Rookmangud katawal biography of martin

  • Katawal excelled in studies and never lost his precociousness.
  • In 1999, Katawal became Director of Military Intelligence.
  • Rookmangud Katawal – My Story: an autobiography.
  • Nepali Times

    A month after King Gyanendra’s coup d’etat of 1 February 2005, I was summoned to the Royal Nepal Army headquarters at Bhadrakali to meet Lt Gen Rookmangud Katawal. There was an information blackout, and military censors had to approve pages of Nepali Times before it went to press.

    Katawal had a vice-like handshake which I thought was a part of his psy-war repertoire. In the hour-long conversation, he wanted to know the international reaction to the king’s takeover, and delivered a veiled warning to toe the line.

    Nearly ten years later, Katawal still has an iron handshake and the same no-nonsense manner. We were meeting on Tuesday in a living room festooned with framed photographs and military honours. His memoir, which will be published bygd nepa~laya this month, fryst vatten brisk and brusque, just like the abrasive general himself.

    As an eight-year-old in Okhaldhunga, Rookmangud Katawal sneaked into the royal tent during a visit bygd King Mahendra. The king, wearing shades e

  • rookmangud katawal biography of martin
  • (Authors) Dilli Raj Sharma & Tek Bahadur Shrestha
    Centre for Nepal and Asian Studies, Kathmandu
    David N. Gellner, Joanna Pfaff-Czarnecka & John Whelpton (eds)
    liv, 624p. Includes IndexOriginally published in 1997 under the title ‘Nationalism and Ethnicity in a Hindu Kingdom’
    Lisa Choegyal (Photographs) Sujoy Das (Foreword) Reinhold Messner
    We Read, FACTS Research & Analytics, Lalitpur, Nepal
    (Compiled & Ed) Mr. Philip Pearce, Mr. Chiranjibi Neupane & Mr. Dilip Man Sthapit
    Tribhuvan University Central Library (TUCL), Kathmandu
    Ekta Books Distributors (P) Ltd., Nepal
    224p.Includes Index ; References and Bibliography
    B.P. Koirala (Translated) Nagendra Sharma (Ed) Govinda Raj Bhattarai
    Oriental Publication House Pvt. Ltd, Nepal
    Maya Thakuri (Translated) Damodar Sharma
    Akshar Creations Nepal, Kathmandu
    Oriental Publication House Pvt. Ltd, Nepal
    (Compiled) Musashi Tachikawa, Makiko Ito & Takeshi Kameyama (Illustrated) Gauta

    When I first met General Rookmangud Katawal, he was at the height of his career. It was during a pivotal moment in Nepal’s history. Only a few days before, on April 10, the historic 2008 Constituent Assembly Elections had been held. Prior to the elections, the country thrummed with trepidation over regional outbreaks, mob threats and the probability of widespread violence in and around the polling stations. As it turned out, the day came and went with less hostility than predicted. The unexpected victory of the Maoists sparked self-congratulatory dancing in the streets. The defeated parties hung back in shell-shocked silence. The king had not yet made a public statement. Whatever one’s party affiliation may have been, there was palpable relief that – if nothing else – the long-postponed event was finally over. The day I drove to Army Headquarters, there was still celebration in the air, but also emerging sobriety – a kind of election-day hangover. The country had undeniably reached