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NEPALI SOCIETY
Lahan's hero
On 19 January, protestors in Lahan torched five buses carrying over 350 passengers. Most of them lost their luggage and did not have even a change of clothes. The town's hotels and guest houses were overflowing and at one point there were 20 people to a room. Sick people couldn't get to hospital, food was in short supply, shops remained shut. News was sporadic and people were desperate: far from home, cold, hungry, tired, and fearful of what could happen next.
NEPALI SOCIETY
Lahan's hero
FROM ISSUE #336 (16 FEB 2007 - 22 FEB 2007) | TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Sunil Kumar Sah, a 29-year-old
resident of Lahan, felt enough was enough. He defied curfew, crossed
barricades, and put his own life at risk to help stranded travellers.
Sah mobilised his social welfare and
human rights organisation, Samagra Jana
Utthan Kendra, and got a group of young people to start helping travellers who
were stranded. The group went to the Marwari Samaj Sewa and requested free food
and shelter for the travellers, and then canvassed Lahan's Naya Bajar for funds
for the sick who needed immediate medical help and to buy bus tickets for
others. The Jana Uthan Kendra organised an ambulance to take a cardiac patient
to Kathmandu and a week after the bus burning, Sah got 53 women and children
airlifted to Kathmandu.
Through all this, Sah, who
contributes to the Lahan-based Nawajagriti weekly, took part in protests.
"We were agitating against the state's discrimination," he explains,
"but the travellers were just caught in the middle, it was my duty to help
them."
"Every Nepali has the right to
travel and be safe, and I was only respecting that," he adds.
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