46-year-old, currently seconded to the UN, was arrested at his East Sussex home by the Met Police on Thursday. He faces trial in Britain under a law that allows prosecution of alleged war criminals.
Col Lama spoke once to confirm his identity at the hearing,
where he was charged with intentionally "inflicting severe pain or
suffering" as a public official on two separate individuals.
The offenses are thought to have taken place between April
and May 2005 and April and October 2005 at the Gorusinghe Army Barracks
in Kapilvastu, Nepal.
Protest note
Col Lama's arrest in St Leonards-on-Sea near Hastings has
angered the Nepalese government, who have requested Col Lama's immediate
release. They have summoned the UK ambassador in Kathmandu to protest
and instructed the Nepalese embassy in London to submit a protest note
to Downing Street.
Two diplomats from the Nepalese embassy were at Westminster Magistrates for the short hearing.
Col Lama is currently employed as a UN peace keeper in South
Sudan. He was due to return to Africa on Saturday after a Christmas
break to the UK, but was arrested on 3 January.
The court heard the colonel had previously served as a UN peacekeeper in Sierra Leone and twice in Lebanon. District Judge Quentin Purdy ordered the 46-year-old to
remain in custody before he appears at the Old Bailey in London on 24
January.
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