Monday, March 06, 2006

Revise The 12 Point Agreement In Delhi


Maoist leader’s confirmation

Sindhupalchowk: Maoist leader Agni Sapkota confirmed on Monday that the top leaders of the seven parties and Maoists will hold talks in New Delhi to revise the 12-point pact and that they would come up with a joint statement soon. Earlier, a report from New Delhi said NC and CPN-UML leaders have arrived in New Delhi to hold talks with the Maoists to revise the pact. Bam Dev Gautam and Jhala Nath Khanal arrived in Delhi on Sunday, while NC’s Mahantha Thakur arrived on Monday. NC spokesperson Krishna Sitaula is already in Delhi. They are said to be in touch with Prachanda and KB Mahara. — HNS

I believe this is a great move. Here is my wish list.

(1) The major powers India, Europe and the US need to stop beating around the bush, and openly participate in these talks. If it is between a failed state and direct talks with two forces that are not in power and perhaps not legitimate representatives of the Nepali people, heck, neither is the king, the king even less so. For the political parties the difference between the Maoists and the king is the Maoists are actually willing to engage in respectful dialogue. Between the three forces, the seven party alliance is the one force that comes close to being a legitimate force working on behalf of the Nepali people. If that alliance wishes to hold talks with the Maoists, the foreign powers need to do all they can to help the talks. I don't think the alliance is exactly looking for help. This is between the seven party alliance and the Maoists, and so be it. Stay out of the way. Let them talk to their fill.

(2) The 12 point agreement was a major milestone. There is no denying that. But it was always meant to be a first step, a framework to build trust and understanding between the seven parties and the Maoists. Now it is time for a second look, to take into account all the feedback that has been received, including the ones from Moriarty who, by the way, has come out openly for a constituent assembly. I did not hear any member of the seven party alliance speak positively about that specific point. Moriarty says, 10 down, 2 more to go. He likes 10 of the points, but he seeks clarification on two points. But this is not about Moriarty. This is about the country and its people. Moriarty's thoughts have to be judged on merit. If he makes sense, he makes sense. If he does not make sense, he does not. I agree with him academically, intellectually. Heck, he echoed my own sentiments as I expressed them immediately after the 12 point agreement came out. On the other hand, I don't think he has realized the political import of his political office, or maybe he has. If you are the ambassador of the sole superpower in one of the 10 poorest countries on the planet, when you criticize two of the 12 points, you get heard as having criticized the entire list of 12 points. That is the tragedy of being a US ambassador in Nepal.

(3) The Maoists are committed to a constituent assembly. That is a ballot box thing. They are by now ideologically committed to the idea of a democratic republic. That is not a power flows through the barrel of a gun kind of statecraft being suggested. They have said they are willing to disarm as long as they can get a constituent assembly. My point being the Maoists have already renounced violence as a political tool for steps 2,3 and 4. But they are still stuck to it on step 1. They think you can not bring this regime down unless you use violence. The truth is only a massive nonviolent movement will topple this regime. The Maoist violence slows things down. The next agreement has to reflect this ground reality. The Maoists do not have to disarm right away, I know they can't. But they sure can hasten the toppling of this autocratic regime by giving total political space to a massive, decisive, final non violent movement. They should also participate in the same.

(4) The country may have only one army before it goes through a constituent assembly. One army safely put away in the barracks. If you can't get there, you don't get a constituent assembly, plain and simple. As to how to get to that one army, there are several options. My personal favorite is to dismantle both the armies. Madhesis are half the country, but are totally absent in the army. Nepal is a poor country that can not really afford an army. I say dismantle both the armies. That would be one way, the least problematic way. Another would be to have the interim prime minister become Commander In Chief through an interim constitution, and to integrate the two armies. So if there are 60,000 RNA folks and 10,000 PLA folks, you end up with an army that is 70,000 strong. A third option would be to partially integrate the two armies such that you end up with a final size of a 30,000 strong army, 25,000 RNA, 5,000 PLA. You seek foreign aid during the peace process to integrate the rest into the private sector of the economy. This part has to happen before the country goes through a constituent assembly. This is an absolute must.

(5) The Maoists are the most radical of the non royalist forces, and they want a democratic republic, but even they don't want to get there through an armed revolution or anything like that. They want to get there through a constituent assembly. So the rest of us should not talk more radical than the Maoists, even the republicans among us. We should leave an opening for the king to come around to the idea of a constituent assembly. The political parties should leave themselves the option to hold talks with the king like they have been holding talks with the Maoists. This is to ensure there is the smoothest possible transfer of the command of the army from the king to the people's representatives. The revolutionary option is always there, and if the king keeps acting unreasonable that is how things will go, but we should leave ourselves some leeway. If we can have the constituent assembly the easy way, why prefer to get it the hard way?

(6) Personally I am willing to go as far as a conditional constituent assembly for the sake of a smooth transition. Say even if you go for an unconditional constituent assembly, unless the two Congress factions want a republic, there just is not going to be the numbers to the turn the country into a republic. And if the two Congress factions do want a republic, then a 75% vote margin is not too high. So why not give the king this? The next constitution may shape everything, but it may not abolish the monarchy. If it wants to abolish the monarchy, it will first have to hold elections to a new parliament under a new constitution, and then that parliament will need a 75% vote to abolish the monarchy. If you think about it, this 75% thing is practically no different from having an unconditional constituent assembly, but it makes the transition smoother. But I defer to the seven party alliance on this issue, as on all other issues. They are my leader. But I keep thinking, the king is going to blow this as well. Then we don't even have to worry about this little detail. For the king pride gets in the way. He is not capable of a democratic dialogue. And he is not even willing to use mediators. Tells me his heart is not yet in the peace process, and the clock be ticking. But then we don't worry about things we can't control, like the royal mood. We focus on things that are in our domain. The only way the king can express his willingness for talks is by unconditionally releasing all political prisoners. If not, what's the point in talking?

Whatever document of understanding comes forth next has to be a dynamic document. More than one scenario has to be imagined for each phase. And there should be room for further revisions down the line, not on principle, but on tactics.

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Up The Ante: Smart Sanctions
Baburam Moriarty Debate
India, Europe, US For A Constituent Assembly
Congress Not Yet For A Republic
5 Point Agreement
The King Is Nowhere Close To Seeing The Light
Moriarty Deserves Your Ears
Organization: Hamro Nepal
Narayan Singh Pun, I Want Your Number
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We Want To Stop Bloodshed: Prachanda
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Undeclared Ceasefire, Decisive Movement



Many questions have been raised about the 12 point agreement between the seven party alliance and the Maoists. I for one would like to see that turned into a more concrete eight party alliance. It is not that the 12 point agreement has deficiencies, it is not strong and concrete enough. The agreement has to be elevated to a whole new level and implemented with a gusto so far lacking.

The seven parties will be forming the interim government to hold unconditional peace talks with the Maoists. But first that interim governemnt has to be formed. And there has to be a roadmap for the movement such that it succeeds no matter what the king does or not. The goal of this movement is not to seek a private audience with the king, it is to introduce democracy into Nepal for the first time ever. This is about people power, this is not about royal kindness.

The Nepali Maoists are communists. That many people know. But what some people do not fathom is that these Nepali Maoists have managed to add new leaves to that communist doctrine such that in their communist worldview there is room for a multi-party democracy, rule of law, free speech and human rights and the rest of the nine yards. Their four month long ceasefire and their ideological leap from the goal of a communist repubic to that of a democratic republic have not been gleaned from the writings of Mao or Lenin. Those who fear a Cambodia style communist republic the most should most appreciate this ideological leap on the part of the Nepali Maoists. And if these Nepali Maoists are part of some kind of a global communist movement, that is good news. They are going to draw the rest of them communists to see the light they have seen after arduous analysis. The Indian authorities, for example, should be happy.

No serious analyst thinks there is a military solution to the insurgency, because the Maoists are primarily a political organization. And granted there is only a political solution, your commitment to peace and democracy is to be measured by your commitment to the attempts at a political solution. There are things one can do to aid that political solution, and things to hurt it.

Of course the 12 point agreement can be criticized. It is called free speech. That is one of the things we are fighting for.

But now is the time for the logistical details for the decisive phase of the movement. I don't see the slightest hints talks are in the cards. The king is like a stopped clock that is right two times a day. He has this thing called a roadmap. He intends to stick to it, come hell or high water. And he will get both hell and high water.

I feel there are two things the seven parties and the Maoists urgently need to do. It would be unrealistic to ask the Maoists to declare another unilateral ceasefire. But I think it is high time for an undeclared ceasefire such that they would go back to being on active defense. They would cease their offensives. That would create the political space needed for one final, decisive phase of the democracy movement. The idea would be to bring a few hundred thousand people out into the streets of Kathmandu to surround the Narayanhiti. At the peak you go ahead and declare the formation of a revolutionary parliament like in revolution era France in the late 1700s. Because that will be a revolutionary parliament, it will have super powers to deprive the king and his clowns of both liberty and property if need be.

This movement has to be concluded before monsoon sets in.

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