Friday, June 24, 2005

Nepali Maoists, Bihari Maoists

Maoism as Mao propagated is an open book ideology. The goal is a one party state of communists achieved through violence. Is that what the Nepali Maoists are? Are they incapable of change? Incapable of an ideological transformation? The recent rampage of the Bihari Maoists in Champaran that is a copycat of what the Nepali Maoists do should ring some serious alarm bells. The operation was as if choreographed by the Nepali Maoist leadership. The Indian Maoists used to be two factions. Babura Bhattarai was instrumental in bringing those two factions together. That shows the level of coordination they have had in the past. There is no reason to believe that might have abated.

Does this one attack prove the Monarchists in Nepal right? No way. The Monarchists, with their distaste for freedom, are but a mirror image of the Maoists themselves. How can they be an alternative to the Maoist ideology?

I continue to think the three forces in Nepal should come together for an
interim government and a Constituent Assembly that is preceded by a Maoist disarmament and the army put back in the barracks. The military option is not off the table, but the political option has to be fully exhausted.

Instead the Monarchists treat the Maoists like allies who helped them grab power from the democrats.

In The News
  • Another former Nepal PM heads for India Hindustan Times, India while Koirala was looking for means to restore democracy in Nepal, former prime minister Surya Bahadur Thapa begins a 10-day visit on Friday to try to mediate between King Gyanendra and Nepal's opposition parties with India's help... six-time premier .... 20-year-old grandson Siddharth .... Siddharth is scheduled to meet Rahul Gandhi and efforts are on to fix appointments with other young Indian leaders like Jyotiraditya Scindia...... Thapa's son Sunil, who works with the UN, will also accompany him.
  • Rebel uprising leaves 21 dead along India-Nepal border Ireland Online, Ireland the first co-ordinated attack involving both Indian and Nepalese communist militants .... some 400 suspected Maoist rebels attacked a police station and two state-run banks in Bihar state’s Madhuban village .... Madhuban is 90 miles north of Patna, the capital of Bihar..... almost 100 Nepalese Maoists, fighting in the neighbouring country to topple the constitutional monarchy, were also involved ...... The Nepalese rebel chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal has previously said that communist rebels from Nepal and India were in close contact, but no joint attack had been reported until yesterday.
  • 29 killed in battle with Maoist rebels in Bihar Khaleej Times in Bihar’s East Champaran district, adjoining Nepal ... Security forces cordoned off the area and a fierce encounter with the rebels followed ..... At least 16 rebels were also killed in the encounter ..... At least three of them belonged to Nepal’s Maoist Communist Party, while the others were from the Maoist Communist Centre which operates across five Indian states.
  • Champaran encounter ends; 10 bodies recovered Malayala Manorama an encounter, which ended late Thursday night ..... two beheaded bodies of extremists were also recovered..... Police seized two SLRs, one regular gun and 250 rounds of live cartridges from the site of the gunbattle
  • Naxal rampage leaves 21 dead in Bihar Hindu the first coordinated attack involving both Indian and Nepalese communist militants .... a fierce, all-night gun battle ..... the authorities had launched a massive combing operation to flush out the Maoist rebels ... Indo-Nepal border along the district had been sealed and CRPF, Bihar Military Police, Special Task Force and district police contingents fanned out across East Champaran to raid suspected Maoist hideouts...... An additional company of CRPF has been rushed here from Jehanabad to assist in the combing operations..... around 1.30 pm .... looting six rifles, two carbines and a huge quantity of ammunition. ..... stormed the State Bank of India branch in the market complex owned by Singh and looted Rs three lakh .... then stormed the local branch of Central Bank and decamped with Rs eight lakh.
  • US Ambassador warns Maoist victory in Nepal would create ... ReliefWeb (press release), Switzerland "Next year will be absolutely critical for Nepal," said James F. Moriarty. "Within the next 12 to 14 months, Nepal is clearly going to be going down one of two paths. One is the path of reconciliation between the palace and the parties to come up with a functioning game plan to get the country back to democracy and also to deal with the insurgency." The other path is bleaker -- no reconciliation, increasingly large demonstrations in Kathmandu, and Maoist rebels destabilizing the situation with more violence, he said...... the best way to address the insurgency is through a negotiated settlement that brings the majority of the Maoists back into the political mainstream ...... the insurgents must believe they will not be able to win militarily...... "Should we give $2 million of security assistance this year or $500 million to refugee camps scattered throughout India in the not-too-distant future?" ..... The Maoists are expanding in the poorest, most corrupt areas of India that border Nepal. Maoist activity has grown from 30 districts to 170 districts in recent years.
  • Maoists should be brought to mainstream - Nepal opposition party ... Monsters and Critics.com, UK Madhav Kumar Nepal has said that the Maoists and the political parties may stage a protest movement separately even if the immediate collaboration with the rebels is not possible...... He has also indicated that the rebels can continue with the armed struggle while the seven parties move ahead with peaceful protests against autocracy....... we can hit at the common enemy separately ...... the Maoists must give up their weapons during the election for a constituent assembly...... Nepal ruled out dialogue and agreement with the king until the parliament is revived to hold the election of a constituent assembly
  • Nepal parties welcome Maoist view Monsters and Critics.com all forces have become converged against autocracy..... Bam Dev Gautam .... "Now the anti-autocracy forces have become centralized". ..... Amik Sherchan ..... "There will certainly be a unity between the Maoists and the movement. Environment for that will be created itself in the course of the movement"..... Dilendra Badu, a leader of Nepali Congress ..... said that the Maoists' view was partially positive and requested them to stop violence
  • Massive Maoist attack in Bihar leaves the Govt stunned Newindpress a large number of Maoist guerrillas ran amok in East Champaran district which border Nepal reportedly killing up to 21 people.....the Maoists, apparently in hundreds, launched a massive onslaught on Thursday afternoon, virtually taking over the Madhuban block for hours...... attackers included several woman rebels dressed in military fatigues ..... attackers were from the Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist), which has close links with Maoist guerrillas in neighbouring Nepal..... the first time Indian Maoists ganged up in such numbers to stage a daring attack on government institutions, banks and the local treasury anywhere in the country since the Maoist movement broke out in 1967. Such attacks are common in Nepal...... Police officials could not explain how Maoist rebels entered the area in hundreds without setting off a major alert and had a free run..... over 300 Maoist guerrillas, including dozens of women in olive green military uniform, Thursday afternoon attacked the Madhuban bazaar, opened fire to create panic and set fire to the police station and block office, killing two policemen and a bank guard...... looted cash from a bank and attacked a petrol pump owned by Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) MP from Sheohar, Sitaram Singh...... rebels exploded bombs, looted four rifles and ransacked the local branch of State Bank of India, Central Bank and local treasury as a part of their daredevil operation..... bombed the house of Sitaram Singh and his neighbour and looted cash and jewellery..... The Maoists did the looting for over 90 minutes without any police action..... One source close to the RJD leader said Nepalese Maoists were also involved in the attack.
  • Seven killed as naxalites go on the rampage in Bihar Hindu, India setting fire to a police station, looting rifles, banks and the house and petrol pump of a Member of Parliament..... Police said they had shot dead at least four naxalites near Banjaria village, while they were moving into Sheohar district. The police also claimed to have arrested local CPI (Maoist) commander Ram Pravesh Baitha...... Additional forces, including those from the CRPF, have been rushed to flush out the naxalites. The State Government has sounded a red alert in the Champaran and Sheohar districts.
  • Janamorcha Nepal Gen Secy Subedi released NepalNews
  • 21 dead in joint Maoist attack in India: The Hindu NepalNews ..... An all-night gun battle ending early Friday involving Nepali and Indian Maoists ..... they tried to flee to Nepal
  • New ordinance proposes King as chancellor of all the universities: Reports NepalNews the new university ordinance was being drafted with a view to making higher education more systematic and to stop politicization in the education sector...... Dr. Suresh Raj Sharma asked, “His Majesty is the chancellor of Tribhuvan University. Has it helped TU from becoming politicized?" ..... Dr. Min Bahadur Bista said the new provision is control-oriented and centralized in nature. (The thing is that) there is a need to decentralise and diversify the education sector as much as possible ..... law experts have cautioned against issuing ordinances—that last for only six months.
  • Student organizations annonce stir NepalNews
  • How Much Longer? Nepali Times King Gyanendra (driving black Jaguar) .... Within Nepal and outside many wished the king and parties would unite but the gap widened. The parties should have reinvented themselves to prevail but were marginalised by militarised forces...... Individually, the parties, king and rebels are incapable of resolving the crisis. But neither are they able to finish each other off. This is an indecisive deadend..... the parties ..still swear by a constitutional monarchy but are dragged by a radicalised cadre....... The king has emerged in the past five months as more of a ruler than a constitutional monarch..... His choice of ultraloyal technocrats rather than meritocrats to run the country prove he’s in it for the long haul..... The idea is to crush the Maoists, whatever the cost to the people and the economy. And in case the Maoists do look like they may win the king is convinced that the Americans, Europeans and Indians will step in to prevent it....... This may be why he doesn’t see talk of an alliance between the parties and the Maoists as a threat, and he seems in no particular hurry to find a resolution. The strategy seems to be to use the next three years to craft a polity that suits the role he sees for himself. All this is making even pro-monarchy moderates seriously worried
  • From The Nepali Press Nepali Times Sharad Chandra Shah, Sachit Shamsher JBR, Bharat Keshar Simha and Dr Kesharjung Rayamajhi...... played an important role in mobilising Panchayat youth workers during the 1980 referendum and later. Shah’s trusted people from that period, Tanka Dhakal and Khadga Bahadur GC, are ministers today. Sharad Chandra Shah’s speciality is behind-the-scenes power-brokering....... ran a restaurant in Singapore. In 1997, he returned and was appointed to the Information Technology Commission...... Sachit Shamsher JBR is the brother of late Damodar Shamsher, the mysterious negotiator between the palace and the communists during the Panchayat....... served as ambassador to Burma in 1996 ..... instrumental in organising various public felicitations for King Gyanendra..... The Royal Council conference headed by Sachit Shamsher proposed that the problem could only be solved through the king’s direct involvement, which was opposed by the political parties...... those who consider Sachit Shamsher’s words to be the official line of the palace and the army....... Simha ..... has espoused monarchism and radical Hinduism...... “I will not accept a republic nor religious secularism even if it means death” ....... served as ambassador to Britain, and on return, worked his way up the WHF hierarchy....... Last year when the ‘anti-regression’ agitation by the parties were at their peak, he said in an interview: “A stick is not enough, we need a Jang Bahadur.” ...... Rayamajhi .. At a program organised last year by the king’s niece, he suggested, “It is important that the king form an advisory council under his own chairmanship.” And that is exactly what happened..... He even fought an election with his own party Janata Dal but lost. Even while he was chairman of the council he admitted he had advised in favour of the 4 October 2002 royal move........ Mohan Bikram .... Mohan Bikram has been talking from his hideout about the rifts in the Maoist leadership. The Maverick communist leader describes it as an indication of Prachanda’s “dictatorial style” and thinks many Maoist rank and file are now in danger from Prachanda loyalists. He says Baburam should have challenged Prachanda but seems to think that Baburam doesn’t have the fortitude. Mohan Bikram has been sharply critical of Baburam ever since the latter left his party to join Prachanda in the early 1990s but this time he appears to have softened. He thinks feudalistic and fascist tendencies are on the rise in the Maoist movement and he believes that Baburam’s life is in danger. He is surprised that Baburam was sent to India and suspects he may have bowed to pressure. He maintains the Maoists cannot win and reiterates his stand that the Maoists will one day unite with the monarchy. He thinks the Maoist overtures towards India are a part of an effort towards a soft landing under Indian mediation. He adds: “In this way, the Maoists are no different than the UML and NC which are always looking to Delhi for blessings. They are not revolutionaries anymore.” ..... Tulsi Giri ..... some even satirising the situation by collecting petty cash to help him pay back the loan..... A person I knew came to me and requested me to be a sleeping partner in his company. I agreed. .. until the bank sends me a formal notice, I don’t have to pay anyone anything on the basis of news published in the papers...... I sold my house and property two decades ago and left the country. I never thought that I would be involved in politics again....... this is neither a duck nor a chicken ..... the nation must be led towards the path that both the king and the nation want...... Haven’t you seen where the parties have taken the country? You wantto go that way? ... I have thick skin like a rhino, criticism doesn’t make any difference to me.
  • Mindless Mistakes by Ashutosh Tiwari Nepali Times 234 Nepalis lost their lives to Maoists’ explosives (11 were killed by the army’s) in the first quarter of 2005..... the Maoists face little incentive to collect and inject diverse and independent third-party feedback into their decision-making process..... between February 1996 and April 2005, the Maoists kidnapped 34,014 Nepalis. Once in, the recruits are to dream of a future free of ‘class enemies’ but survive in the present through the use of force, extortion and violence. Their leaders keep the issues of ‘justice’ and ‘enemies’ vague so anyone can define them any way to justify any act of violence...... those who stray from the party are punished for being traitors and spies, all disagreements are crushed. The only thing that’s fit to grow is an ideologically homogeneous mindset that is hostile to information that contradicts its worldview...... such a mindset knows what it knows and doesn’t want to know any more. Ambitious recruits figure that the only way to get promoted is to start by increasing the enemies’ body count..... its business model is anchored by an insulated decision-making process that has violence on the default mode
  • Death of an engineer by CK Lal Nepali Times For a nation numbed by recent slaughters in Chitwan, Kabhre and Kailali the suicide of Dinesh Chandra Pyakhurel went almost unnoticed. The self-annihilation of a water-supply engineer and top bureaucrat represented the state of society itself...... Regime instability fuels frustration among civil servants. After February First, governance has been arbitrary, amendments of laws through ordinances are commonplace. The constitution itself has been repeatedly re-interpreted to suit the interests of people in power. In the ensuing uncertainty, the moral-legal compass directing the behaviour of individuals has become non-functional. An authoritarian regime lurches towards anarchy without central control. The sight of this speeding monster is frightening to innocent bystanders but it must be even more apocalyptic for insiders...... Since the royal takeover, people unwilling to jump on the directionless train have got out of its way. Some journalists have lapsed into silence, other professionals have just given up and left. Several bureaucrats have taken voluntary retirement. Dinesh chose to take his own life...... The publicity machinery of ‘constructive monarchy’ has been running a concerted campaign to defame everyone with democratic persuasion. People with the strength of principles have taken the criticism in their stride but pragmatists have made peace with power and turncoats, as always, survive....... The RCCC is neither constitutional nor unconstitutional—it is extra-constitutional just like the regime that spawned it...... You can’t even bargain with it—a trading relationship implies equality...... It forces you to either prostrate or perish..... Throughout his life, the engineer worked on the assumption that two-and-two makes four. Dinesh found the arithmetic of life in the past two months too dissonant to bear...... appointment of the new chief justice .... A storm is quietly brewing within. When it bursts, no embankment will contain it.
  • Let's Listen To Nilambar Acharya, Democracy Is Key United We Blog The reinstated democracy of 1990 was under attack from the Royal Palace, right from the beginning. Within 10 days of reinstatement of democracy the then King Birendra announced a constitution reform suggestion committee. The announcement agitated the public immediately..... When the new constitution was ready to be launched the Palace came out with a parallel constitution. It again had to withdraw its draft because of fierce protests from the public as well as from the Cabinet. Until then there was unity among the democratic political forces and that is why the Palace’s moves could not be successful..... Instead of realizing the weaknesses and the danger to democracy, each faction of the political parties tried to influence the palace and get its favor to gain an upper hand in intra-party or inter-party rivalries. The Palace was happy to manipulate such occasions and enhance its power whenever it got a chance. Finally a situation was reached when the King took over...... Journalists, lawyers and other professional organizations are already in the forefront of the movement...... Ambassadors of countries with which Nepal has diplomatic relations have come here with a commitment to respect the Constitution of Nepal. That Constitution guarantees multiparty democracy..... . The King has no right to give directions or speak against political parties. It is the rights of the people to criticize and elect political parties of their choosing. The King is expressing views against political parties inside the country as well as in international forums. This is a clear indication of autocracy..... Nilambar Acharya .. was arrested for a few weeks by King Gyanendra’s regime after 1 February
  • The Rediff Special/Surendra Phuyal Rediff, India Delhi has suddenly emerged as a political and medical hub not just for Nepal's politicians, but also underground and 'Interpol Red-Cornered' Maoist leaders and emissaries, who finally appear keen on working together with the politicians...... Both leaders were welcomed and escorted by the exiled leaders of different Nepali political parties..... 'Even the Indian leaders have realised the fact that the Maoists are a political force. And this problem can only be resolved politically.' Hence, they 'urged me to take the lead' in initiating the process of reconciliation between the parties and the Maoists, and possibly the monarchy as well, he said..... Koirala also had a 'backchannel dialogue' with Maoist emissaries during his Delhi trip.... In Kathmandu, Koirala had made a clarion call to the rebels to work together with the democratic alliance 'for a new constitution, for new Nepal.'..... 'Our party has taken positively the call made by the seven-party alliance to restore peace and establish complete democracy,' Prachanda said in a statement this month.... caused substantial damage to basic physical infrastructures, and scared away tourists from visiting the country...... Information and Communication Minister Tanka Dhakal .... It would be against international norms if the political parties held talks with the Maoists on foreign soil, he added, referring to the recent meetings in Delhi between political party leaders and Maoist emissaries...... "Sooner or later, the parties have to come together and work on a new constitution, which should address the concerns of all sections of the deprived disenchanted Nepali people" ....Hari Roka, a political analyst and researcher at Jawaharlal Nehru University..... Ministers in Kathmandu have been criticising Indian and Western envoys in Kathmandu for unnecessarily interfering in Nepal's international affairs...... To this, Delhi has made it clear that 'any attempt to encourage democracy in our neighborhood should not be construed as unwanted interference.'..... The Indian response is encouraging political parties to stand united for democracy and, subsequently, dialogue with the Maoist rebels ...... "Nothing is impossible," said Krishna Sitaula, Koirala's aide and chief of the Nepali Congress Organization Department, who just returned to Kathmandu from exile..... the king, whose advisors mainly include conservatives ..has been promoting the slogan: 'Monarchy for democracy in the 21st century!'...... The way Nepal will head in the days to come -- liberal republican, status-quo-ism,authoritarian/totalitarian
  • It's now a Maoist jihad that makes India stunned Times of India, India
  • Nepal's royal regime struggles to win international acceptance ReliefWeb (press release), Switzerland ..... his government still faces its most difficult challenge - apart from the Maoist insurgency - of winning acceptance by the international community..... the elusive support from the countries that count the most for the poverty-stricken landlocked kingdom - the United States, Great Britain, West European countries and India - was still not forthcoming...... Nepalese army and police have floated tenders inviting bids to buy arms from the open market..... "I can understand the government-run newspapers doing what they do, but I can't understand the two privately run professional newspapers not adhering to journalistic ethics and working as handmaidens of the agitating political parties" ..... all ambassadors are now back in their offices in the Nepalese capital and are hard at work pushing their democracy agenda.... Gyanendra is seen by most to be firm and uncompromising. .... "I do not think King Gyanendra will make any compromises with political parties. He has a one track mind." ....
  • Case filed against Nepal's child soldier recruitment policy:- Webindia123, India A rights organisation in Nepal has taken the government to court over two regulations that allow the recruitment of minors for its police and army. ...Nepal defended itself by saying it had stopped recruiting minors about five years ago and said the recruits were used as tea boys and cooks.... But Unicef officers say a child soldier is not necessarily one who carries arms. Anyone below 18 and found in barracks if he is not a member of a service man's family is a child soldier..... Once recruited when they are too young to understand what they are getting into the children are not allowed to quit..... The boys in the army are paid between Nepalese Rs.150-170 when according to the Labour Act formulated by the government itself, the minimum wage for a teen between 14-16 is Nepalese Rs.1,384 besides an additional allowance of Nepalese Rs.645......
  • Koirala To Maoists: Support Parties' Agenda Kantipur Treasurer of NC Mahanta Thakur, member Krishna Sitoula, GP Koirala's daughter Sujata and nephew Dr Sekhar Koirala returned home on the same flight with Koirala. They had gone to India immediately after the February 1 royal takeover. According to party sources, leaders of other parties like Nepal Sadbhavana Party (NSP) leader Hridayesh Tripathi, and NC (D) leader Pradip Giri are also returning to Nepal. NSP leader Rajendra Mahato's stay in Delhi may be extended due to his son's medical problem.
  • Nepal Maoists join Bihar raid Calcutta Telegraph, India ... in an orchestrated attack managed through walkie-talkies ... The extremists poured into the hamlet, around 60 km from Motihari , from all sides around 1.30 pm and for the next one-and-a-half hours, had a free run of the place..... Singh, who is a terror in the region, had received threats from the Maoists earlier.... escaped with Rs 12 lakh in cash from the branches of State Bank of India and Central Bank of India, the cash-box of the post office and the treasury at the block office..... taken away an undisclosed amount of cash and jewellery from these houses...... The police claimed the Maoists used various modes of transport, including buses, jeeps and motorcycles. Many also reached Madhuban on foot...... This was a rare Maoist attack conducted in broad daylight. Nor did they ever choose so many targets simultaneously.
  • 'Red army' from Nepal repelled Times of India Among the extremists were dozens of women. ...."One woman, presumably Nepalese, signalled an all-out, simultaneous strike. She blew a whistle and lobbed a bomb at the police station, signalling the beginning of the assault." ...... mayhem lasted all of 90 minutes ..... A detachment of the attackers later poured into the police armoury and emptied it of guns and ammunition..... As the Maoists fell back, a police party intercepted them near Banjharia. The fleeing band fired back at the police party, but managed to dodge them and flee towards Parsauni in East Champaran. .... There, the police party caught up with the attackers and engaged them again. This encounter lasted till 8 pm. .... The Maoists then split into three groups — one of which escaped towards Patahi in East Champaran district, another towards Champapur in Sheohar and the third in Bargania, Sitamarhi. ..... They decapitated the bodies themselves and took away the heads.
  • India, Nepal Maoist launch joint terror The Statesman a clear indication of CPI (Maoist) attempts to create a Nepal-like situation in Bihar. .... attack triggered panic in the entire north Bihar bordering Nepal.... bodies of seven extremists, including that of Moiuddin Mian who founded the movement in North Bihar, have been recovered...... the CPI (Maoists)’s earlier proclamation to create Nepal-like situation in the whole of the country...... Soon after the merger of the MCC and the People’s War early this year the new group was later named the CPI (Maoist).
  • Nepali Maoists Deny Involvement INSN in the attack in Madhuban area of Bihar, India. In an interview to www. krishnasenonline.org, a pro-Maoist website, Krishna Bahadur Mahara, spokesperson of NCP (Maoist) clarified: ‘We have no involvement in the Bihar clash and that is not our Party policy’. This statement is quoted by the Maoist’s party website, www.cpm.org. Mahara also termed ‘[the false statement as] a conspiracy against Maoist by national and international reactionary force’, according to Krishnasen online.
  • Awarding India UNSC Seat? Think Twice Telegraph At best India's growing dreams to keep her neighbors in an all time alarm could be described as India's "inferiority complex" the medicine of which only Pakistan possesses.

Thursday, June 23, 2005

Power Through Political Dialogue



Madhav Nepal's UML is part of the seven party alliance. That alliance wants the 1999 parliament revived. Now Nepal is in news saying he will not accept it if the parliament were revived by the king using Article 127. This is meaningful.

"Political dialogue or round-table conference are the only alternatives that could reinstate the Parliament .... We will not accept the restoration of Parliament using Article 127 since such a parliament will face the situation like the one faced by Sher Bahadur Deuba.... We were not clear about constituent assembly earlier because we had hopes on the King .. But now, since the monarchy has sidelined the political parties we have opened our doors for constituent assembly.... The Maoists must stop attack on parties and accept multi-party democratic system if they are to be trusted."

This has to be thought through.

This brings Madhav Nepal clo
ser to my position. I have been for an interim government. Forget the 1999 parliament.

So if the 1999 parliament is to be revived, but it can not be done so using Article 127, then you are stepping outside of the constitution of 1990. There is no provision in the 1990 constitution for a roundtable conference. The very idea is to suggest the 1990 constitution is dead. Like the Panchayat constitution died in 1990.

And if the 1990 constitution is dead, the idea of reviving a parliament elected through the 1990 document makes no sense whatsoever. So instead you go straight for an interim government.

That reality has to be realized. The Nepali Congress is the second biggest roadblock towards that realization, the biggest being the king.

The king and the monarchists want to stick to the 1990 constitution, because its Article 127 reads like a constitution in its own right to the king. Article 127 gives him powers that Prithvi, and Tribhuvan, and Mahendra, and Birendra had, he thinks. And he likes that. He appointed Chand to become Prime Minister using Article 127, and then got his me
n to get Chand to "request" a major increase in the royal budget and salaries. If the 1990 constitution stays on, that increase can not be corrected because, according to the 1990 constitution, allowances to the king may be increased, but they may not be decreased.

And so the king is the biggest impediment to coming to terms with the reality that the 1990 constitution is dead.

Why is the Nepali Congress the second biggest impediment? I can only guess. Maybe they think the 1990 document is the best they can come up with, and to pronounce it dead is to suggest they are an incompetent group of people, an argyment that could be marshalled many other ways. They think of the 1990 document as their "child." To pronounce it dead would be like killing your own child. There is that kind of bogus sentiment. That sentiment makes the Nepali Congress a near right wing party, a party that stands in the way of the social progress of the DaMaJaMa.

DaMaJaMa liberation totally hinges on pronouncing the 1990 document dead.

There are also other ulterior motives. If the 1999 parliament is revived, the Nepali Congress can "emerge" as the largest party in the country. That is not the ground reality any more. If a new constitution were to be drafted, and new elections held, the Nepali Congress will probably emerge as the third largest party in the country, if even that. The Maoists or the UML will likely emerge the largest party. And the Congress people don't like the idea, so they would rather go in denial, that the 1990 constitution, the 1999 parliament, and the Nepali Congress' position as the largest party in the country, they are all over. Gone!

I think the seven party alliance should work on a strategy that assumes the king will not comply. So what do you do? All seven parties should work on drafting a new constitution right now. And they should do so publicly. In a transparent manner. Differences and disagreements are okay. That is what the Constituent Assembly will be for. But it is high time the seven parties and the Maoits each proposed a draft constitution, and started talking to each other.

It is that difficult dialogue that takes place within a Constituent Assembly. That process can start now.

Or the seven parties and the Maoists could give themselves a wonderful starting point.

My
Proposed Constitution.

Take a look at it, and say in a public, transparent manner if there are portions you disagree with.

If the seven parties and the Maoists could agree on a constitution now, that totally speeds things up. That clarity will topple the regime like nothing else.

It boild down to political dialogue. The key players need to be initiating dialogue, and holding relentless dialogue.

Power flows through political dialogue.
  1. Hold relentless, constant dialogue among all seven political parties.
  2. Invite the Maoists into that fold.
  3. All eight work on a draft constitution.
  4. Seek an interim government. Declare its formation unilaterally if you have to.
  5. Invite the Maoists into that governemnt after peace talks, after they have disarmed.
  6. Go for elections to a Constituent Assembly to iron out differences on the constitution that might still remain.
My Audio Clips: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

The Monarchists Digging Heels


I don't know what the king and his courtiers are thinking, but they are nowhere close to seeing the light. They don't see what is at stake. Some examples have to be brought in to explain the situation, as to what is at stake.
  1. Ferdinand Marcos ..... his regime was marred by widespread corruption and political mismanagement by his cronies, which culminated with the assassination of Benigno Aquino Jr.. Marcos can be considered the quintessential kleptocrat, having supposedly looted billions of dollars from the Filipino treasury ...... a notorious nepotist, appointing family members and close friends to high positions in his government ..... Marcos was driven into exile ..... He and his wife, Imelda Marcos, went into exile in Hawaii and were later indicted for embezzlement in the United States. Marcos died in Honolulu, Hawaii in 1989 of kidney failure.
  2. Nicolae Ceauşescu ..... In 1989 Ceauşescu was showing signs of complete denial of reality. While the country was going through extremely difficult times with long bread lines in front of empty food stores, he was often shown on state TV entering stores jampacked with food supplies and praising the "high living standard" achieved under his rule. In the fall of 1989, daily TV broadcasts were showing endless scrolling lists of CAPs (kolkhozes) with alleged record harvests, in blatant contradiction with the shortages experienced by the average Romanian at the time....... Ceauşescu's regime collapsed after a series of violent events in Timişoara and Bucharest in December 1989...... Demonstrations in the city of Timişoara were triggered by the government-sponsored attempt to evict László Tőkés, an ethnic Hungarian church minister, accused by the government of inciting ethnic hate. Members of his ethnic Hungarian congregation surrounded his apartment in a show of support. Romanian students spontaneously joined the demonstration, which soon lost nearly all connection to its initial cause and became a more general anti-government demonstration. Regular military forces, police and Securitate fired on demonstrators on December 17, 1989..... Ceauşescu's senile reaction to the events had already become part of the country's collective memory. By the morning of December 22, the rebellion had already spread to all major cities.... the generals who were part of the conspiracy (led by general Victor Stănculescu) did their best to create such terrorist stories in order to induce fear and to draw the army on the conspirators' side. Generally, there is a consensus that there were some people instigating terror, and that others effectively caused incidents out of confusion. ...... The presidential couple kept moving through the countryside more or less aimlessly. Near Târgovişte they abandoned the helicopter, which was ordered to land by the army, which by that time had already declared Romania to be restricted air space. The flight included grotesque episodes: a car chase to evade citizens attempting an arrest, leaving behind of their aides, a short stay in a school. The Ceauşescus were finally held in a police car for several hours, while the policemen listened to the radio, presumably in an attempt to get a clue as to which political faction was about to win. Police eventually turned over the presidential couple to the army....... The "trial" and execution were videotaped. The footage was promptly released in France and other western countries. Several days later, the footage of their trial (but not of their execution) was released on television for the Romanian public.
  3. Saddam Hussein ..... He was captured at approximately 8:30 PM Iraqi time on December 13, in an underground "spider hole" at a farmhouse in ad-Dawr near his home town Tikrit, in what was called Operation Red Dawn. ..... Some reported that Saddam Hussein had actually been captured by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and then drugged before being placed in the spider hole to be found by American troops...... Members of the Governing Council who spoke with Saddam after his capture reported that he was unrepentant, claiming to have been a "firm but just ruler." Later it emerged that the tip-off which led to his capture came from a detainee under interrogation.
On the other hand, you have the example of Norodom Sihanouk. ..... reigned as King of Cambodia until he announced his abdication on October 7, 2004, and is now "King-Father of Cambodia", a position in which he retains many of his former prerogatives as king. .... two terms as king, two as sovereign prince, one as president, two as prime minister, and one as Cambodia's non-titled head of state, as well as numerous positions as leader of various governments in exile..... The next year, on April 4, 1976, the Khmer Rouge forced Sihanouk out of office again and into political retirement. He then sought refuge in the People's Republic of China and in North Korea....... The Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in December 1978 ousted the Khmer Rouge. Although wary of the Khmer Rouge, Prince Sihanouk eventually joined forces with them in order to provide a united front against the Vietnamese...... Peace negotiations between the CGDK and the PRK commenced shortly thereafter and continued until 1991 when all sides agreed to a comprehensive settlement which they signed in Paris...... Although the King had very limited political power, in mid-February 2004, after watching scenes of jubilant gay and lesbian couples receiving marriage licenses in San Francisco, California, he announced that Cambodia, too, should recognize same-sex marriage. In the same statement, he also expressed support for transvestites. While carrying no legal force, this proclamation (in which he states that God loves a "wide range of tastes") held considerable moral weight in a nation where the King continued to enjoy substantial popularity for a lifetime of efforts on behalf of his country's independence...... He became one of the first heads of state in the region to have a personal website, which has proven a cult hit, drawing more than a thousand visitors a day, a substantial portion of his nation's Internet users. Royal statements usually appear posted there on a daily basis for his subjects' perusal....... announced his abdication of the throne on October 7, 2004. The Cambodian constitution made no provision for such a move

Much is at stake, and time is running out. The king should engage the seven parties in dialogue immediately. And dialogue necessarily means give and take. It is not about trying to force the other party to your point of view.

In The News

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

1000 Multifarious Uses Of Article 127


Article 127 can be used to:
  1. Dissolve parliament.
  2. Revolve parliament.
  3. Evolve parliament.
  4. Involve parliament.
  5. Resolve disputes.
  6. Light fires.
  7. Ignite hailstorms.
  8. Erupt volcanoes.
  9. Inititate earthquakes.
  10. Clean up Bagmati.
  11. Stop Bagmati in its tracks if it refuses the clean up.
  12. Cause a catastrophe upon Prachanda.
  13. Find out Prachanda actually is not a person but a doll the Maoists worship.
  14. Unearth secrets.
  15. Divulge secrets.
  16. Propagate secrets.
  17. Secretly propagate.
  18. For propaganda.
  19. Turn Girija into a permanent backbencher.
  20. Turn Baburam illiterate.
  21. Turn Ram Chandra Poudel silent.
  22. Invite the Dalai Lama to Lumbini.
  23. To create information.
  24. To disseminate information.
  25. To send out trojan horse viruses across the internet.
  26. To intervene in foreign countries.
  27. To redefine democracy and human rights for the new millenium.
  28. To refine oil. Mustard oil, custard oil, bastard oil, let's start oil.
  29. To install a salt factory.
  30. To stall a revolution.
  31. To forestall dialogue.
  32. To go comatose.
  33. To fend off criticisms.
  34. To inuagurate.
  35. To suffocate.
  36. To obliviate.
  37. To promulgate.
  38. To sustain.
  39. To disdain.
  40. To despair.
  41. To conspire.
  42. To prosper.
  43. To whisper.
  44. Conquer.
  45. Obliterate.
  46. Resolve Kashmir, Palestine, Ireland and Capitol Hill disputes on a permament basis.
  47. Say hello to Moriarty.
  48. Play golf with Moriarty and send Ram Sharan Mahat into fits: "Made my blood boil."
  49. To tour: China, Dubai, Dhaka, if possible, Macau, Hong Kong, Trinidad, Fiji, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Cuba, North Korea.
  50. Alleviate Fidel Castro's loneliness.
  51. Make Musharraf feel like he is the modern day Karl Marx, a man with influence beyond his land.
  52. To send Advani to Pakistan on a clean up exercise.
  53. Arrest, release, re-arrest, re-release, re-re-arrest, re-re-release Deuba until Deuba gets tired of it.
  54. Send 50 police officers after Deuba, 150 after Girija, 250 after MaKuNe and 350 after Peter Pan Giri. Send the leftovers after Prachanda, if there are any.
  55. Magically disappear 20 million rupees from Nepal Bank Limited and make it reappear in Bangalore.
  56. Hijack democracy, and give it back one ounce at a time, because it is not Dashain yet.
  57. To wake up Bishta and Giri from the near dead.
  58. To pronounce Badri Mandal as an almost cabinet member.
  59. To induct RK Mainali into the cabinet, and have CK Mainali green with envy.
  60. To militarily capture Gorkha from the Maoists.
  61. To discover the People's Army folks are seldom in uniform.
  62. To bring an end to RNA desertions.
  63. To send an arrest warrant after SD Muni.
  64. Turn Sharad Chandra Shah onto the soccer field so the people can take a good look at him.
  65. Revive street demonstrations.
  66. Tease the idea of parliamentary revival.
  67. Go abroad where even uncensored media don't talk no nonsense.
  68. Prune grass on the Narayanhiti lawns.
  69. Fly helicopters.
  70. Land in some Yadav's backyard, and claim it for a helipad.
  71. To nationalize all private property to pre-empt the Maoists.
  72. To get rid of FM radio stations forever, and instead introduce the use of loud speakers.
  73. To send spies to Delhi to find out what the Indian newspapers have been up to.
  74. To prevent Sikkimization, Tibetizatinon, fossilization, renaissance, and revolution.
  75. To stay put, dig heels and pass it on as resolve.
  76. To fundamentally misunderstand George W.'s "terrorism" rhetoric and blame it back on George W. because W. can't pronounce words right in the first place.
  77. To make the Dharahara stand up straight.
  78. To jump off the Dharahara with a handy umbrella, open it up only half way down. Like Mao swam down the Yellow River to recapture the imagination of the great proletarian Chinese people.
  79. To congratulate Kim Jong Seriously Ill on his gimmicks like he congratulated.
  80. To challenge Prachande to a nationally televised debate. Also to be webcast for the 700 protesting Nepalis in Washington DC who Gorkhapatra claimed had been hired for a sum total of $35,000. That is $50 a piece, Hem Bahadur style.
  81. To enhance tourism.
  82. To energize the economy.
  83. To ameliorate the situation.
  84. To do other good deeds on the shopping list.
  85. To challenge Girija to spell his name.
  86. So Pashupati Rana ain't nobody no more. And?
  87. For royal participation in street demonstrations as an outreach program.
  88. Celebrate monsoon in ways never done before.
  89. Take away all the holidays for one year, so people realize what they might be missing. It ain't just democracy.
  90. To mistake Moriarty as the ambassador from Greenland, and shame him into resuming military aid.
  91. Threaten to cut his water supply and blame it on the monsoon if the threat need be carried out.
  92. To build a east west Gyanendra Highway in the Himal region to rival its counterpart in the Terai.
  93. Make it four lane.
  94. Pretend all residents of Ramechhap are tourists.
  95. Hang up the phone every time Vajpayee calls. He is no longer Prime Minister.
  96. Say, Chandrashekhar who?
  97. Root for the Scindias so the Indians can have a taste of monarchy too.
  98. Offer to go back to Gorkha. The rest of Nepal can go to hell.
  99. Invite all exiled politicians to a party at the palace. Arrest them after getting them drunk.
  100. Declare the civil war over.
I am sure King G can come with the other 900 items on the list.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Full Democracy Soon?


Looks like the threat of a Maoist-Democrat alliance is already working. We have a top Indian minister claiming Nepal is on the verge of restoring full democracy, although I would like to know where he got his information from. On the other hand we have a senior Nepali minister threatening the democrats, that they will be treated like the Maoists should they form an alliance. Carrot and stick? Empty threat? So if the Maoist-Democrat alliance comes together on the issue of Constituent Assembly, you are going to send the army after the democrats? Come on.

Isn't this minister guy the same one that routinely gets into trouble with the Supreme Court? Looks like he is speaking out of his back pocket. Isn't this the guy that imposes imaginative sackles on the press, and when the press asks the king about it, his reply is that such decisions have yet to reach his desk? I mean, this minister guy, does he think he is the modern day Jung Bahadur or what! He sure is going on a tangent on a routine basis.

As for a restoration of full democracy, I will see it when it happens. Frankly, I don't see it in the cards. Although it would be wise of the regime to head that way.

The Maoists have taken their attacks to a whole new level. They are now targeting district headquarters, it seems. If only a few of those were to fall, that would be a major blow to the regime. The war is psychological.

The Maoists are not pretending they have given up on their original goal. And that is why engaging them is the better route to go. Keep your friends close, keep your enemies closer, as the saying goes. If you engage them, you stand a chance to tame them. If you stay away, they run amok. Besides, if the consensus is for a political solution to the civil war, that translates into engaging them. So do what you say you will.

If the Monarchists keep digging their heels, the foreign powers will continue to stay away. And I am not sure the recent RNA stunt of trying to buy arms and ammunition from private global markets is exactly a great move on their part. First, the US routinely passes laws prohibiting American companies from doing business with regimes it disapproves of. I would think other democracies do something similar, or are capable of the same. Second, India-US-EU holding back military supplies is not a military move, it is a political move. If the Monarchists see it purely in military terms, they stand to challenge powers like India into changing gears.

Monarchists Invited To The Maoist-Democrat Alliance

The Monarchists have been alarmed by the gelling Maoist-Democrat alliance around the idea of a Constituent Assembly. They need not feel excluded. They are very much welcome to the same alliance. It is not some exclusive club.

Peter Pan Giri and company, stop whining and instead turn the Maoist-Democrat alliance into a Monarchist-Maoist-Democrat Grand Alliance. Seize the moment. It's called Constituent Assembly. It is called going to the people.

E-Mail From Gagan Thapa

I received an email from Gagan Thapa earlier today. I am thrilled. He got arrested when Dinesh (Prasain) was on his US speaking tour, and we all took it very personally. It is good to know Thapa now is beyond arrest, and is politicking freely.

Thapa's point is the four point agenda of the seven parties is a great starting point, but not entirely enough. And that as the movement chugs along, more progress is to be made.

In The News

CPI (M), CPN (M)

Communist Party Of India (Marxist), Communist Party Of Nepal (Maoist).

CPI (M) is destined to become larger than the Congress and the BJP in India so as to enshrine a strong Third Front in that ocean of a country. It is the fastest growing party in India. The average age of its member is 40. It is a young party. Its leadership, Prakash Karat, is young.

The Nepali Maoists could learn from the CPI (M). Come into the mainstream and take over the power. That is the surer way.

Actually if the Maoists were to take to heart my proposal for a total, transparent democracy, they might actually have something to export to them communists in India. India should be working to abolish the veto, not trying to become a member of that club that should not even exist in the first place. The UN Security Council is an anachronism.

It is a brave, new world. The future is now.

I was just reading the CPI(M) program. And their 2004 manifesto. Both could benefit tremendously if the concept of total, transparent democracy were to be taken to heart.

In The News