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The British Army has been
recruiting Nepalese men for nearly 200 years |
At least one British army officer is thought to be
among five people reportedly abducted by Maoist rebels in Nepal.
The group were part of a mission to
recruit Gurkhas in the remote Baglung region, northwest of the capital,
Kathmandu.
Nepalese soldiers were also missing,
the district's most senior official said.
Bomb attacks, ambushes and
kidnappings have brought the violence to a peak recently, after the rebels
pulled out of a seven-month old ceasefire.
Armed struggle
The British Embassy would only
confirm that a British national was among five men missing in the Baglung
district.
If the Maoists are responsible, it
will be the first time they have kidnapped foreign nationals.
The rebels are opposed to the
recruitment of Gurkhas by Britain and in recent weeks have been involved in
several violent attacks aimed at disrupting the process.
More than 8,000 people have died
since Maoist guerrillas began an armed struggle to rid Nepal of its monarchy in
1996, the authorities say.
Contact lost
Britain provides non-lethal military
aid and training to the Nepalese army as well as much of Nepal's foreign
assistance.
A Ministry of Defence spokesman in
London could not confirm the officer had been kidnapped, but told the BBC they
had lost contact on Sunday night with a team that was observing the recruitment
of Gurkhas.
The British Army has been recruiting
Nepalese men to fight in its Gurkha brigade for nearly 200 years.
Competition is fierce to join the
brigade, which has a reputation for fierce bravery, endurance and
loyalty.
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