Monday, August 15, 2005

Caste Discrimination Leads To War


The insurgency is but the symptom, the disease is something else. The entrenched caste dynamics in Nepal is a major culprit. Casteism has to be confronted head-on. That is the sure way to peace.

This 71-page report by the Center For Human Rights And Global Justice at the New York University Law School makes that point.

This approach also speaks to me personally. I have had a zero tolerance policy towards the Pahadi chauvinism within the democracy movement. The heck with you. You need me. You might as well measure up.

Some excerpts from the report:

Maoists hold programs several times a month, gathering villagers from miles around to educate them about the “People’s War.” Maoist campaigns also include public humiliation and punishment schemes against those who practice caste and gender discrimination. The Maoists particularly target Dalits (so-called untouchables) and women for indoctrination and recruitment.

The victimization of Dalits or so-called untouchables by the State and Maoist insurgents is inextricably linked to the perpetuation of the conflict, yet attention to this dimension of the conflict has been notably absent from the international community’s response.

The Maoists formally declared the beginning of their “People’s War” on February 13, 1996, and formulated their initial goals around moving Nepal away from a Hindu kingdom and towards a more secular republic that committed itself to the principles of gender and caste equality and addressing centuries-old exploitation of Dalits.

Dalits represent 80 percent of the “ultra poor” in Nepal, dramatically increasing their vulnerability to bonded labor, slavery, trafficking, and other forms of extreme exploitation. “Upper-caste” community members force Dalits to live in segregated communities, prevent them from entering public spaces, deny them access to food, water, and land, and relegate Dalits into caste-based occupations considered too “ritually impure” for “higher castes.” Dalit women and girls endure the double burden of caste and gender discrimination. They bear the brunt of exploitation and violence and are routinely forced into sex work. Defiance of the proscribed social order is consistently met with punitive violence and social ostracism.

Dalits are extremely underrepresented in local and national government bodies.

Dalits were quickly identified as a base of ready support for the Maoist insurgency...

Rampant sexual abuse and exploitation of women by the police, and the subsequent mistrust and distaste for the government amongst rural communities, fueled early support for the Maoist movement in far- and mid-western Nepal.

....local government structures were replaced with “people’s governments” that
assumed state functions. the most important component of their insurgency: a “People’s Militia” comprised of thousands of armed fighters. The Maoists once again capitalized on caste and gender discrimination in Nepal by heavily recruiting Dalits and women for their “People’s Militia.”

Dalit women make up 50 percent of the Maoist cadres’ lower ranks.

The mere promise of food is sometimes enough to attract a young Dalit child to join the
Maoist army.

Although the Maoists claim political empowerment of Dalits and women as a central
tenet of their agenda, their leadership is dominated by upper-caste men. In effect, Dalits are
relegated to the lower ranks and serve as dispensable persons who can literally take the bullets for the Maoist insurgency. The absence of Dalit leaders has also fostered the belief that the Maoist leadership is adopting the same Brahmin-dominated leadership model used by mainstream political parties. Coupled with reports that the practice of “untouchability” and sexual abuse against Dalit women persists even within the ranks of the Maoist movement, some speculate that Dalits have begun to feel extremely alienated and underserved by the very movement that purports to liberate them.

November 26, 2001, the Nepalese government declared a state of emergency. Following the announcement, the government deployed 54,000 soldiers from the Royal Nepalese Army throughout the country ...... security forces began operating under an unofficial policy of killing all individuals suspected of taking part in the Maoist insurgency without leaving opportunity for further investigation........ government security forces have engineered more than 2,000 extrajudicial killings since 2001. According to the United Nations, Nepal also had the highest number of reported new “disappearances” in the world in both 2003 and 2004.

The overwhelming majority of senior officers in the RNA continue to hail from “upper-caste” communities....... Caste-based profiling is also a common occurrence at security check posts
and during village interrogation round-ups...... The State has also armed upper-caste village militias—or village defense committees—whose members abuse their power to settle personal scores and target Dalits and religious minorities.

Dalit civilians also face discrimination and egregious abuses at the hands of Maoists themselves.

...... vulnerable Dalits have proven to be the favored victim of both State forces and Maoists; and ultimately Dalits find themselves trapped between a growing, brutal insurgency and a violent, unbridled State.

Meaningful and lasting reform cannot be sustained in the absence of the rule of law and real democratic governance. The Nepalese government must also move quickly to restore all fundamental rights formally suspended under the state of emergency.

Over 2,000 years old, the caste system is perhaps the oldest surviving social hierarchy in the world..... the caste system permeates, to varying degrees, all major religions in the Indian subcontinent ..... Caste divisions prevail in housing, employment, marriage, and general social interaction.

Dalits are typically restricted to tasks and occupations that are deemed too “filthy” or “polluting” for “upper-caste” communities. Unlike discrimination on the basis of ethnicity or race, there are almost no physical characteristics that distinguish one caste from another.

Dalits are also denied entry into public places, such as hotels, shops, and restaurants. When
they are able to enter public restaurants, they are made to drink water from separate glasses, tea from separate tumblers, and eat daal bhat from separate plates.

.... routinely denied entry into “upper-caste” temples ..... On December 5, 2004, for example, Dalits were beaten by police officers with lathis for entering the “upper-caste” Laxmi Banketesh Temple in Bharatpur. The Nepalese Constitution, while purporting to abolish caste discrimination, explicitly permits discrimination against Dalits in religious contexts. The non-discrimination provisions of the Nepal Civil Code also contain an exemption for places of religious practice.

In Sindhupalchowk District on May 29, 1999, two Dalits were beaten and forced to pay a total of NRs. 40,000 ($569.23) in damages after refusing to wash their own dishes at a local tea stall. Strict prohibition on inter-caste marriage, particularly between Dalits and non-Dalits, also help preserve caste hierarchies. These prohibitions are sometimes enforced by
punishing entire communities. On January 27, 2004, for example, a young inter-caste married couple was kidnapped by the wife’s “upper-caste” relatives. A mob of 200 “upper-caste” persons then attacked the husband’s Dalit village, destroying all property and forcing all 80 members of the community to leave the village.

.... comprise over twenty percent of Nepal’s population, Dalits possess only one percent of the nation’s wealth. ...... professions require the handling of dead animals or human waste, often with one’s bare hands ..... Chamar Dalits who live in the Terai region of Nepal, for example, are predominantly manual scavengers.

Dalits own just one percent of Nepal’s arable land, while only three percent of Dalits own more than a hectare of land.... squatter colony inhabitants and landless bonded laborers are overwhelmingly Dalit. Dalits are charged much higher interest rates on loans from landlords than are their “upper-caste” counterparts. Such discrimination is intentionally designed to keep alive a system of debt bondage and free farmhands for cultivation of “upper-caste” lands.

As ownership of property was a precondition for Nepali citizenship, Dalits who lost their land were also forced to forfeit their citizenship papers. As possession of citizenship papers is a precondition for purchasing land, evicted Dalits were unable to acquire new land.

Erosion, arsenic poisoning, soil quality depletion, and deforestation also disproportionately impact segregated Dalit communities..... most Dalit families live without toilets and running water.

Rampant employment discrimination makes it difficult for Dalits to enter into, much less
excel in, non-caste-based occupations. Because Nepal’s government is the country’s largest employer, discrimination in the workplace directly implicates the government. 48 percent of the surveyed Dalits claimed that they would be denied employment due to their caste status even if job openings were available. Twenty-one percent of the respondents reported that they had been refused jobs based on their caste status. In addition, approximately 71 percent of individuals reported that they are paid lower wages and salaries in both the private and informal sectors.

..... many Dalits migrate to other countries, particularly India, in search of better employment. many Dalits return with even more debt, handicapped by the high interest loans obtained by non-Dalit lenders in the community to fund the overhead expenses of foreign employment. Meanwhile, Dalit women experience aggravated caste discrimination, enslavement and sexual exploitation when Dalit men go abroad, and Dalits working overseas may continue to experience economic and social discrimination even in the diaspora.

Dalits are often made to sit in the back of the classroom and are treated as “untouchable” even by their teachers. Dalit teachers are themselves socially segregated from their non-Dalit colleagues.

..... only two Dalit medical doctors and fifteen Dalit engineers in Nepal, all of whom were male ..... Nor do any Dalits hold an academic or administrative leadership position at Tribhuvan University

.... denied access to communal water sources ..... According to a 2000 report on Dalit
children in Nepal, a three-year-old Dalit girl was bitten and thrown into a well for drinking from an “upper-caste” community’s water supply in Sindupalchowk district. Schools, particularly in western Nepal, maintain separate wells for Dalit and non-Dalit children. Dalit students found drinking from non-Dalit water taps may face disciplinary sanctions, including corporal punishment, by their teachers ...... a lack of Dalit representation in
Village Development Committees ...... the state was promoting the distribution of separate taps for Dalits and non-Dalits ......

.... even those with adequate purchasing power often encounter problems buying higher quality foods from “upper-caste” community members who practice caste discrimination at vegetable markets, meat shops, and dairy cooperatives. Shopkeepers may even refuse to handle money from Dalits or force Dalits to cup their hands in a deferential posture to receive their change without being touched.

.... the relegation of Dalits into professions that involve handling human excrement and
animal flesh, resulting in greater exposure to disease causing agents. In addition to occupational
hazards, sexual violence against Dalit women and punitive social rituals seeking to “pollute”
Dalits also have detrimental consequences on Dalits’ mental and physical health. On April 8, 2003, in Dhanghadi, western Nepal, an upper-caste couple attacked a Dalit neighbor who they claimed was a witch. They held her down, beat her, and force-fed her a paste made of human excrement and chili powder while her children watched.

Dalit women lag far behind Dalit men and “upper-caste” women in terms of healthcare, education, and remuneration for their labor. Dalit women also bear the brunt of exploitation and violence in the country and are largely perceived as being “sexually available” to “upper-caste” men. As a means of crushing political dissent, Dalit women are targeted with impunity by landlords, the police and the army.

Dalit women have no economic power in the family

Dalit women are economically marginalized and exploited, both within and outside their families. In some rural areas Dalit women scarcely earn ten to twenty kilograms of food grain a year, barely enough to sustain a family. Many have been driven to prostitution. One caste in particular, known as [B]adis, is viewed as a prostitution caste. Many Dalit women and girls, including those from the [B]adi caste, are trafficked into sex work in Indian brothels.

Dalit women are often forced into sex work with truckers, policemen, members of the
army, and the general public.

The marginalization of Badi women into prostitution is also self-perpetuating due to Nepali laws that confer citizenship solely through a father. As Badi-Dalit girls are often born as a result of prostitution, they are unable to identify their fathers and are effectively rendered stateless. Without citizenship, these girls can neither participate in the School Leaving Certificate (SLC) exam required for high school graduation nor pursue formal employment.

In the Mushahar community, one of the poorest Dalit communities in Nepal, only 9 percent of Dalit women were literate.

From 1991 to 2001, literacy among “upper-caste” women increased by 19.2 percent, from 36.7 percent to 55.9 percent. During the same time period, Dalit women experienced only a 12.2 percent increase, from 12 percent to 24.2 percent. Literacy among the Terai Dalit women increased by an even smaller margin of 7.5 percent, rising from 4 percent to 11.5 percent. According to one estimate, out of a total population of two million Dalit women, only ten to fifteen have a graduate or postgraduate degree.

Dalit women are at significantly increased risk of suffering from prolapsed uteruses because
of a lack of clean drinking water or toilet facilities in their communities.

Gender development programs and positive discrimination policies rarely work to
enhance Dalit women’s opportunities.

..... a total of 118 provisions in Nepalese laws, regulations, and its Constitution that discriminate against women in the areas of social, economic, political and family life, including citizenship, inheritance, marriage, adoption, and domestic and foreign employment.

... the Country Code does not criminalize marital rape82 and limits property inheritance to
women who are unmarried and over the age of thirty-five. Men have unconditional inheritance
rights.83 Article 5 of the Constitution allows for a father to vest citizenship onto his children, but
does not confer similar rights to a mother.

Even where the law otherwise protects women from discrimination and abuse, women
are rarely able to secure adequate legal redress. Women who experience sexual and physical
abuse are hobbled by the social stigma associated with bringing cases against family or
community members, and as a consequence do not report such incidents or bring them to court.

Dalits are extremely underrepresented in government. Since 1958, only fourteen Dalits in Nepal have become members of parliament (upper house), all of them men. Only one Dalit has been elected to the House of Representatives.

Dalits are also absent from Nepal’s administrative and judicial system. An 1854 survey revealed that 98 percent of all civil service posts were held by “upper-caste” Brahmins and Chetris. Not much has changed well over a century later. A 1991 survey indicates that 93 percent of these posts are still held by upper-caste Brahmins and Chetris.86 Over a 137-year period, there was only a five percent increase in Nepal’s political diversity.

..... while Brahmins constitute only 16 percent of the population, they represent 57 percent of parliament and 89 percent of the judiciary.87 Discrimination also persists in the Royal Nepalese Army.88 This pattern of exclusion is repeated at the local government level, where Dalits are severely underrepresented in the administrative system:89 of the more than 3,000 Village Development Committee chairmen, only a handful are Dalits.

..... attempts at building effective Dalit political movements are met with punitive violence

Their formal agenda was articulated in a “Forty Point Plan.” Many of the demands, including greater inheritance rights for women, ending racial and caste discrimination, and allowing for local autonomy where indigenous groups predominate, echo the unfulfilled promises set out by the 1990 Nepal Constitution. Other demands, however, far exceed constitutional pronouncements and would, if implemented, fully abolish Nepal’s more than 200-year-old monarchy.

..... specifically amongst the Magar tribal group ..... also built considerable support amongst Dalits and women, as their campaign included public humiliation and punishment schemes against those who practiced caste and gender discrimination. Men who committed sexual abuses against women, squandered money in card games, or behaved like ....... drunkards were humiliated in public view. Similarly, the Maoists punished “upper-caste” community members who prevented Dalits from entering temples, selling their goods, drawing water from public wells, or otherwise subject them to humiliation or abuse. “They will not allow us to be humiliated. If a Brahmin abuses us, the Maoists will beat him… The Maoists speak to equality between men. We can go to temple.” The Maoists are also known to give free literacy courses to children and adults, teaching them to read, write and count, so that they are not swindled by merchants.

Under the cover of targeting criminal activity, the government launched Operation Romeo in November 1995. The Operation’s actual agenda, however, was to dislodge the growing foothold of the Maoist movement in the west and resulted in extensive human rights violations against rural populations, including summary executions, forced “disappearances,” and rapes. Instead of suppressing the Maoist movement, the Operation’s abusive nature had the opposite effect: it equipped the rebels with a self generating reason for the rural population to disfavor the government and support the insurgency.

In guerilla-style attacks, the Maoists launched a series of raids on vulnerable police posts in western Nepal in order to dismantle the existing, albeit weak, police force and amass a supply of weapons and ammunition.

In the absence of effective government resistance, and with a growing arsenal of weaponry, the Maoists were quickly able to devastate the government’s security system and take control of the western countryside surrounding the district headquarters. It is estimated that between 1996 and 2001, Maoist rebels killed more than five hundred policemen, including a senior superintendent of police (SSP), a district superintendent of police (DSP), and eight inspectors.

A Maoist-imposed boycott of the 1997 elections resulted in a political void in eighty-three Village Development Committees in the districts of Rolpa, Rukum, Salyan, and Jajarkot. By 2001, the Maoists effectively controlled twenty-two of the seventy-five districts in Nepal. In Maoist-controlled districts local government structures were replaced with the “people’s governments” that assumed state functions. Parallel judicial systems began hearing cases and passing sentences. At the same time, Maoists took control of existing educational and health facilities and levied “people’s taxes.” As the Maoists built effective government structures, they were also able to realize the most important component of their insurgency: a “People’s Militia” comprised of thousands of armed fighters.

As their hold and popularity extended throughout the west, the Maoists began strategizing to gain control in the more developed eastern region and Terai and, ultimately, to capture Kathmandu. The conflict quickly escalated from the initial weapons raids on remote and abandoned police posts in the western part of the country to a highly organized, wide-scale insurgency affecting life in the entire nation.

Maoists dismantled educational and business facilities throughout Nepal’s seventyfive districts.

On November 23, 2001, Maoists killed over eighty members of the security forces in forty-two districts in a single day. In the days that followed, around 250 people were killed on both sides, signaling a definitive escalation of violence in the conflict.

On November 26, 2001, a state of emergency was declared pursuant to Article 115 of the
Constitution; basic rights and freedoms were suspended. On the same day, a Terrorist and
Disruptive Activities (Prevention and Control) Ordinance (TADO) was promulgated, the CPNMaoists were declared “terrorists,” and the army was deployed.

.... the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Control and Punishment) Act (TADA), which was enacted into law in April 2002....... TADA grants sweeping discretionary powers to the security forces in dealing with anyone deemed to be a terrorist, and provides immunity from prosecution for “any act or work performed or attempted to be performed in good faith while undertaking their duties.” Such a broad grant of immunity has fostered a climate of impunity among the Nepali security forces, in clear violation of Nepal’s international obligation to investigate and punish human rights violations.

...... government security forces have engineered roughly 2,000 extrajudicial killings since 2001.... the state’s unofficial policy to kill all individuals suspected of taking part in the Maoist insurgency without leaving opportunity for further investigation.

..... suspected Maoists were and continue to be routinely arrested and killed, and then simply listed as “disappeared.” Suspected Maoists are not the only victims: lawyers, human rights activists, political opponents, journalists, academics and even ordinary civilians have been “disappeared.” ...... not a single soldier, policeman or state official has been held accountable for these abuses, and the state has generally denied all knowledge and responsibility in connection with the killings...... individual members of the security forces have been unexpectedly candid about how they treat suspected Maoists, openly declaring that suspects are taken to jail and killed

The ceasefire broke down in August 2003 after the government refused to agree to key Maoist demands. According to the International Crisis Group, the end of the ceasefire was marked by a dramatic upsurge in violence. At least 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing four-month period. ...... Throughout 2003 and 2004 the Maoists made significant territorial gains and continued to promote their system as a viable alternative to an autocratic king and ineffective political parties.

Maoists and security forces reportedly took turns patrolling villages—each side accusing villagers of supporting the other and torturing and killing innocent civilians in order to deter sympathy for the other side.

In contrast to state forces that detain and abuse their victims in secret, Maoists commit summary executions and brutal forms of torture in full public view.

Maoists have primarily targeted suspected informants, non-Maoist political activists and officials, academics and teachers, government officials and civil servants, and, occasionally, civilians who have refused extortion demands or have otherwise failed to cooperate. Their intimidation tactics are so effective that these attacks are rarely reported to state officials

...... the practice of extracting forced confessions. Maoist insurgents are known to physically torture civilians until they admit to being supportive of the state, while security forces utilize the same methods to extract confessions of Maoist sympathies.

Both the Maoists and the security forces have intentionally killed children ......

While Maoists were consolidating control over the countryside—and running “people’s
governments” in 45 of Nepal’s 75 districts—the government was falling into chaos...... In August 2004, the Maoists blockaded Kathmandu for a week, effectively blocking supplies from reaching the city. By January 2005, by the government’s own admission, the Maoists controlled the majority of the country outside of Kathmandu, setting the stage for the February 2005 royal takeover.

In February 2005 alone, 227 conflict-related deaths were reported, nearly double the monthly average for the conflict. According to one estimate, security forces killed an average of six civilians each day that month.

..... “phone lines are routinely tapped and there is a general assumption that e-mail traffic is also monitored.” ..... A lawyer in Surket district, for example, was arrested after filing a torture case.

“The whole country is like a prison. Nobody knows what is happening. When colleagues leave in the morning, we have no idea if they are going to come back.” “Through very selective arrests, selective surveillance, selective late night calls, selective warnings that the King’s proclamation should be read carefully, through selective restrictions banning criticism of the royal proclamation or the actions of the Royal Nepalese Army, the message is very clear that there will be no democratic space.”

..... police vans continued to be filled on an almost daily basis with protestors who voiced their dissent against the King.

Though the state of emergency had been lifted, basic civil liberties were not restored.
Restrictions on civil society have continued past the lifting of the emergency..... more than 3,400 political activists and human rights defenders continue to be detained in facilities across the country.

..... the Social Welfare Council reportedly will soon introduce a new code of conduct to regulate NGOs. Among the many restrictions, the new code of conduct would prohibit NGOs from organizing political programs,210 and would make it even more difficult for NGOs to criticize the government.

Until the royal takeover in February 2005, the United States had been uncritically
supportive of the Nepalese government.

The U.S. explains its refusal to cooperate in international efforts on Nepal by claiming that it has “very good access with the government. So we raise issues privately at various levels, including the highest levels.”

The U.S. also continued to provide military assistance out of the Fiscal Year 2004 budget, as opposed to the Fiscal Year 2005 budget.

India has long maintained that the international community should not intervene in Nepal’s civil war. Although India suspended its military assistance program to Nepal following the takeover in February 2005, the program was reinstated three months later in May 2005. A number of other countries have also directly supplied arms and military equipment to the Nepalese government or have authorized their domestic companies to do so.

Nepal was also on the agenda of a meeting between President Bush and Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh on July 21, 2005.

China has taken a similar approach to India. Publicly, it has assumed a “noninterventionist” stance ..... however, there has been increased evidence of strengthened ties and relations between Beijing and Kathmandu.

China’s support has been linked to the King’s decision to close the Office of the Dalai Lama’s Representative and the Tibetan Refugee Welfare Office in Kathmandu on January 21, 2005. China had long complained about the presence of the two offices, which worked to assist the approximately 30,000 Tibetan refugees living in Nepal.

The European Union’s record on Nepal could reasonably be considered to be the strongest in the international community—it involved itself in Nepal more forcefully, and at an earlier date, than any other nation or body. In particular, the EU convinced Nepal to acknowledge that its soldiers massacred nineteen people at Doramba and to court martial an RNA Major involved in the killings. In 2004, EU criticisms and direct diplomatic overtures, combined with its threat to force through a strongly worded U.N. Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR) resolution, prompted Nepal to pledge to uphold human rights and abide by international law.

While there has clearly been increased attention to human rights in Nepal—through the
efforts of the U.N. and the European Union in particular—the international community’s response to the crisis has failed to address caste discrimination as a root cause and consequence of the conflict.

Historically, the Nepalese army was built around caste lines.

.... the “upper castes,” who form only thirty five percent of the general population, constitute 98 percent of all army officers ...... Chetri officers may be more likely to trust information provided by villagers of their own caste and may be inherently suspicious of and abusive toward Dalit villagers.

Police and security forces regularly assume that Dalit civilians unilaterally support the Maoists.

..... security forces will seek out Dalit communities and unleash heightened violence and brutality on those sites.

In November 2005, for example, in Dullu village, Dailekh district, 18 Dalit families were forced to abandon their homes so that a security base could be set up on their property.

... imposition of the emergency .... Passengers on board buses were often required to get off at each checkpoint and submit to searches of their person and their belongings. As the contents of bags were searched, passengers were subject to probing questions in a serious and intimidating manner about their background and purpose in traveling.

RNA officials are a constant presence throughout Nepali villages in Maoist-dominant districts ...... physical and sexual abuse during these interrogations and searches ...... Because most officer-level positions are filled by “upper-caste” Chetris, Dalits may be intimidated by simply being addressed by them. Yet any indication of undue fear can be interpreted to mean involvement in the Maoist movement, while acting with over confidence may engender resentment by security forces who expect Dalits to submissively adhere to the caste system hierarchy.

..... are more likely to succumb to physical injuries and display open sores, cuts, and infections on their person. The presence of physical wounds and scars is often interpreted by security forces as evidence of engagement in combat as part of the Maoist militia....... Maoist women tend to wear simple kurtas, without tikkas or glass bangles. In contrast to “upper-caste” women, Dalits dress in a manner similar to the Maoists because they cannot afford adornments or fancier clothing

Late night intrusion into Dalit homes and sexual abuse by intoxicated police officers was
a common experience for many Dalit women even before the Maoist insurgency was officially
declared. The burgeoning presence of the police and army in the villages since the insurgency,
and the subsequent power of the security forces to detain, question, and intimidate rural villagers at will has led to even greater sexual abuse and exploitation. In the wake of state resistance to the insurgency, armed forces are unrestrained in entering Dalit homes and victimizing Dalit women...... security forces raping girls during “searches” of villagers’ homes.

Complaints against state forces may be perceived as forms of dissent against the government and the monarchy and may result in further violence and exploitation, both by state authorities and by “upper-caste” civilians.

State forces have also come to rely on “upper-caste” villagers, many of whom are only too cooperative and willing to charge Dalits as Maoist sympathizers

Village Defense Committees were first introduced by then Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba on November 4, 2003. In Bhajo, in the eastern district of Ilam, for example, a Village Defense Committee was reportedly formed by giving weapons to thirty children, who then underwent training with the RNA.

“Uppercaste” Hindu villagers armed by the government may be targeting religious minorities and Dalits without any real basis to suspect that they are aligned with the Maoists. In Nawalparasi district, members of a village defense committee cut off a Dalit man’s left arm, forced him to eat it, and then shot him. The villages attacked in Kapilvastu contained mostly Dalit and Muslim residents, many of whom claimed that they were living there after fleeing from the Maoists.

According to government estimates from 2003, the Maoist “People’s Militia” was composed of approximately 5,500 combatants, 8,000 militia members, 4,500 cadres, and 33,000 followers. As noted above, Maoists have recruited heavily among Dalits and women to fill the lower ranks of their army. Dalit men and women, who endure extreme marginalization under the caste system, may experience a feeling of unprecedented authority, control, and empowerment when armed with a weapon. Once drawn in, they are deployed on the frontlines of battle. While it is difficult to assess the number of Dalit deaths from the conflict, a disproportionate number of Dalits may be dying on the frontlines in clashes with security forces as very few assume positions of authority or decision-making in the insurgency.

.....the chief architects of the movement, Baburam Bhattarai and Pushpa Kamal
Dahal (alias “Prachanda”), are both “upper-caste” Brahmin men, while the leader of the
military wing, Ram Bahadur Thapa (alias “Badal”), is of Magar origin. According to a 2001 estimate, only two of the thirty-seven members of the Maoist Central Committee were believed to be Dalit. ..... reports that the practice of “untouchability” persists even within the ranks of the Maoist movement

Dalits are serving as dispensable persons who can literally take the bullets for the Maoist insurgency. The 2003 National Women’s Commission’s report indicates that women account for 33 to 50 percent of the Maoist militia in various districts and constitute 50 percent of the cadres at the lower level. ..... Dalits often face discrimination and egregious abuses at the hands of Maoists themselves ....... Under cover of resisting “untouchability,” Maoist soldiers make heavy use of Dalits’ private homes for their overnight stays. ...... In the remote west, food and water are simply not readily available and housing ten or twelve soldiers for even a single night often requires Dalit families to starve for days in order to compensate for lost rations........ Dalits, who average a per capita income of only US$39 a year, are also not exempt from paying the Maoist-imposed “people’s tax.”

Where Maoists impose themselves on homes for nightly food and shelter, there have been
reports of resident women being raped.

Underage girls abducted into the Maoist movement also report being sexually abused while in captivity. Since the collapse of the 2003 ceasefire Maoists have increased their efforts to recruit young women and girls.

Not only high-ranking leaders or activists, but sometime we have to fulfill the sexual desire of our own level’s activists and the militia. This is against the party rule and moral duty, but this is the fact of many women like me in this party. Sometimes this happens by chance…but, sometimes the party policy forces us. Most of the women like us are the temporary wives of male militia. Sometimes…the militia forces us to have sex with them. Sometimes we are
forced to satisfy about a dozen per night. When I had gone to another region for party work, I had to have sex with seven militia [men] and this was the worst day of my life.

Gunfire is routinely exchanged on school premises. Teachers are often forced to contribute one quarter of their salary to the Maoists ..... Maoists have also regularly demanded that Sanskrit not be taught in schools

The military and the police regularly bring teachers into district government security offices for interrogation, disrupting the school environment, and will often target Dalit teachers, who are particularly vulnerable to false accusations made by their non-Dalit peers...... tens of thousands of children have been abducted and subjected to some form of “political education” since the start of the Maoists’ campaign...... in 2003 alone Maoists torched and destroyed at least fortyone educational establishments including teacher training and educational resource centers.

One method of indoctrination combines lectures on history and current political events with cultural programs, such as Maoist-themed songs and dances. This method, particularly when directed at marginalized Dalit children, has proven effective at least in part because it addresses real social problems. Recent reports indicate that Maoist education often includes a special emphasis on societal discrimination and oppression of the lower castes, as well as the Maoists’ alleged role in liberating them. A Dalit child who had been abducted and educated by the Maoists stated, “I never tried to run away from the Maoists. I learned we are all Dalits and everyone is discriminating against us, so I felt that to be a Maoist was good.”

.....the Maoists have enlisted several hundred children into their ranks,342 most of whom range from age fifteen to eighteen years old— Although the majority of child soldiers do not engage in direct combat, many children receive military training.

On February 23, 2004, a leading member of the ANNISU-R claimed that the Maoists were
committed to raising a 50,000-strong child militia in order counteract a developing shortage of soldiers due to civilians’ increasing reluctance to be drawn into the conflict.

The caste-based abuses documented in this report are in violation of a number of international human rights treaties to which Nepal is a party. Nepal acceded to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) in 1991. As a result, Nepal is bound by ICCPR’s provisions guaranteeing civil and political rights for all individuals “within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction . . . , without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.” Nepal is also bound by the ICESCR’s provision guaranteeing economic, social and cultural rights “without discrimination of any kind.” As a signatory to the International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD), Nepal is additionally obligated to eliminate caste- and other descent-based discrimination. As a signatory to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), Nepal is obligated to pursue a “policy of eliminating discrimination against women.”

.....de facto discrimination remains the order of the day.

In March 2002 the government formed the National Dalit Commission and the National Women’s Commission. However, two years later, in March 2004, both Commissions’ terms came to an end and were not renewed.

On December 31, 2004, leaders of 13 political parties in Nepal came together and signed
a “White Paper for Elimination of Untouchability.” The document proclaims 2005 as the “Year of Elimination of Untouchability” and 2005-2015 as the “Decade of Elimination of Caste Based
Untouchability.”

....... the practice of untouchability remains rampant and violence against Dalit continues with impunity. ...... the existence of “segregated residential areas for Dalits, social exclusion
of inter-caste couples, restriction to certain types of employment, and denial of access to public spaces, places of worship and public sources of food and water, as well as at allegations that public funds were used for the construction of separate water taps for Dalits.”..... ill-treatment and ineffective protection of Dalits by law enforcement officials, especially the police.

the U.N. Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights passed a resolution in August 2000 reaffirming that discrimination based on work and descent is prohibited under international human rights law....... caste systems are inherently economic and social in their consequences and represent a deeply oppressive form of work and descent based discrimination.

without a sustained commitment to addressing caste discrimination as both a root cause and insidious consequence of the insurgency, the conflict will remain unresolved.

“[r]esolving the conflict is a precondition for poverty reduction in Nepal, and addressing exclusion is a key conflict reduction priority.”

adoption of the Kathmandu Dalit Declaration
November 29 – December 1 2004

...... caste discrimination affects, in its most severe forms, at least 260 million people worldwide and is particularly acute in South Asia, Africa, and Japan

the condemnation of discrimination against persons of Asian and African descent and indigenous and other forms of descent in the Durban Declaration

the reinforcing relationship between poverty, landlessness, and caste discrimination

The term “Dalit”, as used in this Declaration, is meant to encompass Dalits, outcasts and other
communities discriminated against on the basis of work and descent.

Nepal’s Dalits who represent a significant sector of Nepal’s population and economy

forms of affirmative action and public education programs

Establish a program and timetable to enforce the abolition of “untouchability”, segregation,
manual scavenging and similar practices. In both public and private sectors, Dalits and other
outcaste communities should have full access to employment opportunities; agricultural land;
credit; adequate housing; health; and common property resources, such as forest and water
resources. Similar programs should also be established to counter existing cultural exclusion and social discrimination, such as the separation of Dalit children in schools and the social exclusion of inter-caste couples. National surveys should be conducted on a regular basis to assess the effectiveness of such programs.

Prosecute and condemn those responsible for incidents of caste-based discrimination, segregation, exploitation and violence.

Monitor and publicize the extent to which existing laws and rulings to end caste discrimination, including untouchability, have been implemented.

Repeal national security and anti-terrorism laws that are contrary to the due process norms of international law. Ensure that anti-terrorism measures do not discriminate against anyone on any ground, including caste, and are not used against human rights defenders, including Dalit rights activists.

Uphold human rights obligations, even in the face of national security concerns.

facilitating of group claims

Reform criminal justice systems to ensure that Dalits at the local level have an independent complaints mechanism freely available to them in cases of police torture, other abuses or general failures to uphold justice.

Dalit women and girls who suffer multiple discrimination on the basis of caste, class and gender.

.....address sexual exploitation and domestic violence, including early marriage and
sexual violence in marriage, against Dalit women and girls.

Amend discriminatory laws regarding birth and marriage registration, and citizenship laws
that confer citizenship to children solely on the basis of their father’s identity.

Enact land reform legislation that includes land distribution clauses to counter the pervasive landlessness of Dalits

....greater access to credit and markets

....measures to combat homelessness and discrimination in tenancy, particularly in urban areas.

Ensure the inclusion of all Dalit children in free, full-time formal quality education from primary level until the completion of elementary level. All working and other out-of-school children up to 15 years of age, including Dalit children, should have the right and opportunities to enter and finish a formal elementary education through the provision of transitional educational support such as bridging classes and courses.

Introduce mid-day meal schemes in all public schools and ensure non-discriminatory access.
Where meal schemes exist, ensure that Dalit children are not denied access to these meals and
that Dalit cooks are employed by the schools in the preparation of the meals.

Introduce social justice and human rights education, including principles of nondiscrimination,
in public schools

Enact equality laws that prohibit public and private employer discrimination on the basis of caste. Require affirmative action programmes in the public and private sector and set up appropriate monitoring and reporting systems.

Take necessary steps to remove the customary constraints on leaving traditional caste-based occupations and promote more gainful alternative employment opportunities for Dalits. Increase access to finance and marketing to enable Dalits to set up enterprises. Improve functional literacy, for Dalit women and girls in particular, so they may engage in both skilled labour and entrepreneurship.

Enact and enforce legislation guaranteeing decent work, a living wage, labour rights, and
access to land for Dalits and other exploited or oppressed communities, particularly in the
informal economy

infrastructure projects in the areas of water and sanitation, irrigation, rural roads and electricity should actively involve Dalit community members to ensure access to basic services.

Include Dalit groups and other civil society groups in discussions on priorities for engagement
with the World Bank and Asian Development Bank.

United Nations Fund for Women (UNIFEM)

..... and the dissemination of hate speech

the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (including its Optional Protocol), the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), the U.N. Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (including its Optional Protocol), the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (including its Optional Protocol), and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

....appoint a Special Rapporteur on Caste Discrimination and declare in a resolution that caste-based discrimination is prohibited by international law, and call upon all concerned States to the take necessary measures for its elimination.

...The Ambedkar Principles: Employment Principles to Assist Foreign Investors to Address Caste Discrimination in South Asia

the Vulnerable Communities Development Plan (VDCP).

Give due attention to the nexus between caste discrimination and other forms of human rights violations such as torture, gender-based violence, modern forms of slavery including child and bonded labour, denial of equal treatment before the law, and deprivations of livelihood, food, water, healthcare, education, housing and land.

.....descent-based discrimination

..... Take resolute measures to secure rights of marriage for members of descent-based
communities who wish to marry outside the community

....Take measures against public bodies, private companies and other associations that
investigate the descent background of applicants for employment

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Email To Charlie Szrom



Mary Joyce, Demologue


Hi Charlie.

I just had a chance to look around. I have been looking for something like your organization, Students For Global Democracy.

I think Nepal could be the pefect human laboratory for a final push for democracy worldwide. It can be done. I have been developing some tools that are "open source" and of possible universal applications.
  1. Take over power: Project Take Over Tundikhel: Draft 1.
  2. Build a democratic party: Janata Dal Constitution.
  3. Introduce a democratic constitution into the country: Proposed Constitution.
  4. Promise rapid economic growth in the aftermath: 21st Century Nepal.
  5. Go global with it: Reorganized UN, Methods.
How do you like this? I think once the total, transparent democracy is established in Nepal, it could be exported right back to America itself. Let's face it, the American democracy as is comes with some serious limitations.

You can perhaps help me with the fund-raising, which is so modest compared to what it could achieve. 300 individuals giving $100 each. Is that too much to ask?

The beauty of the concept of a total, transparent democracy is the conversation never ends starting with the work towards it. The 5-step formula could be replicated absolutely anywhere. The tools could be modified to fit the local conditions, hence the designation "open source."

I look forward to working with you.

You will realize you do not have to be a Nepali to take part in Step 4: 21st Century Nepal. You could be anywhere, with an interest in any field, or just some time to buzz around with Google Scholar to contribute. You will perhaps help me find some people to people the think tank.

PS. I am very familiar with Bloomington, IN. I almost settled down there. We are practically homeboys.

$$$

Please click on the Make A Donation link to the right and just do it!

All book-keeping will be done right here at this page in a transparent way. The money will go to the democratic cause in Nepal.

This blog entry should give you some idea of where the money might go: Project Take Over Tundikhel: Draft 1.

Don't hold. Do-na-te!

Email From Charlie Szrom


Hi Charlie.

Your email is a godsend. Ever since I moved to New York City the second half of May, I have thrown myself more fully into working for the cause of democracy in Nepal.

By the way, are you someone famous? Because I remember your name from somewhere. I guess I can Google your name real quick and find out. I just wanted to send you a real quick reply asap.

I give you full cooperation. I seek full cooperation. Let's talk on an ongoing basis and shape this baby.

Let's rumbo!

Paramendra Bhagat.

From: "Charlie Szrom"
To: paramendra@yahoo.com
Date: Sun, 14 Aug 2005 19:07:30 -0400
Subject: Worldwide democracy movement requests your help

Dear Paramendra Bhagat,

I am contacting you because, having written about democracy movements or democracy promotion in the past on your blog, you may be interested in an organization that I lead.

Two months ago, Nepali activist Jyoti Gartaula spent 31 days in a 5 x 3 meter (14 x12 feet) prison cell with 29 other people. The king's security forces put him behind bars for the 'crime' of organizing a peaceful demonstration to demand democracy and a future for his people that included neither the dictatorial rule of the monarch nor the violence of the Maoist insurgency. But the punishment only hardened Jyoti: days after his release he began traveling around the mountain nation to further strengthen the democracy network and organize more pro-freedom demonstrations.

Jyoti does not tread his path alone, however, because he leads the Nepal chapter of Students for Global Democracy (SGD), a nonpartisan international organization founded last year to support nonviolent democratic dissidents in authoritarian nations. Besides aiding Jyoti, SGD has supported democrats in Belarus, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Burma, and Ukraine through actions of moral support, fundraising, awareness efforts, and by lobbying governments to support pro-democracy policies.

SGD is organizing a Worldwide Walk for Democracy this October that will highlight the crisis of democracy in Belarus, give moral support to dissidents there, and raise funds for pro-democracy activities in the East European nation. In order to make this event a great success and show the world just how strongly its citizens support freedom, SGD is calling for new recruits everywhere to add to its current roster of a dozen chapters.

Bloggers like you can play a critical role in this recruitment drive. We request that you consider taking an active role in fighting worldwide oppression by blogging in support of SGD and its activities. If you mention us frequently, the international democracy movement will strengthen as more democratic adherents put their beliefs into action by joining up with us and increasing the scope of nations that we deal with.

I ask that you please do one or more of the following if you are interested in helping us:

1) Post about our recruitment drive on your blog and call for new members to the movement. To bolster a blog post, you can get information on the Walk from http://sfgd.org?wwdb and information on recruiting from SGD's manifesto and mission statement, also located on the site. Also, consider placing our button (http://sfgd.org?button) in a prominent place on your blog and link to the SGD website at http://www.sfgd.org.

2) Pass this message on to fellow bloggers, co-workers, friends, and/or family who may be interested in SGD and its work.

3) Consider joining the movement yourself, either by starting a local chapter or by lending assistance in such areas as fundraising, publicity, or grant-writing.

If you do any of these, I ask that you please email me so that I can add you to the SGD-friendly blogs list.

Please check out our website, and if you would like to speak more with me, either for your own personal interest or in relation to a blog post, please email me at studentsforglobaldemocracy@gmail.com to set a conversation up.

Thank you for your time and consideration of our efforts.

Sincerely,
Charlie Szrom
President
Students for Global Democracy
http://www.sfgd.org


Mary Joyce

Gagan Thapa Released




Kudos to the judiciary.

There have also been rumors the new Supreme Court chief justice has scheduled hearings on the possibility of reviving the House. If he could engineer that, democracy could get back on track. Then the parties could head on to the other three items on their agenda, ultimately taking the country through a Constituent Assembly.


I am personally very pleased with this piece of news.


In many ways Gagan Thapa has become the face of the movement. It is not Girija Koirala, not Madhav Kumar Nepal. Both carry the baggage from the 1990s, Girija more than most. Their reluctance to conduct internal reforms in their respective parties has also got in the way of the democracy movement.

Once the charges have been totally dropped, I am going to
rename this blog and rewrite the proposed constitution to make room for a ceremonial monarchy.

People like Gagan Thapa and Baburam Bhattarai should be sitting in Singha Durbar working on policy, not hiding in the jungle, or protesting in the streets. That is why we need democracy.


21st Century Nepal Online Think Tank And SEBS


I emailed thousands of SEBSers inviting them to join this online think tank:
21st Century Nepal. So far the response has been tepid. I guess I will have to fill the coffers through Google Scholar. Through the free service, you are basically tapping the best minds on the planet. The heck with SEBS.

The King's Biratnagar Visit

I guess he is trying to show municipality elections can be held. Look, ma, no hands.


I disagree. I don't think the elections can be held. That is my prime objection to the elections. Got to face the facts. Can't bypass dialogue with the Maoists.


In The News
  • Gagan Thapa Released Legal News From Nepal The Special Court today ordered the release of former general secretary of Nepal Students’ Union Gagan Kumar Thapa saying there was no ground to keep him in custody. The court freed Thapa saying the government charges against him were not clear. Thapa was released on condition that he would present himself before the court as and when summoned. Earlier today, government prosecutors filed a case against him in the Special Court on sedition charges seeking three-year jail and Rs 3,000 fine on him. Thapa was arrested on July 27 for shouting anti-monarchy slogans during a pro-democracy rally organized by the civil society on July 25.
  • Court orders Thapa’s release NepalNews Talking to reporters upon his release, Thapa said if fighting for ‘loktantra’ (democracy) was equated with treason, he would be more than happy to repeat such ‘mistake’ time and again....... Thapa has already announced his candidacy for the top job of the NSU during its tenth convention that kicked off in western town of Pokhara on Sunday...... Nearly a dozen student leaders have announced their candidacy for the top job of their organisation.
  • Fierce clashes likely in coming months: Pathak NepalNews .... massive armed clashes between the security forces and Maoists are likely sometime around Dashain and Tihar festivals (October) .....“The Maoists are forcibly recruiting one person from every single household in their strongholds. They are ordering to manufacture bamboo baskets while their donation spree is on the rise” ...... The rebels use ‘doko’ or bamboo baskets to carry their wounded comrades after the clashes...... also accused the state of preparing for war with same speed.
  • King visits Biratnagar NepalNews From Koshi Hospital, his Majesty walked on foot up to the Regional Police Office at Traffic Chowk ..... This is His Majesty’s first visit to the districts since February 1
  • Locals fear backlash as bodies of lynched rebels remain unattended NepalNews
  • Maoists rob banks in Sindhupalchowk NepalNews
  • King grants audience to Thapa NepalNews Thapa flew to Dhankuta, his hometown, by a chartered helicopter to ‘welcome’ the monarch who was there Saturday afternoon. Reports said the King granted Thapa a brief audience....... A couple of days ago, he met Nepali Congress president Girija Prasad Koirala, who commands the seven-party alliance, and discussed the current political impasse and its possible outlet.
  • Maoists place bombs along Siddhartha Highway, traffic blocked NepalNews
  • Indian manufacturer blames on poor maintenance of INSAS NepalNews
  • Locals lynch suspected Maoists in Banke NepalNews
  • India rejects Nepal complaint on Rifles – Nepal tilts towards ... India Daily, NJ
  • Nepal military loses Indian arms to rebels Calcutta Telegraph the monarch’s military is ill-trained and has neither the numbers nor the firepower to hold its own..... arms supplied by India and meant for the RNA are landing in the hands of the Maoists..... confiscated 70 Insas (Indian) assault rifles with 30,000 rounds of ammunition, 80 self-loading rifles (probably outdated Indian-made 7.62 mm) with 21,000 rounds of ammunition, an 81-mm mortar and explosives...... Both the RNA and the Maoist rebels are fighting with Indian weapons — the RNA with rifles and ammunition supplied by India and the Maoists with Indian weapons snatched from the king’s army...... the Maoists have been saying that their struggle to overthrow the monarchy and establish a republic was in the phase of “strategic offensive”..... the king’s army was still too weak and its abilities were doubtful. Nepal has been asking India for weapons desperately as well as scouring the world markets for arms and ammunition since the February 1 coup...... The Prime Minister reiterated India’s stated position that constitutional monarchy and multi-party democracy are the twin pillars of stability in Nepal.
  • India rejects Nepal’s rifle complaint, offers training Indian Express
  • Nepal downplaying efficacy of INSAS rifles: experts IANS
  • Volatile Nepal teetering on the brink of collapse Lexington Herald Leader, KY a state teetering on the brink of a collapse that could result in huge bloodletting and international confrontation ..... Maoist rebels are convinced of ultimate victory..... an army that has one of the worst human rights records in the world...... a country where they can be lynched by vigilantes, abducted by the Maoists, disappeared by government security forces and tortured or killed by any of the three..... a million so far -- have chosen to flee to India ..... Rebels here control roads and thoughts and bodies in the countryside and the security services can take control of the courts, the media, the telecommunications systems and people's lives in the cities....... In May, the United Nations opened its largest human rights monitoring office in Katmandu since it established one in Rwanda. Its mission: to monitor both sides -- the king and the Maoists. It also has been investigating the vigilante actions of anti-Maoist militias....... The democratic parties are numerous, but most of the power resides with the Nepali Congress Party and the Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist Leninist). While they may represent the country's best chance of representative government, Nepalis tend to see them as nepotistic, corrupt and untrustworthy..... To support the increasingly autocratic King Gyanendra is hard to justify, especially in the era of President Bush's stated aim of spreading democracy...... ignoring a country such as Nepal -- or Rwanda, or Bosnia or Afghanistan -- as it descends into chaos can have a costly impact later in global stability and in lives both foreign and American...... Nepal, much like other ignored and apparently insignificant countries like Cambodia, Afghanistan, Yugoslavia and Rwanda, threatens to sneak up on the consciousness and conscience of a world currently preoccupied by the conflicts in Islamic nations.
  • UML leaders slam Nepal Kathmandu Post, Nepal
  • UML mulls over Monday meet minutes Himalayan Times
  • UML Holds Standing Committee Meet Himalayan Times
  • Nepal rebels threaten to close Unilever plant Peninsula On-line, Qatar
  • Indian PM reviews Nepal security situation, hopes King will honour ... Asian Tribune, Thailand
  • Guerrillas loot banks in central Nepal Xinhua, China
  • Suspected Maoists presence in Bangladesh cause concern for SAARC ... NewKerala.com Bangladesh Home Ministry has asked the intelligence agencies to carry out an investigation to ascertain well before the upcoming South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC) summit whether the Nepal-based Maoist guerrillas are active in the country or not. .... following press reports that Nepalese Maoists are active in Bangladesh.
  • Bangladesh for observer Status for China in SAARC: official Hindustan Times
  • Drawn into the arms of the MAOISTS Newsday, NY
  • India rejects Nepal complaint over assault rifle RedNova.com, TX
  • NSU General Convention begins Kantipur Online, Nepal The convention was inaugurated by NC President Girija Prasad Koirala.... Koirala warned that the country would move towards the republican set up if the palace did not correct its mistakes on time.
  • Popular student leader charged with sedition, released later Outlook (subscription), India
  • Gagan Thapa Released Himalayan Times, Nepal
  • Gagan Thapa released on general date Kantipur Online, Nepal
  • Nepal "shocked and saddened" by assassination of Sri Lankan FM PeaceJournalism.com, Nepal
  • India: Hijacked Planes Can Be Shot CBS News
  • EU raps Nepal rebels for using child soldiers Gulf Times, Qatar
  • NSU convention to be ‘stormy affair’ Himalayan Times, Nepal the meet aims to achieve the goal of full democracy and also that a president should be elected by consensus, but the convention is likely to be a platform of tough competition for the top post
  • Will Sticks Lick Broadband Fix? Newsweek Though the Berkshires are only hours away from superwired citadels like New York and Boston, in terms of telecommunications this might as well be Nepal...... The NSU plans to appeal to the Nepali congress top drop all clauses relating to the monarchy from its statute and lean towards a democratic republican set-up.
  • Pandey leaves for China Gorkhapatra, Nepal
  • Formidable defence of democracy Kathmandu Post, Nepal a work of great erudition that challenges the allegations to the post-1990 democratic dispensation with irrefutable facts, evidences, and logical explanations..... a powerful answer to the propaganda the royal government has spread widely that democracy was not suitable for the soil...... a blow-by-blow account of how mere twelve years of democratic polity changed the economic, social, and political spheres of the country...... a plethora of credible information and evidences..... the economic rationale of the decisions the democratic government had taken ..... quantified the impacts of decisions with the help of data, charts and graphs, which no sane person can arguably refute ...... the Nepali Congress government did not only pursue the liberal market policies, but also improved the living standard of the poorest segment of the population. He has vividly explained the efforts undertaken by the democratic government to enhance education, health, and priority human sectors...... has explained exclusion and discrimination, dependence on foreign aid, Arun III debacle, refugee impasse, corruption perceptions, Maoist war, and other pertinent issues..... the recognition of the fault lines of the society ..... dualistic education system, weak or soft state situation, low productivity, disparity, and centralization as some of the fault lines that need urgent address to avoid class struggle and conflict.
  • Govt torturing me: Sujata Kathmandu Post, Nepal accused the government of making "repeated attempts" to harass her...... fled the country immediately after the February 1 royal takeover "to campaign in India, Europe and the USA for restoration of democracy in Nepal", accused the government of torturing her mentally with frequent visits of officials from the controversial Royal Commission for Corruption Control (RCCC) ...... "Now they have started a planned attack against Sushma Koirala Memorial Trust, which is run with money managed from donations," Sujata told reporters at a press conference in her residence. "After they could not establish any charge against me personally, they have started attacking a social trust." .... revealed that she has already provided every information demanded by the Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority (CIAA)..... "Some men in our party are helping the palace secretly to create obstacles for me to contest party posts in the upcoming general convention" .... said she would contest the elections but wants her cousins Dr Shasank Koirala and Dr Sekhar Koirala to observe "patience" this time.

Friday, August 12, 2005

The Movement Has Been Gathering Much Momentum




Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests

The streets have been warming. There is definite momentum. There is no stopping the movement now.

Baburam Bhattarai On The Maoists' Army

In a recent interview Dr. Baburam Bhattarai came across as unclear on the issue to me. So far I have taken him for his honesty on the possibilities of a Maoist-Democrat alliance. But his recent remarks are of concern. He is suggesting the RNA will be disbanded, and the PLA will take its place. I can imagine that to be the internal Maoist thinking. That is understandable.

But when it is time to finally sit down and talk, I see something like this happening.

RNA = 80,000 fighters
PLA = 10,000 fighters
Size of the unified army to be in 5 years = 30,000

So PLA gets to send 3,000 of its fighters into the unified state army. Not as separate battalions. There has to be total integration. And the army gets 5 years to lay off 53,000 of its fighters. It might be possible to seek foreign aid to facilitate a retraining of those individuals into the private sector of the economy. Likewise for the 7,000 Maoists in uniform who will not make it.

Something like that has to happen.

I request Dr. Bhattarai to think along these lines if he is serious about a Maoist-Democrat alliance.

The Maoist rank and file, armed and otherwise, if they are to draw state salaries, they should hope to do so as (1) elected officials, (2) school teachers, and (3) primary health care workers. Very few of them will stay in uniform.

On the other hand, if the Maoists are unflinching, the Democrats will have to opt to steal their political and social thunder. It is possible to herald a democracy, even a republic, without Maoist cooperation. That is not my first choice, but that is sure an option.

And my thinking is based on an extrapolation of what Dr. Bhattarai has already said. He has said he is for a Democratic Republic as a first choice, and a Constituent Assembly that might retain a ceremonial monarchy as a second, final, minimal choice. Once that happens, the Maoists will engage in a peaceful transformation of the state to ultimately achieve a commuist utopia which might take a hundred, or a thousand years. Which means, post-peace, the Maoists do not have any political use for an army of any kind.

What I am saying is not that different from what they are saying, are on record saying.

In The News
  • Moriarty: Nepal Desperate For Reconciliation Spotlight ..... there is a national security waiver where if the Secretary of State feels that she is worried that the development in Nepal represented threat to the national security of the United States , she can waive the requirement and go ahead with the security assistance...... We are absolutely afraid something might happen to this country that will allow the Maoists to take over. Obviously, we don’t want that to happen..... Maoists are still extorting, killing people and committing all crimes in the country...... There is nothing to be said against trying to figure out whether the Maoists are ready to renounce violence. People have to be very careful and not pretend that the Maoists have changed....... I have been misquoted and I have been accused of saying that the parties have to come crawling on their bellies to the government. I am not saying that at all. What I have been saying is that the government has to reach out and the palace has to reach out to the parties. If palace does so, the parties need to respond....... we look upon our relations with Nepal through our own eyes or our own perspective and our own interest..... there was discussion between President Bush and Indian prime minister Dr. Manmohan Singh (recently) in the Oval Office about the status and affairs of Nepal ....... the Maoist insurgency has grown into the most serious threat even as outside powers have tried to figure out how to respond to the move of February 1...... Without any reservation, Beijing does not want to see any chaos in Nepal and Beijing does not want to see the so-called Maoist regime trying to export its revolution towards its neighbors. I see nothing but desires on the part of China to play helpful role here. I don’t see any intention on the part of Beijing to try to use this uncertainty and confusion...... the worst enemies of freedom of Nepal as far as I can see are the Maoists. Their actions say so and their words say so. Their formula for the future is horrific as their actions now...... I don’t think any such meeting between President George Bush and King Gyanendra will take place (on the sidelines of UN summit).
  • Narahari Acharya: For A New Democratic Nepal
  • Chief Justice Poudel: Priority To House Revival Case
  • Shun The Status-Quoist Kantipur
  • Countless Gagan Thapas by Khagendra Sangraula
  • Wagle's Experiment Kantipur
  • CPN (M) Statement
  • Prachanda Statement
  • Nepal's Human Rights Record Threatens Military Aid New York Times
  • Don't Legitimize Nepal Rule Indian Express
  • Amnesty Condemns Nepal's Vigilantes: Report

Protests


























Proposed Democratic Republican Constitution


Proposed Constitution

Preamble
  1. Nepal is a federal republic, a total, transparent democracy, with the sovereignty resting with the Nepali people.
Article 1: The Legislative Branch
  1. There is to be a lower house, the Pratinidhi Sabha, with 180 members, 60 per state, and a upper house, the Rajya Sabha, with 60 members, 20 per state, all of whom are to be directly elected through constituencies demarcated such that the largest has a population not more than 5% of the smallest, geographically in close approximation to a circle or a square, and protected from partisan gerrymandering by an autonomous Election Commission. The constituencies need not respect district boundaries. Three constituencies for the Pratinidhi Sabha will make one for the Rajya Sabha. The entire Sabha is dissolved en masse when its term nears expiration.
  2. All matters of national importance are to be decided by the national parliament through a majority vote unless otherwise stated. Parliamentary procedures are to be laid out or revised with a 60% vote margin.
  3. The legislatures are to elect their Speakers and Deputy Speakers. The legislatures shall assemble at least once every four months, and as often as necessary.
  4. No parliamentarian may be arrested while the parliament might be in session except for felony charges. Their speech in parliament is protected from any and all oversight, legal and otherwise.
  5. A simple majority of the parliament will pass the budget. All budget proposals must originate in the Pratinidhi Sabha.
  6. All bills must be posted online in three languages - Nepali, Hindi and English - for at least one week before they may be voted upon.
  7. All regional and international treaties that Nepal might enter into will have to pass a 60% majority in the parliament.
  8. Political parties may not engage in fund-raising activities. Instead each national party, described as those that garnered at least 5% of the votes in the previous nationwide elections, will get an annual sum that will be directly proportional to the number of votes it earned. That money is to be used for party-building and electioneering activities. Details of expenses are to be posted online in the three languages to the last paisa on at least an annual basis.
  9. The Election Commission holds secret ballot elections for party leadership for each national party. Tickets for all elections are distributed by parties through democratic methods involving members at or below the said level in the organization.
  10. The Election Commission puts in place ceilings as to election expenditures. Independent candidates may not raise money, but may spend their own money that may not exceed the amount of the party candidate spending the most money. Once elected independent candidates may not join a national party for at least one year.
  11. A party may not charge its members more than Rs 36 a year.
  12. Every person on the state's payroll - elected officials, bureaucrats, justices, police, army personnel - is to submit a Family Property Statement, to be posted online and archived and updated annually. Upon exiting the public sector, they may discontinue the practice, but the archives will remain, and the updates will resume should the individuals re-enter public service.
  13. Details of all expenses incurred by the state, to the last paisa, are to be posted online in the three languages. All contracts offered by the state to the private sector are to be bid for in a similar transparent manner from beginning to the end. All job applications and promotions in the public sector are to be similarly handled in a transparent manner.
  14. All formal political deliberations at all levels of government are to be posted online in as real time as possible in the language that was used at the venue. Efforts are to be made to make the same available in Nepali, Hindi and English. All votes are to be similarly made public.
  15. Every elected official at all levels of government is to get a decent monthly salary.
  16. Anyone above the age of 16 is a legible voter. Members of the Pratinidhi Sabha will have to be at least 23 years of age, and that of the Rajya Sabha at least 25 years of age. The terms of members of the two bodies shall last four and six years respectively. All elected officials are to have been citizens.
  17. Acts of impeachment require a vote of 65%. This constitution can be amended by the same vote margin.
  18. The parliamentarians may not increase their salaries in a way that might affect the members of the existing class. The same applies to the salaries of members of the cabinet.
Article 2: The Executive Branch
  1. The legislative party leader of the majority party in the Pratinidhi Sabha becomes Prime Minister. The Prime Minister may elect members to the Cabinet that might or might not be members of the parliament.
  2. When a majority might be lacking, the largest pre-poll alliance, or the largest single party, whichever might be larger, gets invited to form the government, and is given 30 days to prove majority.
  3. The Prime Minister makes nominations to the Supreme Court and other constitutional bodies like the Election Commission (EC) and the Commission to Control Corruption (CCC) to be confirmed by a 60% vote in the parliament. The commissioners serve 6-year terms.
  4. The army, to be called the Nepal Army, is not to be larger than 0.1% of the national population and is to be downsized accordingly within 5 years of this constitution getting promulgated. The Prime Minister is the Commander-In-Chief of the army.
  5. The central bank is to be autonomous, and the governor, to serve a six-year term, is to be appointed by the Prime Minister, subject to a 60% vote in the parliament.
  6. All appointments made by the Prime Minster, except for his or her personal staff, will need a majority vote in the parliament for confirmation, unless otherwise stated.
Article 3: The Judiciary Branch
  1. The judiciary will reflect the composition of the government, from village/town to district, to state to the national level. Towns and cities with more than 25,000 people will be served with more than one court, the number to be decided through a formula by the state government. There will be a layer between the district and the state levels, the Appeals Court, 10 per state. The system is to be peopled like the civil service, on merit.
  2. The Prime Minister makes nominations to the national Supreme Court. The Chief Minister makes nominations to the State Supreme Court. Both are subject to their respective parliaments for 60% of the vote. Justices to the Supreme Court are to serve to the age of 75 or upto their voluntary retirement.
  3. The state and national Supreme Courts interpret the constitutionality of laws passed by the parliaments when thus challenged, but such interpretations may be overturned by the parliaments through a 65% vote.
  4. The parliament, federal or state, may not diminish the salary of a sitting judge.
Article 4: The States
  1. The current "zones" and "development regions" are to be abolished, but the "districts" are to be retained. The country is to be divided into three states, roughly of equal population, Eastern, Central, and Western, to be called Purbanchal, Madhyamanchal, and Paschimanchal, that are to include all three geographical regions, Terai, Pahad and Himal. Each state is to have a Pratinidhi Sabha, 120 members, and a Rajya Sabha, 40 members.
  2. The districts will have their own governments, forming a third layer, named Zillapalika. It is for each state to design the formation and functioning of its component district and town/city governments. The village units are to be called Grampalika, the town units are to be called Nagarpalika, and the city units Mahanagarpalika, and will form the fourth layer of government. District, town/city and village elected officials are to be at least 21 years of age.
  3. The federal government will directly transfer 10% of its annual budget to the 25 poorest districts measured by per capita income. This does not prevent further federal expenditures on those districts.
  4. The income tax structure is to be as follows: 50% federal, 30% state, 10% district, and 10% village/town/city. The income tax is to be collected by the federal government, and funds transferred by the same to the other levels of government as per this formula.
  5. The education system shall follow a tri-lingual policy up to Class 10, beyond which it is for each individual institution to decide on their own as to the language of instruction. The first language is to be the student's first language, the second language is to be Nepali. For those for whom Nepali might be their first language, the student may choose any language spoken in Nepal. The third language is to be English, the contemporary language of science and commerce. This policy applies to schools in both the private and the public sectors. The language of instruction for all other subjects to Class 10 will be a decision to be made by the individual school boards for the public schools and by the owners of the private schools.
Article 5: President, Governors
  1. Every elected official in the country is to vote for a President who is to serve a five-year term and is to be the guardian of the constitution. A block of at least 30% of the national parliament may make nominations for the candidacy. When there are more than two candidates, the one who gets the most votes wins.
  2. Each state is to similarly elect a Governor.
  3. The parliament may not diminish the salary of a sitting president or governor.
Article 6: The Individual
  1. The individual is the most important component of the state and is to be protected and celebrated.
  2. Every person has a birth right to freedom of speech, freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of religion, a right to a speedy, public trial, and a right to privacy, a protection from unreasonable searches and seizures. No person may be tried and punished for the same crime twice. No person will be compelled to testify against themselves. No person will be deprived of life, liberty or propety without due process of law. Private property may not be taken for public use without due compensation. Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted. The privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended. No ex post facto law shall be passed. No warrants are to be issued, except upon probable cause, and should specifically describe the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. A person charged with a crime is to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his or her favor, and is to have the Assistance of Counsel for his or her defence.
  3. Every person born in Nepal is a citizen of Nepal. But this does not prevent people not born in Nepal from seeking Nepali citizenship.
  4. Every person is equal under the law. Any law that might conflict with that fundamental premise will become null and void as soon as this constitution takes effect.
  5. No person shall be taxed more than 40% of their income by all levels of government put together. Those in the bottom 40% income brackets are not to pay any direct taxes.
  6. No business may be taxed more than 30% of its income, and businesses in the bottom 30% income brackets will not pay any taxes. All business expenses are tax write-offs.
  7. The sales tax may not exceed 10% and is to be collected by the state.
  8. Elections at all levels are to be organized on Saturdays.
  9. No citizen of age may be barred from voting for whatever reason.
  10. It is a stated goal of the state to make possible lifelong education for every person in the country through creative partnerships between the private and public sectors, and through creative uses of the internet. The state shall also attempt to provide universal access to secondary education and primary health care, free of cost. The secondary education provision applies to people in all age groups.
  11. The state shall attempt to provide universal access to micro-credit to all in the bottom 40% income brackets.
  12. All persons that might enter into agreements, either in the private or the public sector, to access credit will have the option to declare bankruptcy as a last resort. Money owed by an individual, as opposed to by a business or a corporation, may not be passed on to the next generation. Indentured servitude is an illegal form of collecting money owed by an individual or family. Money owed may not be paid for through manual labor. Any person, group or organization, lending money on interest, the total of which is larger than Rs 20,000, to be indexed to inflation as calculated every five years and rounded to the nearest thousand, is to register as a small business owner, and will be subject to taxation and regulation.
  13. All educational institutions, public and private, must have at least 10% of its students on need-based full scholarships. Institutions may also opt to have 5% on such full scholarships, and 10% on need-based half scholarships, or 5% on full, 6% on half, and 6% on one-third scholarships. But at no time should the proportion of full scholarships dip below 5%.
  14. Employees of the state in the education and health sectors will be paid salaries that are at least 10% larger than to those with similar qualifications serving in other fields.
  15. An accurate, scientific census is to be conducted every 10 years, and scientific projections are to be made for the intervening years.
Article 7: Capitals
  1. The national capital is to be shifted from Kathmandu to the Chitwan valley within 10 years of this constitution getting promulgated.
  2. Udaypur Valley, Chitwan Valley, and Surkhet Valley will respectively serve as the capitals for Purbanchal, Madhyamanchal and Paschimanchal.

Chargesheeting Gagan: This Regime Has Gone Berserk



Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right. Gagan Thapa can be as repubican as he might want to be. He may express those republican sentiments is as many different ways and as many different forums as he might want. It is his basic human right to do so. It is for the Nepali people to collectively decide if or not they want to retain the monarchy in some ceremonial fashion, but a monarchy that does not allow the Nepali people to express that choice is an illegitimate one. But as for one person Gagan Thapa, he can be a republican regardless of if or not others feel that same way.

Chargesheeting Gagan Thapa for a view he might hold and express is a crime against the person, against the democrats, against the state itself, and against humanity. You may disagree with him, but you may not chargesheet him. Chargesheet him for what?

After 2/1 I took a clear stand for a democratic republic. After the emergency was lifted in name three months later, I softened my stance a little. A blog that started out being called For A Democratic Republic Of Nepal got renamed For A Democratic Nepal. (Proposed Constitution) As of today, it is going back to its original name. And I am also rewriting the proposed document to make it republican.

The lines have been drawn. It is a fight to the finish.

America is a democratic republic. India is a democratic republic. It is wrong for both to preach anything else upon Nepal. If it is right by them, it is right by Nepal. The twin pillar policy has to go.

This king does not have the Pakistan option. This king does not have the Burma option. This king has no option. Nepal is not Pakistan. Nepal is not Burma. And even Pakistan and Burma will not be that for long. Musharraf and the Burmese junta have to see it coming.

A clear republican stance also clarifies and simplifies the democratic debate. A republican stance also makes a stronger alliance with the Maoists easier.

A two word common minimum program is practically a slogan. A slogan goes further when it comes to rallying people. On with it.

This king has crossed all boundaries. The monarchy is a rotten institution.

The movement has to go ahead fearlessly. Members of this regime who might retaliate can be punished soon after power is snatched away from them. These people really don't have that many options. All these Kirti Bishtas, and Peter Giris, and Sharad Shahas go to jail. That is what. That is what is in store for them.

The democratic principle is not a weak one. The method of non violent resistance is not a weak one. The movement for democracy is the strongest current running through the country's political veins.

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