Conflict victims have condemned the government's failure to amend the Truth Reconciliation Act as ordered by the Supreme Court, reports The Himalayan Times on November 3. They have demanded that no amnesty be granted for serious offences committed during the decade-long Maoist insurgency. Devi Sunuwar, mother of Maina Sunuwar who was killed by security personnel in Kavre during the Maoist insurgency, said Kavre District Court had awarded life term to the members of the Nepali Army who were found guilty, but ironically, she was dragged into a case by the Nepali Army for seeking justice. "We have lost everything in our long battle for justice. We have lost our loved ones and family members in the course of seeking justice, but we have not got justice," she lamented at a stakeholders' consultation meeting on Universal Periodic Review (UPR) organised by Forum for Women, Law and Development. She said none of the political parties had shown sympathy and seriousness towards the plight of conflict victims. Chair of Conflict Victims Common Platform (CVCP) Gopal Bahadur Shah said the UPR had been expressing serious concern about Nepal's failure to ensure justice for conflict victims, but the government was doing nothing to address the concerns of conflict victims. Similarly, Executive Director of Forum for Women, Law and Development Sabin Shrestha said UPR participants had shown serious concern about Nepal's failure to ensure justice for conflict victims.