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WSWS : News
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Nepali regime steps up oppression of Maoists and civilians
By W. A. Sunil
23 February 2002
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Bloody clashes have erupted in Nepal between guerrilla fighters
of the Communist Party of Nepal- Maoist (CPN-M) and state forces
as a military-police offensive launched by the Kathmandu regime
against CPN-M enters its fourth month.
After taking the upper hand in the offensive, government forces
faced a major attack last Saturday night when Maoist guerillas
raided the Nepal Achham district state headquarters in the town
of Mangalsen, 375 kilometres from Kathmandu, killing 49 policemen.
They also killed 48 Nepal Royal Army soldiers deployed in the
town. Rebels attacked a small airport in the nearby town of Sanphebga,
killing another 27 policemen. With later casualties, the death
toll has risen to 142, including five civilians.
The CPN-M is trying to make a comeback after suffering massive
repression when the government started the offensive at the end
of November last year. The party has called for a general strike
this Friday and Saturday to mark the sixth anniversary of its
insurgency.
King Gaynendra Bikram and Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deubas
Nepal Congress Party (NCP) government stepped up the repression
after last weekends attack. On Wednesday, the defence ministry
reported that 46 Maoists had been killed in four western districts
including Achham, after the government sent in additional forces.
Two more rebels were killed in southwestern areas, the statement
said.
On Thursday, the Nepalese parliament passed an extension of
its draconian emergency laws with a large majority in the 205-member
house. In Nepal, the monarchy still holds wide powers but parliament
has to ratify its emergency declarations every three months.
In this case, there were no difficulties. Though the opposition
Stalinist and bourgeois parties had been bickering with the government
over its misuse of emergency powers, they rallied behind it after
last Saturdays attack on government forces. The government
has also committed itself to spend millions of dollars to buy
new weapons and attack helicopters.
The government offensive commenced last November when four-month-long
talks with the CPN-M broke down. The talks had begun last July
after Prime Minister Deuba took office following the ousting of
NCP president G.P. Koirala. Deuba promised peace talks with the
NCP-M which controlled most of the countrys hill districts.
Both sides agreed to a ceasefire and when talks began in August
they issued a joint statement saying the negotiations had been
held in a cordial atmosphere.
But the situation changed after September 11. The government
banned all public rallies, with the specific aim of blocking a
CPN-M rally scheduled for September 21, and refused to make any
concessions. This led to a resumption of hostilities.
Since November 26, the Kathmandu regime has assumed extensive
power of arrest, detention and punishment under emergency laws
and banned all protests. CPN-M members, or anyone directly or
indirectly helping them, are declared to be terrorists and liable
to a life sentence or capital punishment.
With military aid from India and open encouragement from the
Bush administration, the government has insisted it will end the
NCP-Ms six-year insurgency. But the Kathmandu regime has
a wider agenda. It is out to crush unrest among the rural poor.
The 50,000 strong Nepal Royal Army (RNA) and the police, assisted
by Indian helicopter gun-ships, have been deployed for the repressive
operation. According to a parliamentary report by Home Minister
Devendra Raj on February 5, at least 398 people, including
civilians, have been killed since the imposition of the emergency.
Some 10,800 people affiliated with the Maoists have surrendered.
Of the 5,850 people arrested, 3,283 were released after investigations
while cases against 1,150 have been filed, the report said. An
army report issued on February 18 claimed that 500 Maoists had
been killed so far.
Strict censorship makes it difficult to provide a true picture
of the scale of repression. Nevertheless, there is evidence that
a large number of people may have been killed, Maoist fighters
and civilians alike.
The Informal Sector Service Centre, a non-governmental organisation,
said that the number of deaths was 619 by December 26. According
to reports, poor peasants, mainly members of the so-called peoples
governments set up by the CPN-M in villages under their
control, were among those arrested.
In one incident, in the Dang district, army and police forces
gunned down 11 peasants when they were arguing with a landlord
for their share of the harvest. In another incident in the Rolpa
district, five civilians were killed and seven injured when an
army helicopter fired on people at a religious festival.
Over 50 journalists, as well as activists from various non-governmental
organisations, have been arrested. Underlining the extent of the
repression, the army and police forces have picked up 50 members
of the Communist Party of Nepal (M-L) and an unspecified number
from Communist Party of Nepal (UML). Both these parties support
the government emergency.
Justifying the civilian killings, army head General S.P. Rana
said: We cannot deny that they [Maoists] are using human
shields and therefore when we attack some civilians may get harmed.
The governments move to suppress the CPN-M received immediate
support from India. India would actively oppose the Maoist insurgency
movement and would support the king and the prime minister, Indian
foreign minister Justwant Singh told a press conference.
India has supplied two helicopter gun-ships and 11 truckloads
of sophisticated weapons and sealed off the India-Nepal border
with 80,000 paramilitary troops.
India, which is striving to emerge as a major power in the
region, has several motives for intervening in Nepal. It wants
to head off China, which is also trying to cultivate a relationship
with the Kathmandu regime. Nepal is on the border of the Chinese
province of Tibet, now a focal point of interest for the major
international powers. China fears that 30,000 exiled Tibetans
living in Nepal could be used against it. India also wants to
deal a blow against the Nepalese Maoists because of their close
connections with separatist forces in India.
After earlier supporting talks, the US changed its position
when they broke down. The US embassy in Kathmandu issued a statement
backing the government offensive and calling on the Maoists to
lay down their arms.
The significance of the struggle in the Himalayan kingdom for
the US was underscored in January when US Secretary of State Colin
Powell visited the country. This was the first time in 30 years
that such a high-ranking member of the US administration has visited
Nepal.
After meeting the king, the prime minister and the top military
brass, Powell declared that the US was ready to supply military
aid. The US is very concerned [about] what is happening
in Nepal, he told a press conference, adding that a team
would soon visit Nepal to discuss what was needed to fight the
Maoist violence.
Washingtons keenness in cultivating relations with the
Nepalese regime is bound up with two important strategic interests
of the US: it is close to the oil fields of Central Asia, which
the US is looking to exploit, and situated at the underbelly of
China, which the US considers to be a rival in Asia.
For its part, the Kathmandu regime is seeking to resolve a
decades-long political crisis by winning international support
and aid for its efforts to crush internal political opponents.
Since 1991 there have been nine governments, including three coalitions.
Prime Minister Deuba is the third since the 1999 general election.
Since the mass protest movements in 1990, which ended the three-decade-old
absolute monarchy, the Nepalese masses have gained next to nothing
in terms of improved social and economic conditions.
Nepal is one of the poorest countries in the world, with 42
percent of the population below the poverty line, according to
official figures. Per capita income is $250 and 36 percent of
the population consume less than the minimum daily calorie requirement.
About 60 percent of adults are illiterate, while for women the
rate is 70 percent. Life expectancy is 58.1 years and the infant
mortality rate is 75 per thousand births.
The masses in the rural areas and in the urban slums live in
dire poverty. Smuggling girls, who cannot earn a living, to Thailand
and India has become a thriving trade of mafia gangs.
These are some of the social conditions out of which the struggle
against the regime has emerged. The origins of the CPN-M lie in
the Nepal Communist Party. With the Stalinists developing closer
ties with the bourgeois parties, including the Nepal Congress
Party in the mid-90s, the Maoists broke away from the ranks of
the mainstream party and rapidly gained influence among the rural
and urban poor. But the CPN-M has absolutely no perspective for
their advance. Its bloody confrontations with the ruling regime
are essentially aimed at securing conditions to strike a deal.
Like all Maoist parties, the CPN-M rejects the revolutionary
role of the working class and has built support among the peasants,
with actions aimed at a more equitable distribution
of the agricultural product. But for all its radical rhetoric,
it has no fundamental differences with the other Stalinist parties.
Its original program called for an alliance with progressive
elements within the bourgeoisie in the struggle against
feudalism. And at its national conference in February last year
the CPN-M called for a meeting of all concerned parties
with the aim of forming an interim government and
drafting a constitution.
When Deuba assumed power, the Maoist leader Pushpa Dhal Kamal
(Prachanda) welcomed the change, saying it was a victory
over reaction and the CPN-M sought to forge a compromise
with his government.
But the claims of the Maoists that some kind of progressive
regime could be established by the Nepalese monarchy and ruling
classes have been blown apart by the military repression of the
Deuba regime, with the support of the Indian and US governments.
See Also:
Bizarre royal murders
plunge Nepal into political turmoil
[6 June 2001]
Nepal government launches
crackdown on strikes and insurgency
[17 May 2000]
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