Crowd stones Nepal king

The motorcade of Nepal's King Gyanendra was stoned today as the monarch drove to a pilgrimage site in the capital.

The motorcade of Nepal's King Gyanendra was stoned today as the monarch drove to a pilgrimage site in the capital.

The attack was the first of its kind in Nepal where the monarch was traditionally regarded as an incarnation of Hindu god Vishnu but has become unpopular since King Gyanendra took power only to be forced down by weeks of violent protests last year.

The 59-year-old monarch was on his way to the Pashupatinath Temple in Kathmandu to pray on the occasion of "Mahashivratri" when crowds hurled stones at his motorcade as it neared the venue.

The stones hit one car accompanying King Gyanendra's vehicle before the heavily-guarded convoy made it to the temple where the monarch worshipped on the annual "grand night" festival of Lord Shiva, the Hindu god of destruction.

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The crowd also shouted "Gyanendra thief, leave the country" as a power shutdown plunged the area into darkness, Ishwar Dhakal, a witness said.

Police said the crowd was baton-charged before the king was driven back to the palace safely.

King Gyanendra has been isolated since he gave in to mass protests last year, stripped of most of his powers including the control of the powerful army and is rarely seen in public.

Gyanendra was a businessman before he became king in 2001 after his brother, King Birendra, and eight other royals were shot dead in a drug-and-drink fuelled shooting spree by the then crown prince who later turned the gun on himself.