Monday, February 12, 2007

B. K. Rana And The Madhesi Janajati Question


B. K. Rana has a standing as a Janajati intellectual that stands in a class of its own, and I respect that, but I have been disturbed by his Pahadi tendencies during the course of the Madhesi Movement. He has readily bought into the ruling class demonization of the Madhesi Movement, he has made at least one comment of ridicule to me during the course of the movement, and now after having tried to peddle the ridiculous schools of thought that the monarchists and Hindu supremacists were the instigators of the Madhesi Movement, he is now suggesting the Madhesi Movement was a violent movement.

The movement was violent in that state terror was unleashed upon it. The state terror the Madhesi Movement was subjected to was worse than the state terror subjected upon the April Revolution itself.

There were a few acts of violence here and there, sure. Like Upendra Yadav said, people naturally reacted to police brutality. But for the most part this was a peaceful movement. I call it nonviolent militancy. The goal was to paralyze the state and we did it. The exact same thing happened during the April Revolution. Back them the demonizers said it was the Maoists who did it. Wrong. Both time it has been the people. The average person. The masses rose up saying enough is enough.

I have consistently tried to build a Madhesi-Janajati coalition. But I get a clear impression the likes of B. K. Rana are not interested. To the Bahun we are Janajati, but to the Madhesi we are Pahadi, that seems to be the suggestion of the likes of BK Rana.

I am a great admirer of the work of Dr. Om Gurung - it was an honor to sit next to him at this event: Janajati Sammelan At The New School - and the umbrella Janajati organization, NEFIN, just like I am a great admirer of the leaders of the Madhesi Movement. And I have been very much part of the conversation. My involvement with the Madhesi Movement was daily, hourly. I kept myself informed of all the developments, constantly suggested strategies, and was part of some major activism efforts. And I have done all that in a transparent way so as to give credit to all participants generously and in real time.

But Rana's hostility tells me it will be a while before we see the emergence of a Madhesi-Janajati coalition. Maybe it will be issue based and will happen inside the assembly and not before, which will be fine, but I think it is a shame that we Madhesis and Janajatis can not see common ground when our enemy is the same: the status quo. Power is in numbers, and political logic dictates that we get together. I wish enlightenment upon BK Rana.

The small scale Janajati Movement that seems to be underway is a direct result of the Madhesi Movement. The Madhesi Movement in its intensity has inspired the Janajatis. The likes of BK Rana should acknowledge that much instead of participating in the demonization of the Madhesi Movement to which he owes so much as a Janajati.

The Madhesi Movement's gift to me has been the idea of a Madhesh state. Before that I was still toying with the three state federalism of Koshi, Gandaki, and Karnali. I have ditched that.

The Madhesi Movement's contours have drawn the boundaries of the future Madhesh state. I also noticed the Kirats of the east are thinking of their own state in the eastern Hills. If the Madhesis of the eastern plains and the Kirats of the eastern Hills are not agitating for a combined Koshi state, who am I to impose the idea on them?

Our strategy now is to get Krishna Sitaula out. Then the Madhesi Movement will coalesce around the idea that only Madhesis get elected from all the Madhesi majority constituencies in the country. We want a federal republic, and we want a Madhesh state.

The Madhesi Movement is very much on.

NYC Nepali Are Madhesi, Powerless
समानता अौर अिधकार पर्याप्त नहीं हैं, हमें तो शक्ित चािहए
Photos From Janakpur: Santosh Bhagat
सत्ताधारी सात पहाडी पार्टीको घैंटोमा अझै घाम लागेको छैन
सरिता गिरी: अशान्त मधेस, नया नेपाल
माघे क्रान्ित, राजावादी र िहन्दु कट्टरपन्थीबारे

Infighting for Identity with Violence ?

B. K. Rana

Email: rana1616@yahoo.com

The 1998 Nobel Prize Winner Amartya Kumar Sen, a Harvard Economics Professor, writes in his book ‘Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny’ that his ‘first exposure to murder occurred when I was 11’ - that was in 1944. In the book he argues that identity has offered an ample opportunity for violence in the world. He talks of Hutu and Tutsi of Rwanda also. He writes- ‘For a bewildered child the violence of identity was extraordinarily hard to grasp. It is not particularly easy even for a still bewildered elderly adult’.

He saw certain Kader Mia - a Muslim laborer knifed by Hindus. It had happened a few years before the collapse of British Empire in India and the period of widespread Hindu-Muslim violence. The poor Kadar’s wife had urged him ‘not to go into a hostile area of then-undivided Bengal. But he had to feed his starving family, and he paid with his life’.

The victim ‘profusely bleeding suddenly stumbled through the gate to our garden, asking for help and a little water.’ – writes the Nobel laureate. Sen's father had rushed the bleeding Mia to hospital where the victim was pronounced dead of the sustained injuries. More than 13 thousand Nepalese people also lost their precious lives during Maoist insurgency that began in the country in 1996. Many others also lost their lives during the Panchyat system.

The recent Madheshi peoples’ protest was at most a movement against the state-denial of their identity or state of state non-recognition. The movement was reasonable. The demands are just. The movement has some bases. The Madheshi people still feel being unjustly treated as second-grade citizens of the country; most of whom have not obtained citizenship certificates or identity. The case of citizenship is another grave issue of Madhesh.

After the promulgation of the Interim Constitution on January 15, 2007 the ever disgraced and disgruntled Madheshi people found an outlet to protest against the state for their fundamental rights – the right to identity. The sate being backed by radical force on the other hand apparently ignored what had been cooking inside the minds of Madheshi people. Now, the Madheshi movement has fully demonstrated that they are different than the Maoist insurgents in the country. The Madheshi people, however suspended the protests, seem still not prepared to shun violence. Some of their leaders are reported to have sought assistance from Delhi Durbar by visiting New Delhi along with some leaders of monarchial parties in the country. This movement also took at least 29 lives.

The solitarist Nepal, for the sake of its ‘national unity’ which virtually has not been realized by all of the Nepalese peoples, at best stands for the ‘benefit and happiness’ of only those in the governance and always portrays itself monolithic as discussed in Samuel Huntington's much impressive paper ‘Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of the World Order’[1996 ].

Kenji Yoshino, a professor at Yale University, Law School and author of ‘Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights’ while commenting on the Nobel laureate Sen’s book in discussion writes ‘Its [ identity’s] weakness lies in its failure to explain why, at critical junctures, we disown that knowledge. Is it because human cognition tends to trade in binaries? Is it because violence creates identity as much as identity creates violence ? Is it because human beings fear the choices or solitude a more cosmopolitan outlook would force them to face?’

It is worth taking note here that the indigenous peoples or Aadibasi Janajatis [the majority folks in the country] who, also in a state of state non-recognition and second-graded as the Madheshi peoples, are adopting peaceful measures to expressing their differences which is always laudable[1].

Won’t it be possible for the Madheshi people to protest peacefully in case the government did not again address what they are making voices for? There has been lot more blood-shed in the country. The country needs peace for now.



February 12, 2007

Boston, USA

[1] www.nepalnews.com Feb 11, 07

NFIN to sit for talks with government, continue protest http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2007/feb/feb11/news02.php


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Krishna Sitaula Not Going Risks Everything


Hate the sin, love the sinner.
- Mahatma Gandhi

The ridiculous argument being made on behalf of the Home Minister is that the focus has to be on the political issues raised by the Madhesi Movement, and not on one individual. That is highly ludicrous.

A minister's resignation in a democracy is a very done thing. Ministers resign on much smaller matters. This has not been a mere scandal. There has been a brutal suppression of a major movement. Krishna Sitaula killed more people than Kamal Thapa did.

Krishna Sitaula has to go. I don't care if he resigns on his own, or he gets fired by the Prime Minister. Either way he has to go.

There is a huge political reason for Sitaula to go. If he does not go, that will see more street protests. We could be risking the peace process, we could be risking the constituent assembly.

It is ridiculous of the Nepali Congress to suggest the party can not find another person to become Home Minister. I have been pushing the Aftab Alam name. A Madhesi name would be a smart move on the part of the party only a few months before the elections.

But then Girija likes to play the game of brinkmanship. He likes to push people, he likes to corner people.

If there is another showdown, you are looking at more than the Madhesi taking to the streets. There are a lot of aroused groups now. The Madhesi Movement has given them confidence. Their grievances are just. It is just that it will be wise for this eight party government to get all those groups to come for talks and take their agenda to the constituent assembly.

I think all the various groups just want to make sure the constituent assembly ends up looking like Nepal in terms of its ethnic and gender composition. The challenge is how do you achieve that best without compromising the basic one person, one vote democracy?

I have consistently pushed for reserved constituencies.

I just hope there are no more major street agitations. I hope talks and compromises and concessions carry the day. I hope creative solutions can be found.

It all starts with Krishna Sitaula's resignation.

Too many people died. Too many got hurt. And the Madhesi Movement was but the second chapter of the April Revolution itself.

Go, Krishna Sitaula, go.

38 Martyrs = Go, Krishna Sitaula, Go
How Not To Get Back Onto The Streets
49% Seats For Terai In Constituent Assembly Is A Fair Deal
समानता अौर अिधकार पर्याप्त नहीं हैं, हमें तो शक्ित चािहए
Why Krishna Sitaula Has To Go

In The News

Janajati Federation stages rally in the capital NepalNews Demanding federal structure of the state and ethnicity-based proportional representation in the forthcoming constituent assembly elections .... chanted slogans demanding federal system, proportional representation in the CA polls and linguistic freedom. ..... The NEFIN, an umbrella body of over 50 organisations of indigenous communities in Nepal, has warned of nationwide protests if the demands of indigenous people are not addressed at the earliest. Sitaula in the eye of storm; Maoists come to his defense MPs of his own party Nepali Congress (NC) have called for his resignation ..... leaders of Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF) – who have said they would not sit for talks with the government unless Sitaula is removed – NC MP Surendra Chaudhary ...... Earlier, Sujata Koirala – another influential NC MP and daughter of Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala – had also similarly demanded Sitaula's resignation saying that one individual cannot be more important than the whole Terai cause. ...... Nepal Sadbhavana Party (NSP-Anandidevi) – a constituent of ruling alliance – has also formally demanded Sitaula's resignation holding him responsible for "inhumane suppression of Terai protests." ..... Maoist MP and former senior commander of People's Liberation Army (PLA) Janardan Sharma aka Prabhakar said Sitaula's resignation was not the solution of the problem. ...... Sitaula has been saying that he has done nothing wrong. "Police have used minimum of force. They resorted to firing only after other alternatives did not work and because of their duty to maintain law and order and prevent deaths and destructions," he has said in response to charges of suppression. ..... As ultimatum given by the MJF draws closer, the ruling seven party alliance and the Maoists will need to decide whether to keep him or let him go. The decision is going to be especially difficult for the PM.
Koirala, Nepal discuss legal instruments for CA polls agreed to call an all-party meet to finalise the differences still spilling among the eight parties on the modalities of the elections, delineating electoral constituencies, election procedure, ballot papers and such others.
CZOP urges Maoists not to use children in its programmes
NHRC flays Maoist attack against RPP and RJP
Who will lead this nation?

INTERVIEW WITH JAMES F MORIARTY Kantipur The US has not lifted the terrorist tag from the Maoists because they are still acting like terrorists. ..... Sometimes, people either intentionally distort what I say, or make up things I have never said, and there are personal attacks or criticism of me in the media. That can be uncomfortable, I must admit. ....... The future of the monarchy is for the Nepali people to decide. Period. ..... The US provided nearly $50 million in development assistance to Nepal in fiscal year 2006 .... The situation we faced in Nepal is similar in some ways to the West Bank/Gaza case, where our Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assests Control (OFAC) also issued a license to the State Department and USAID for activities with the Palestinian Authority, despite the involvement of the Hamas organization in the government.
Over 800,000 receive citizenship certificate from mobile teams Discussions are underway about resending the mobile teams to various Terai regions that could not be covered earlier because of the Madhesi movement. ... the highest number of citizenships was distributed in Bara where the count reached is more than 20,000.
Madhesis to hold celebratory gathering in Lahan The Madhes Jana Andolan Struggle Committee is to hold a mass meeting in Lahaan, Siraha on Monday. ..... The gathering will be addressed by the chairman of Rastriya Janabadi Morcha Ram Raja Prasad Singh and Madhesi People’s Rights Forum chairman Upendra Yadav.
Nepal Pichada Barga hands 48-hr ultimatum to govt if the government failed to address their demands within 24 hours, it would launch an armed struggle. ...... has been demanding an ethnicity-based proportionate electoral system ..... the association's central chairman Bharat Mahatao
Property worth Rs 35m destroyed during Terai unrest in Sunsari
Nepal may join Shanghai Cooperation
No easy entry for Shivaratri sadhus
24 killed, 67 injured in terai unrest according to Home Ministry. .... Terai Cobra, a little known group, killed a truck driver in Madhuban area of Sarlahi district. ..... MPRF vice-president Kishor Kumar Bishwas claimed that the death toll during the recent demonstration has reached 38. ..... the government has been bearing all medical expenses of those undergoing treatment in various hospitals in Nepal. It has also initiated providing Rs 1 million as compensation to each of those killed in the demonstration. Stating that the government released Rs 500,000 to Bir Hospital for proper treatment of the injured, Nepal said, "We have also made a provision to provide Rs 150 a day to the caretakers of each of those undergoing treatment in Kathmandu."
Gangster Manange released mysterious group with expensive cars and flashy bikes appeared outside Sadarkhor Jail at Dillibazar, Sunday afternoon. ...... Dipak Manange ... Manange, a notorious gang leader, was imprisoned on the charge of a murder attempt on another notorious gangster Milan Gurung aka Chakre on December 27, 2003 at Hyatt Regency in the capital. ...... over 500 people escorted Manange along Dillibazar. ..... "We are here for the security of our don," said a youth, declining to disclose his name. The visibly elated Manange even said that his release was due to the establishment of loktantra in the country. However, police are apprehensive that Manange’s release could begin fresh gang-fights with his rival - Chakre Milan. "Both have strong links with political leaders," said a senior police official, preferring anonymity. ....... alleged that Manange is connected to the Rana-led Rastriya Prajatantra Party while Milan is close to ruling CPN-UML. ...... senior leaders of various political parties used to visit him during his stay in prison. ..... operates Club Dynasty in Durbar Marg, Funky Buddha in Thamel and several other restaurants in Kathmandu. Police believe he is a multi-millionaire ..... there is a strong possibility that these gangsters will be active in the coming CA polls ..... In previous cases, neither Manange nor Chakre ever spent full jail terms for various offences they were charged with. However, Manange spent the full term of his imprisonment this time, as a disciplined inmate, said a jail official.

Naga sadhus to march for Nepal king RxPG NEWS, CA
Mt Everest to feature on Nepal currency
ABC Online, Australia
India to build trade infrastructure in Nepal
Kantipur Online, Nepal