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 zachary harden
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 image located by Chrystian Kretowicz, 9 July 2008
 
image located by Chrystian Kretowicz, 9 July 2008See also:
Today, the Nepali Constituent Assembly resumed its deliberations, which hit a 
snag due to the Madheshi parties misgivings about CPN-M sincerity in following 
up on their promises of creating a new, federal structure of the freshly minted 
Republic. That agenda is going to be difficult to solve and it will take a lot 
of time. One of the latest demands for autonomy comes from Sherpa (Bhotia) 
people of the Tibetan stock of the Himalaya region of Nepal. They were 
completely neglected and overlooked by Comarade Prachanda and other 
revolutionary politicians in carving ethnic niches in the new Nepal. All of 
their parties and organizations united now, irrespective of ideological 
differences, in demanding a state of their own - Himali Autonomous State.
Dr.Stan Stevens, Associate Professor of Geography of the University of 
Massachusetts (Amherst, MA) provides a comprehensive background on the region in 
question (extracts from
http://www.sherpakyidug.org/forums/Messages.asp?idThread=2870):
Of 
the 59 indigenous peoples currently recognized by the government of Nepal, 17 
inhabit the high Himalaya and others are waiting to be recognized. The most 
well-known are the Sherpas. The area they inhabit stretches the length of Nepal 
along the Tibetan border "from Humla to the high valleys below Kangchenjunga." 
It comprises perhaps 17% or more of the total land area of the country. [...]
The provisional flag of the proposed Himali Autonomous State is composed 
of three unequal stripes - blue-white-red - with the map of Nepal featuring 
prominently the Himalaya region and surmounted by the six sets of figures of 
Sherpas in their native dress.
There is a Nepali-language website of the Himali Autonomous State at
http://www.himaliautonomousstate.org.
Chrystian Kretowicz, 9 
July 2008