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Continuing turmoil in Nepal after king appoints new government
By Vilani Peiris
11 July 2003
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Political turmoil is continuing to mount in Nepal just weeks
after King Gayanendra installed a new prime minister on June 4
to do his bidding. Opposition protests against the kings
dismissal of the elected government last October persist; social
unrest is growing over the countrys economic decline; and,
while a ceasefire is holding, talks with Maoist guerrillas have
produced no results.
The resignation of the former Prime Minister Lokendra Bahadur
Chand, appointed by the king last October, followed weeks of opposition
protests. Five political partiesthe Communist Party of Nepal-Unified
Marxist Leninist (UML), the Nepali Congress (NC), the Nepal Workers
Party, the Peoples Front of Nepal and the Sadbavana Partyall
demanded that Chand resign and that the king reconvene parliament
or hold fresh elections under an interim government of all parties.
The protests reached a high point in late May when Chand stepped
down, saying his resignation would pave the way to solve
the conflict. The king called on opposition parties to submit
the name of a replacement. But when they proposed UML secretary
Madhav Kumar Nepal, the king ignored them and instead appointed
Thapa, leader of the rightwing royalist National Democratic Party
(RPP). Thapa appealed for other parties to join his government
but was turned down.
Opposition parties have since held a number of protests demanding
an end to direct monarchical rule. On June 13, a demonstration
of more than 5,000 people in Kathmandu chanted, Restore
democracy and We dont approve the kings
regressive steps. A week later, another protest involving
several thousand opposed the kings assumption of executive
powers last year. On July 4, members of the deposed parliament
gathered in the National City Hall in Kathmandu to protest against
the kings anti-democratic methods.
King Gayanendras ability, thus far, to ignore the opposition
is due in part to the tacit approval of the US, European countries
and India. The International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think
tank, noted in April that the international community
was overlooking the increasingly undemocratic nature of
the government in hopes that a strong king is best positioned
to secure a peace.
After he was appointed last October, Chand initiated talks
with the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M), which resulted
in a ceasefire, but no substantive steps have been taken toward
a political solution. The Bush administration has used the insurgency
to push for a more direct US role in Nepali affairs. While supporting
negotiations, verbally at least, Washington has provided the Nepalese
army with substantial military aid and increased the pressure
on the Maoist rebels.
Three senior US officials, including Secretary of State Colin
Powell, have visited Nepal since early last year. In March, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State Donald Camp told the right-wing Heritage
Foundation in Washington that Nepal was on the list of US
foreign policy challenges. He claimed that the CPN-M decision
to negotiate was a foreign policy successthat
is, the result of US intimidationand warned that Washington
would support the Nepalese government whether or not the
ceasefire holds.
The Bush administration increased the pressure on the Maoists
rebels further by provocatively adding the CPN-M to the US list
of terrorist organisations on April 30, even though the Maoists
had agreed to talks. Just days before, US ambassador Michael Malinowski
signed a five-year agreement for cooperation in fighting
terrorism and preventing possible terror attacks with Nepals
Home Secretary Tika Dutta Niraula.
Washington provided $US14 million in military aid to Nepal
in 2002 and announced the delivery of 3,000 M-16 rifles in January
as part of a total consignment of 5,000. By beefing up the Nepalese
army with political and material support, the US is also boosting
the autocratic monarchy, which traditionally has rested heavily
on the military.
Malinowski told the BBC on May 6: The US interest in
Nepal now is greater than ever because of the insurgency crisis
in the country. Washington may have concerns about the impact
of instability in Nepal on the Indian subcontinent as a whole.
But the major reason for growing US military ties with Nepal is
the countrys strategic positionadjacent to China and
Central Asia. Washington has a series of military arrangements
with countries bordering China, stretching from its new bases
in the Central Asian republics through South East Asia to its
formal allies in North East AsiaJapan and South Korea.
India, which is developing strong ties to Washington, is also
backing the Nepalese monarchy and strengthening the army. While
making empty appeals for a multi-party regime in Nepal,
Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee nevertheless congratulated
the royal appointee Thapa. New Delhi has provided substantial
military aid to Nepal. Indian army chief N.C. Vij visited the
country last April and promised a further 1.87 billion rupees
in assistance.
Maoists make concessions
CPN-M leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal (also known as Prachanda) has
indicated his willingness to hold talks with the Thapa government,
declaring it no different from the previous one. The rebels are
clearly concerned about growing US involvement in Nepal. Deputy
leader Baburam Bhattarai told the Guardian in May: They
(government forces) cant crush us. They cant defeat
us militarily... But the US is the worlds biggest terrorist.
The US has been threatening us openly. We want to avoid that scenario.
Like other Maoist groups, the CPN-M is based on the Stalinist
two-stage theory that subordinates the struggle for
democratic rights to the capitalist class and relegates any fight
for socialism to the distant future. In entering talks, the Maoists
have distanced themselves from their own limited demands and indicated
their willingness to embrace open market restructuring.
After signing a code of conduct with the government on March
13, the CPN-M chief negotiator Krishna Bahadur Mahara indicated
that the party would consider retaining the king. If the
people accept the monarchy, there is no problem. If they reject
it, it should go, he said.
A week later, Mahara fielded questions at a big business form
entitled Peace for Economic Revolution organised by
the Federation of Nepal Chambers of Commerce and Industry. He
promised to make the partys policies public but to reassure
his audience added: Our economic model is a free economy
with sound competition and a level playing field for all the players.
After the first round of discussions on April 27, a CPN-M delegation
visited US, European Union and Indian diplomats in Kathmandu to
press its case for greater recognition. According to Indias
Frontline magazine, Mahara held frank and positive
talks with Indian and EU diplomats but received a frostier welcome
at the American embassy.
The Thapa government has appointed two cabinet members to prepare
further talks with the CPN-M. Both sides agreed in early July
to hold informal talks prior to a third round of negotiations.
These discussions take place against a backdrop of deepening economic
crisis and rising social tensions.
A BBC report last December stated that the Nepalese economy
hit a 20-year low last year. The economy contracted by 0.63 percent
in the 12 months to July 2002, according to the Central Bureau
of Statistics. Trade, manufacturing output and tourism fell by
11, 10 and 27 percent respectively.
While about 1.5 million of Nepals 23.1 million people
are classified officially as unemployed, 47 percent of the labour
force is categorised as under-employed. A report in May explained
that out of 300,000 to 350,000 youth who enter the job market
annually, only 10 percent find work.
President of the Central Carpet Industries Association, A.G.
Sherpa, said the carpet industry had cut half its work force,
which employed 550,000 in 1992. The garment sectors workforce
of 60,000 to 70,000 has been halved over the past few years.
Social unrest is on the rise. Protesters took to the streets
in Kathmandu in March over the raising of petroleum prices by
65 percent. On June 13, bonded labourers from rural areas filed
a memorandum at the prime ministers office demanding cultivable
lands and equitable resettlement. They warned that if their demands
were not met they would launch protests.
The king and his government are clearly looking to incorporate
the CPN-M as part of the political status quo as a means of containing
popular resentment. Should that tactic fail, however, the security
forces are being strengthened, with the support of the US and
India, in preparation for a crackdown not only on the Maoist guerrillas
but on broader anti-government opposition.
See Also:
US establishes closer military
ties with Nepal
[27 January 2003]
Nepali regime steps
up oppression of Maoists and civilians
[23 February 2002]
Bizarre royal murders
plunge Nepal into political turmoil
[6 June 2001]
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