Police in
Nepal will resume the search today for the body of a 27-year-old
American woman who has allegedly been battered to death with a hammer in
Nepal.
Dahlia
Yehia, from Kalamazoo, Michigan, has been missing since travelling to
the city of Pokhara last month to help people who were injured or lost
their homes following last April’s earthquake.

A
local man, named by police as Narayan Prasad Paudel, has allegedly
admitted battering Miss Yehia to death with a hammer and a lathi - a
metal-clad baton - as she slept in his house in Dhital village, near
Pokhara.
Miss Yehia,
who was an art teacher in Austin, Texas, at the time, was staying in a
rented room in Paudel’s home when she was savagely attacked, said senior
local officer Govinda Adhikari.
‘He
confessed that he killed her and then threw her body into a river,’ the
officer told the Himalayan Times. ‘Unfortunately, we have not found her
body yet.
‘We are also trying to find out the motive for the killing.’
Mr Adhikari said the suspect had thrown Miss Yehia’s body into the Seti River from the KI Singh Bridge.
‘He
contacted the American lady through the internet and invited her to
stay in a rented room in Pokhara on an earthquake relief support
programme.
‘She had been staying in the room for three days before the crime was committed.’
Police
said that while Paudel was being interrogated at the district police
station about Miss Yehia’s disappearance, he made the excuse that he
wanted to use the toilet.
Released from handcuffs, he then allegedly made his way onto the roof and jumped off.
But he broke his leg and was quickly recaptured.

He is now
being treated at the Manipal Teaching Hospital, police vowing to
continue the interrogation on Monday morning to find the motive for the
murder.
Meanwhile teams of police and rescue service personnel plan to continue searching the river for Miss Yehia’s body.
Miss Yehia’s family is understood to have last heard from her through the WhatsApp messaging service.
She contacted them from Pokhara on the night of August 6, according a Nepalese trekking association.
The family had contacted the association for helping in finding Miss Yehia.
They
told the association that she had first visited a village in Gorkha
district, which was at the epicentre of the earthquake, before setting
off to Pokhara.
Nearly 9,000 people died in the April 25 earthquake and thousands more were left without homes
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