Sunday, February 04, 2007

Maoist Wet Dream


City-centred revolution in the offing, says Maoist leader Gajurel

City-centred revolution in the offing, says Maoist leader Gajurel

By Gopal Khanal

NEW DELHI, Feb 3 - Maoist Politburo member Chandra Prakash Gajurel "Gaurav" Saturday revealed that the CPN-Maoist’s participation in the interim parliament and the recently thawing relations with India was “merely a stratagem” for declaration of a republic Nepal.

Speaking at an interaction programme organised by the Maoist affiliated Democratic Students Union (DSU) of the Jawarlal Nehru University (JNU), Gajurel stated that his party’s foray into mainstream politics was also a part of their "ongoing revolution."

He disclosed his party’s strategies in reply to the Indian Maoist affiliated intellectuals and leftist leaders who accused the CPN-M of being "unable to maintain its revolutionary image."

He assured his supporters that Nepali Maoists had "abandoned its revolution but were instead strengthening themselves to this end and that in the recent days, the party had managed to achieve a substantial increase in the PLA fighting force."

“Since entering mainstream politics, we have increased our military strength from 10,000 to a 37,000-strong PLA. This in itself is a great achievement,” Gajurel said.

“We are now capable of launching a fresh revolt any time.”

Gajurel’s comments have confirmed conflicting reports in that past that the Maoists had been busy recruiting PLA fighters even after entering mainstream politics.

Gajurel, who is also the in-charge of the party's “international command”, revealed that if the parliament failed to get results, they would also conduct a "city-based revolution."

We are going to the elections and make sure that the results are in our favour. If the oppositions capture one booth, we will capture five,” he added.

He also divulged that a "People’s Volunteers" was being formed for the party’s city-based revolutions, elections and other “strategic activities”.

He also said that the "People’s Volunteers" would have around 100,000 members, adding that the Maoist Chairman Prachanda would soon make an announcement to this end.

Gajurel further stated that the refusal by senior leaders to participate in the interim parliament was also part of the strategy.

"Why didn’t Chairman Prachanda, Baburam (Bhattarai), Badal and I himself go into the interim legislature? Because, once there, they (parliamentarians) must speak the language of revolution, something those who were there on frontlines are capable of."

He also said, if necessary, the CPN-M parliamentarians would lead the street and city-centred revolutions.

Disclosing that his party would take up guns as soon as peaceful measures failed to get results, the Maoist leader further added that his party was capable of being "locked and loaded within an hour."

Gaurav’s claim of the PLA’s “ability” to be armed and ready for combat within has raised suspicions regarding the ongoing UN monitored Maoist arms and armies registration and storage.

Union’s former chairperson, Rona Wilson had chaired the interaction programme that continued till midnight in the JNU’s Sutlej hostel, in which around 100 leftist students and intellects were present.

While Gajurel was busy giving away the party’s internal strategy, members of his own Indian association, People’s Right Protection Committee (PRPC), however, appeared “uncomfortable”.

Gajurel, who was the chief guest during the inauguration of a PRPC programme recently, had faced criticism by representatives of Indian and international revolutionary forces who had accused his party of giving-in to a progressive outlook and forgetting the notion of class struggle,

Although he did not reply to those criticisms in an open forum, he disclosed his party’s “masterplan” to CPN-M’s foreign well wishers that Friday night. During the programme, he also claimed that 80 percent of Nepali territory was still "under the Maoists’ control."

He also stated that the cordial relations with Indian government was part of a strategy, adding that his party couldn’t do its job while India remained incensed.


Gajurel is so way out of line here.

The Madhesi Movement has already done a total safaya of the Maoists in the Madhesh. If the Maoists are going to treat their Janajati leaders and members like cattle, the Janajati Movement will do a total safaya of the Maoists in the Janajati territories also.

I am for land reform. I am for state funded parties. I am for one person one vote democracy. I am for women's rights. I am for Dalit, Madhesi, Janajati rights.

But the Maoists are going to have to play ball.

Power flows through the barrel of a gun - they are going to have to ditch that dictum once and for all. And if they are not going to do that, all other forces in the country have to come together to ostracize them permanently. They will have hit a point of no return. And if that means not ditching the monarchy, then so be it.

I am for ditching the monarchy. I am a progressive. The monarchy is a feudal institution. But violent Maoism is beyond feudal, it is medieval.

The spirit that Gajurel expresses here, if that is the "internal" reality in the Maoist tent, then the democrats will have no option but to forge a strong alliance with all forces foreign and domestic to wage a total, final struggle against the Maoists.

I don't get it.

I can understand that the Maoists as the leading ultra left force on the planet would be under tremendous pressure from their lesser accomplished comrades around the world to go back to dogmatic ways. The "Bible" says violence, so you stay with violence.

I invite people like Baburam Bhattarai to engage with me in an elaborate, open philosophical dialogue on the topic. I have laid out in my proposed constitution my vision for Nepal. Nothing Mao ever wrote is better. Maoism gets a ton of people killed, and it did.

Mao is from a different era. That was an era of rabid western colonialism. Those were desperate times. Even the Chinese know that: they have known that for decades.

Today Maoism does not apply. It is not scientific to apply ancient Maoism to today's realities.

My proposal of state funded parties will build a classless Nepal that no Maoism ever will. Going back to classic Maoism will only invite a protracted civil war in the country where powers like India and the US will get to have an open play, and for good reason. Their calculation will be, do we want maybe 100,000 deaths now, or 10 million during the years of Maoist rule. They will be wanting to avoid the Cambodia situation, and for good reason.

The Maoist leadership needs to steer away from that trap. Prachanda does not want to be like one of those cult leaders who lead all their followers to commit mass suicide. That way lies a bloodbath. There is no liberation, there is no national pride, there is land reform, there is no classless society down that path. That is a path to living hell.

The Maoists can not do it even if they want to. The democrats in Nepal are strong enough to fend the Maoists off. And if they are not, the royalists and the feudals will be trigger happy to forge an alliance with the democrats and the foreign powers. But if ever that need is felt, the Maoists will have closed all doors of reconciliation permanently. Why would they want that?

I hope this Gajurel flareup is a temporary mental slide to feed the intransigent ultra leftists who are insignificant in numerial strength, and even less so in impact. Those people are basically out of touch with reality. Communists are supposed to be scientists. They are supposed to face reality. They are supposed to face facts. They are supposed to allow open analysis of their positions held. These losers of the international ultra left movement are a throwback to another era. These are like the Japanese soldiers on remote, desolate, tiny Pacific islands who decades later still did not know World War II was over. Noone told them.

In The News

Terai wants Nepal minister to go, toll rises The Statesman, India
Nepal minister under fire as Terai toll climbs to 15
Times of India, India
Nepal:Home Minister’s resignation a pre-condition for talks: MFJ PeaceJournalism.com
Police Shoot Protesters In Nepal
Playfuls.com, Romania
More killed as violence escalates in southern Nepal (Roundup)
Monsters and Critics.com, UK the worst of the clashes occurred in Birjung, where hundreds of activists belonging to Madhesi People's Rights Forum (MPRF) defied a curfew and fought running street battles with police. ..... JTMM said its 'third battalion of Terai Liberation Army' and had captured two rifles, a pistol and more than 300 rounds of ammunition from the police station. ....... Police said about 50 armed JTMM cadres were involved in the attack. ..... It the second time recently that the JTMM captured weapons from police. On Wednesday, JTMM activists used civilians as cover to storm a police post in the industrial city of Biratnagar, killing one police officer and abducting three. They made off with weapons. ....... on Saturday, a protestor who was wounded during police firing in the town of Janakpur, died in hospital from his injuries. The town has now been placed under curfew in anticipation of more violence. .......
Red alert sounds at India Nepal Border Hindustan Times, India
Nepal: BJP rejects
Sahara Samay, India The Bharatiya Janata Party today dismissed charges by Nepal's Maoists that it was supporting movement against the radical leftists in the Terai region of that country. ..... "It is not our ethos to interfere in the affairs of other countries. Since they (Maoists) are losing the battle against common people, they have started dragging the BJP and the RSS into their mess," party spokesman Prakash Javadekar said........ His comments came in the wake of Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) leader C.P. Gajurel's allegations that the BJP and the RSS were behind violence against Maoists in the Terai region in Nepal. ...... Javadekar accused the Maoists of attempting to derail the democratic process in Nepal.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Inbox 8




Kanakji. I am so glad you are doing this. The political conversation will never be over, and sometimes it will be tumultous, but lives lost are a tragedy in black and white. No grey about it. As a Madhesi I am greateful you are doing this.

I will surely circulate this. Thanks.

On 2/3/07, Kanak Dixit wrote:

Call for a Vigil

To mark the tragic loss of lives in the Tarai/Madhes over the last two weeks
due to unrest and police action, Himsa Birodh Abhiyan invites you to a
candle-light vigil at the Maitighar Shanti Mandal.

MAITIGHAR SHANTI MANDAL
SUNDAY, 4 FEBRUARY (21 MAGH)
5 PM

Please bring a candle
Please circulate this message


Dear Pramendraji,
All the members of NDYCUSA we are socked on the current situation of Nepal and we strongly believe that the current ongoing of Tarai situation must be resolve through the dialouge and government have already formed a commission and lets hope this legitimate commision will comeout with solution.
NDYCUSA is going to issue a stetement on the current situation of Tarai that will be our official position so please do not menction the NDYCUSA name any other stetement.
I appriciated your concern and understanding.
Thank you
Anand Bist
President
Nepalese Democratic Youth Council in USA(NDYCUSA)

ANTA has officially stated its position on the ongoing terai issue. Kindly remove my name from all of your future correspondence.

Thank you for your cooperation.
binay

Paramendra dai,

While I agree with a lot of your demands/ideas, I am uncomfortable
with seeing my name on a letter of whose existence I had no idea. We,
at Adhikaar, are very process-oriented, and I cannot sign on to
something without approval of the entire board. Yes, that means we
might not be on top of things - our statements might be stale, but we
believe that the process is equally important, if not more, and we use
it as a way to empower ourselves. We hold off signing on even to new
letters for the campaigns we are actively involved in.

Additionally, organizationally speaking, Adhikaar cannot take any
kudos for the April revolution. Yes, we raised some money to support
the injured, and I personally attended a couple of rallies, but we
were not actively involved. We have on-going conversations at our
meetings about our role in Nepal, and as a small organization with
limited resources, we have decided to focus on the issues here --
immigration reform, making sure everyone has access to drivers'
license, access to healthcare, able to get a good job.

I appreciate the hard work you have put in, and wish you all the best.
I will bring it to Adhikaar's meeting and let you know what the team
decides. I hope we can continue working together in many issues that
are of common interest to us.
Luna

Parmendra Ji,
would you please remove this email account from DFN BLOG. I already have another email in this blog and I am getting multiple times.

Thanks for your help.

I don to hear all this .

so please stay out of my way.

Thanks,

Narayan


Paramendra,
Good job. Keep it on.
Just minor correction (Off the record): 205+45+100 = 350, but not 345 what you have mentioned there.
JP

You are exactly at the same opinion where I am.Thank you

If the
Nepal Army and the Maoist Army are mobilized against the Madhesi
people, nothing will stop the Madhesh from becoming a separate country
after that. That will be a point of no return. And all the political
leaders of the seven Pahadi parties are going to be declared state
enemies of that new country, Madhesh. All atrocities committed during
the Madhesi Movement will be tried by the future Madhesh government.
They will be taken to international courts as necessary. The Madhesh
would vow to never have any kind of diplomatic relations with Nepal
ever after that.
MY heart is speaking the same language as above.

Dr BN Yadav BPKIHS Dharan. No compromise with the deadly blood hounds
Dear paramendra ji
We will not take more seats but at no cost we will take less seats for terai.There is no question of compromise.You don't know madhesies are 54% in actual.The data which has been provided by the pahadi government is unreliable.Let them decide the seats for hill first then we need the exact number of seats in terai.That's all.
2nd is fedral governance and samawesi( equal partipation of the madhesi in all fields)

Yes ... you are right.

These pahadias have done enough.

Lokendra

I think you are going too far. But, remember that patience pays. Madesh cannot afford to be out of Nepal. There will be an identity crisis. Madesh (meaning middle territory) is only an qualifier noun more like an adjective, but not a name. It signifies no country or no territory. If you consider Mithila as the ultimate name, it will leave out the west. If it is Awadha, it will leave out the East. You cann't call it Bihar; neither you can call it UP. Either it has to be Nepal or a part of India. Or you are going to have to invent a whole new name. It is just like trying to call Pahad a country; that's not a name- it just indicates the type of topography. Pahad cannot be a country. It is as simple as that. Let us try to resolve the genuine problem at hand rather than dissolve what has already been an established country.
- Show quoted text -



check this parmendra jee,
suyesh

Nepalese Fate

It has been more than two weeks that we have been stranded at home due to the ongoing agitation. More than thousand small and big industries are out of work since then.

Naturally, thousands of workers have nothing to earn and I wonder how they are surviving. Hundreds are stuck half way on their way home lying helplessly having nothing to feed themselves. Half the nation has been paralyzed since 2 weeks.

Expecting a better life ahead all of us fought for the Janaandolan II . We were hungry for peace thus it was successful as we were all desperate for it.

We were happy to get back to our normal lives, work, earn better and of course lead the nation on the path of other developing countries. But, again the same routine has been prearranged to us which we almost had wiped off our lives.

Does democracy mean more suffering for the people? Why does it have to be only the poor who suffer the most? Why is their life being sacrificed and still no one is serious about it? Just imagine a rikshwa wala who earns the whole day to feed him and the family in the evening.

Similarly a worker in the factory who gets Rs 125 a day to survive.

How will he be surviving?? Aren’t we responsible for Hundreds of thousands of these citizens of ours? Where are the leaders? All the policies seem to be formulated for the lower class people which in fact is only on papers.

We say we fight for people’s right but in fact we are fighting against them. We are crippling their life. Yes, we need to fight for our right and street is the proper place. But here we are making street the most hated venue.

We yet are to exercise the proper democracy.

It in no way allows us to fight for our right violating other’s right. I have the right to support any protest and in the same time I do have the right not to support them.

The very elementary principle of democracy and human rights should be mugged up by the leaders and the citizens should be aware of.

Several people have sacrificed their lives in recent protest called by the Madhesi’ nationals across the country. Parties do not care for its cadre until he fights but the day he / she dies, shamelessly they do not waste a sec to claim the victim to be active cadres of their party thus demand some hundreds of thousands of rupees paying off the bill to their sacrifice.

They do not however, speak a word of sympathy for the woman who looses her life with labor pain on the way not being able to reach the hospital on time. Should we not be responsible for her life? Who is going to demand some couple of lacs for her?

Oh!! That actually is supposed to be the punishment for not supporting the strike …

So, dear Nepalese, be aware! Dare you not support the strike and plan to be sick or deliver a baby when there is a strike called by our leaders. You may actually have to pay for that with your lives.

Actually we are BUTCHERS. We are so much used to innocent people being murdered everyday. If it is less than 5 a day, we do not make it news at all. We are the coldest blooded people in the whole world.

May be that is the reason behind the PM’s baseless address to the nation.

There was no seriousness in his speech. The unseen political interest and unwillingness of delivering peoples demand could be smelled.

I was more surprised to see such an unprofessional delivery. We are least bothered with his health and second address if he fails to save life of a single citizen of the nation he is leading. More than 5 people have lost their life and hundreds injured after PM’s address.

This fully reflects how serious he is with the citizen and the respect.

He gave a damn to the people loosing their lives, being injured and their desire. Is that the proper way of answering the people’s queries? Are we satisfied? No, we are not…

We need a wind of change . The youths should now train themselves to be the next leader of our nation. Our country needs us. We no more can trust our country to be safe in these people’s hand.

Suyesh Pyakurel

Exe Member: Chamber Of Industries, Morang

President : Nepalese Young Entrepreneur’s Forum, Biratnagar Chapter.

Email: suyeshp@gmail.com


Dear Pramendra Ji
Please don,t send me any more mail because I don,t have time to read your mail. Okey it,s my request.
Colin

hello Bhagat,I hink Pahadias wish to keep ruling on Madhesh.THey will pay a heavy price for this .BINASKALE BIPRIT BUDHI Aibrahal chhai,Srabasabke Dasa likhagelchhai.


Anil Kumar Jha
Re: [DFN] Butchers, Stop The Killing, You Will Get Tried
Wow.


Are you ever gonna stop sending this crap? Where did you get my email? Have I ever authorized you to spam me?

Nirmal Shrestha


Excellent! I agree. Just had lunch with 2 Yadav students. Add them. Thanks.
Brian


Dear Paramendra Kumar Bhagat Ji,

I am working for Madhesy rights, Dalit rights and women rights.

Thanks

Satya
Satya Narayan Shah
Executive Director
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT PATH (SODEP)
Ramanandchowk, Ward no. 9,
Janakpurdham, Nepal

thought on minimizing Madhesh's current conflicts

Janakpurdham - the heart of Madhesh or Terai is disturbed since last three weeks. The markets remain closed. No signs of activities are being observed in markets. Excepts the mass of political rallists only the stray dogs are visible even around the Janaki temple. People have started pouring in on roads on daily basis expressing different demands. In spite of such a big protests on daily basis it is highly pleasant to not that there has been no destructive attempts either to physical properties or with common people from the side of ralliests. Instead the local administration, particularly the police have beaten people mercilessly, fired guns on innocent observers, a insulted and assaulted the human rights commission representatives etc. So far more than 300 people have suffered from these brutual attacks of the local police. Out of these 300 about seven are in critical condition. One has been referred to PMCH-Patna, another to DMCH-Darbhanga of Bihar (India) and one is Teaching Hospital Kathmandu for special treatment. Some are still in zonal hospital Janakpur.

The on going revolt by the people is a sign of spill over effects of suppression faced by Madhesies during the past 200 years. This revolution would get calmed only after getting the full due rights as claimed by Madhesies. If the genuine demands of Madhesies are not addressed immediately Madhesh may go for a complete but independent state away from Nepal.

To conclude existing revolution is hovering around in following two demands;

    1. The decision to reallocate national assembly seats on the basis of equal proportional representation of people.
    2. On the basis of geographical consideration the separate state of Madesh with full rights for self determination except suzerainty, Foreign policy & Physical policy of the country.

The conflicts being observed in Madhesh at present is completely a political one. There is not a trace of truth in the rumor that the conflicts have been due to communal feelings or infused by any vested interest. In fact the Madhesies are awoken for their political, economic, human rights etc as per the established principles of democracy all over the world.

Suggestion:

Roughly 50 percent of the country's population is residing in Madhesh. Hence as per the essence of Millennium Goal of the UNO the Donor Agencies should think in contributing their resources at par in Madhesh to educate for social justice and ameliorate the economic condition of Madesh and Madheshies on a sustainable basis.

                    Satya Narayan Shah

                    Executive Director

                    SODEP