Kathmandu: A new trekking trail to attract more foreigners by allowing them to retrace the memory of Nepal’s decade-long Maoist insurgency has been launched by former rebel chief Prachanda to rebuild the country’s economy.
The ambitious project ‘The Guerrilla Trek’ – a 19-day hike – follows trails where thousands of Maoist guerrillas once dug trenches and ambushed enemy during their fight against the once-absolute monarchy.
The civil war claimed 16,000 lives. UCPN-Maoist Chairman Prachanda on Tuesday launched a map and a guide book produced by US author Alonzo Lyons at a programme organised by Nepal Tourism Board in Kathmandu.
The trail has been divided into three sections and is a walk over rugged mountains, forests, rivers, caves and centuries-old villages. “As all know, Nepal has seen big political upheavals and the people’s revolution will be of no value unless the country goes through an economic transformation,” Prachanda said at the function.
With peace restored in the country, the Maoist party has now transformed the districts hit by war into a “war tourism” destination.
In 2006, Maoists agreed to lay down arms and participate in the new electoral process and was voted to power two years later. Guerrilla Trek has the potential of becoming a “war tourism product” like in Vietnam, Russia, and China, he said. “As war tourism has been promoted worldwide for economic benefit, Nepal’s Guerrilla Trek also holds the potential to lure visitors from around the world,” he said.
The vision is more or less showing visitors how the people’s war began and spread to other districts from Rukum. The Maoists were the largest party in the parliament, which was dissolved in May over the failure to draft a new post-war constitution. (PTI)