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After election landslide, Nepalese Maoists reassure investors
and major powers
By K. Ratnayake and Peter Symonds
18 April 2008
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An unexpected landslide for the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist
(CPN-M) in Constituent Assembly elections on April 10 underscores
the depth of the countrys social crisis and the extent of
popular hostility, not only to the monarchy, but to the entire
spectrum of establishment parties.
Full results in the complex election process may not be known
for weeks, but the Maoists have won a clear majority of 240 directly-elected
seats. Of the 218 seats finalised so far, the CPN-M has 116 compared
to just 34 for its nearest rival, Nepali Congress, and 31 for
the Nepal Communist Party-Unified Marxist Leninist (NCP-UML).
The ethnic-based Madhesi Peoples Rights Forum won 24 seats.
Another 335 seats will be decided by proportional voting, with
quotas set to ensure the representation of women, lower castes
and ethnic minorities. The overall vote for the Maoists is about
33 percent, ensuring that the CPN-M will be by far the largest
party in the 601-seat Constituent Assembly, but unlikely to hold
a majority. The remaining 26 seats will be appointed by the interim
cabinet, which the CPN-M will dominate.
The decision to establish a Constituent Assembly, which will
draw up a new constitution as well as appoint an interim government,
is the product of a protracted political crisis. In April 2006,
sustained political protests against the absolutist monarchy finally
forced King Gyanendra to stand aside and hand over power to a
seven-party alliance led by Nepali Congress and the NCP-UML. In
November 2006, the Maoists concluded a deal with the government
to end their 12-year armed insurgency, enter the cabinet and participate
in elections for a constituent assembly.
The outcome of last weeks poll caught observers, political
pundits and diplomats off guard. Among the most surprised at the
extent of the victory were the Maoists themselves. The election
was twice delayed after the CPN-M threatened to pull out unless
key demands were met. Fearing they would not win directly elected
seats, the Maoists insisted on a greater number of proportional
seats, but in the end were forced to compromise. As it turned
out, the CPN-M swept the direct seats, not only in their rural
strongholds, but in Kathmandu and other parts of the country.
Hostility to the monarchy was clearly a significant factor
in the result. The depth of the opposition was graphically demonstrated
in April 2006 when tens of thousands of protesters defied security
forces day after day to demand that the king step down. While
Gyanendra was an object of particular hatred for his autocratic
methods of rule and privileged lifestyle, there is no doubt that
many people drew the conclusion that the whole system of absolutist
monarchy had to go. None of the royalist parties have secured
any of the direct seats to date.
The Maoists have been the most consistent party in demanding
the abolition of the monarchy, forcing the outgoing assembly to
adopt a motion to establish a republic prior to the election.
A vote by the incoming Constituent Assembly is all that is required
to confirm the motion, which will be decided without amendment.
CPN-M leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal, more widely known as Prachanda,
has given Gyanendra an ultimatum to step aside within a month
and become a private citizen, or face the consequences.
In the eyes of voters, the established political parties, especially
Nepali Congress and the leftist NCP-UML, are tarred with corruption,
years of political prostration to the king and failure to resolving
the countrys pressing social crisis. Mass protests in 1990
had forced the previous king Birendra to grant limited constitutional
powers to a parliament, but ultimate power always rested with
the monarchy, backed by the army.
Both Nepali Congress and the NCP-UML were decimated in last
weeks election. The previous interim prime minister and
Nepali Congress leader G. P. Koirala retained his seat but key
party leaders including Koiralas sister, former home minister
Krishna Prasad Situala, were defeated. NCP-UML Madhav Kumar Nepal
lost his seat and resigned his post. The party announced its intention
of pulling out of the seven-party coalition.
More fundamentally, opposition to the entire Nepali political
establishment reflects a deep-seated social crisis as well as
the lack of basic democratic rights. Some 31 percent of the population
of nearly 30 million lives below the official poverty line. Average
per capita income is just $US280the worlds 12th lowest.
Illiteracy is rampant. Most of the population live in rural areas
and lack basic amenities, including clean drinking water, sanitation,
education and health services.
Soaring global food prices have exacerbated the plight of the
most impoverished. The cost of cooking oil has jumped by 50 percent
in just three months. Prices for rice, meat and pulses have increased
significantly. By one estimate, Nepals four million ultra-poor
typically spend more than 75 percent of their disposable income
on food. Investment in the countrys agricultural sector
is declining. An Asian Development Bank report published on April
2 forecast annual growth of just 3.8 percent, well below other
countries in the region, and an inflation rate of 7 percent.
A capitalist agenda
Many voters supported the Maoists in the hope they will usher
in a new period of democratic rule, peace and prosperity. These
illusions will soon be dashed, however. Maoists have promised
all things to all people, but at the centre of their program is
a commitment to retain capitalism. For anyone familiar with the
Stalinist two-stage theory, the declarations of Maoist leaders
come as no surprise. The CPN-M bases its bourgeois peasant
revolution on the poorest rural layers, not the working
class. The stated objective of the first stage is
to clear away the remnants of feudalismincluding the monarchy
and the caste systemnot abolish capitalism. Socialism is
relegated to the distant future.
Having won the election, Prachanda and Baburam Bhattarai, another
senior Maoist figure, have been busy reassuring business leaders,
foreign investors and the major powers that their interests will
be protected. In this 21st century, we need the cooperation
of everyone for development, Prachanda declared on Sunday.
We want good relations with our neighbours India and China
and other members of the international community. He pledged
to work with all the parties to write a new constitution.
In an interview with the Nepal Times, Bhattarai explained:
When we say we want to end feudalism, we dont mean
we want to end private ownership. Our economic development is
in our language [a] bourgeois democratic revolution, in other
words, collectivisation, socialisation and nationalisation is
not our current agenda... We would like to assure everyone that
once the Maoists come [to power] the investment climate will be
even more favourable. There shouldnt be any unnecessary
misunderstanding about that.
Prachanda and Bhattarai met with the Federation of Nepal Chamber
of Commerce and Industries for two hours on Wednesday to deliver
a similar message. Within 10 years, let us work magic for
economic revolution and mesmerise the whole world, Prachanda
told business leaders. We will allow private investment
and also promote foreign investment. Dont lose confidence,
we are not going to capture industries, but we need your cooperation
to gain economic prosperity.
The DNAIndia website reported: The interaction
started as a tense affair, with businessmen complaining about
Maoist atrocities, but ended with Prachanda delivering an unexpectedly
capitalistic speech that received repeated applause
from the crowd... We are Maoists of the 21st century,
Prachanda declared, after several businessmen raised the grievances
and concerns. Promising to crack down on corruption, he
declared: A strong hand is needed to build a strong nation.
Prachanda and Bhattarai held up Malaysia and South Korea as
examples of how they would encourage foreign investment. Asked
about China, Bhattarai praised Maos elimination of the feudal
system that established a solid foundation for economic
growth... Once we restructure the state and involve the private
sector, it will be possible to achieve rapid economic growth.
These remarks make absolutely clear that the CPN-M has nothing
to do with socialism, nor does it represent the interests of workers
or the rural masses. Rather its program articulates the frustrations
of layers of Nepali business at the failure of the monarchy to
implement free market policies and open up the country to foreign
investment.
Far from resolving the social crisis confronting the majority
of the population, such economic measures will only deepen the
social divide between rich and poor. As in the case of China,
Prachandas strong hand will inevitably be directed
not against a few corrupt officials, but against workers and the
rural masses demanding democratic rights and decent living standards.
Threat of destabilisation
How long a Maoist-dominated government will last, and even
whether it will be formed, remain open questions. Having fought
a ruthless war to suppress the 12-year peasant rebellion, the
king and the army are deeply hostile to the Maoists. Given the
widespread opposition to the monarchy, any immediate move to shut
down the Constituent Assembly and impose military-backed rule
appears unlikely. But such methods have been repeatedly used in
the past and the possibility cannot be excluded.
The army is bitterly opposed to Maoist demands for the integration
of their ex-guerrillas into the military. Currently around 30,000
former CPN-M fighters are housed in poor conditions in cantonments
under UN supervisiona potentially explosive problem for
the Maoist leadership. While paying lip service to accepting the
peoples mandate, army spokesman Ramindra Chhetri stated:
They [the fighters] cannot be integrated into the army as
of now. They need to be disarmed, de-mobilised, rehabilitated
and reintegrated [into society].
The Bush administration branded the CPN-M as a terrorist
organisation and backed the Nepali armys war against the
Maoists, providing weapons and training. Washington only withdrew
support for the king at the last moment in April 2006 and maintained
the CPN-M on its terrorist list even after the party became part
of the interim government in late 2006. While welcoming the election,
the US has yet to make any statement on the formation of a Maoist-led
government.
The Bush administrations machinations against the Islamist
party Hamas, after it won the 2006 elections for the Palestinian
authority, are a clear warning that the White House is quite capable
of mounting a destabilisation campaign against the Nepali Maoists.
The American media is already hinting that it regards the election
as illegitimate. An article in the Wall Street Journal
on Monday focussed on Maoist election violence, even though international
observers described the poll as generally free and fair,
and the rather bizarre argument that people had voted for the
CPN-M to prevent the guerrillas returning to war.
Nepal is strategically located between India and China and
adjacent to energy-rich Central Asia. The Bush administrations
backing for the war against the Maoists was aimed at increasing
the US presence in the small Himalayan state as part of a broader
strategy of encircling rival China. Any increase in Beijings
influence in Nepal will spur on Washington to undermine the Maoists.
At the same time, the CPN-M is looking for a rapprochement. Prachanda
took the opportunity last weekend to have a lengthy discussion
with former US President Jimmy Carter who was in the country to
observe the poll.
Chinas policy toward Nepal has been completely pragmatic.
Far from supporting the Maoist insurgency, Beijing denounced the
rebels and provided arms for the Nepali military. Like other countries,
China will have to adjust its approach following the shock election
outcome. Time magazine pointedly noted: China is
beefing up its interests in their strategic Himalayan region bordering
restive Tibet. Chinese companies are aggressively pursuing lucrative
deals to tap Nepals glacial rivers for hydropower, while
state officials are cozying up to the Maoists in Kathmandu.
The other major regional power is India, which has long regarded
Nepal as part of its sphere of influence. One strand of Maoist
propaganda in Nepal has always been directed against expansionist
India. The CPN-M previously promised to scrap the 1950 Indo-Nepalese
treaty that allows for free trade and movement of people between
the two countries. Sections of the Nepalese ruling elite have
long regarded the treaty as a lever for New Delhi to exert its
political and economic influence. Landlocked Nepal has few trade
and transport options.
The Indian government played a major role in brokering the
deal between the seven-party alliance and the Maoists, but never
expected that the result would be a CPN-M dominated government.
New Delhi wanted an end to the insurgency in Nepal in part to
counter Maoist guerrilla movements in large parts of India. India
will be acutely sensitive to any growth in the influence of rivals
Pakistan and China in Kathmandu, as well as to anything that might
encourage unrest in rural India.
Prachanda has been quick to try to allay Indian fears. On Wednesday,
the Maoist leader reaffirmed that Nepal has a special relationship
with India for geographical, cultural and historical reasons.
He revealed that he had already had long and serious talks
with New Delhi officials on Tuesday. In a telephone conversation,
Indian foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee invited Prachanda to
visit New Delhi.
Beyond the exchange of diplomatic pleasantries, tensions remain.
Prachanda pointedly warned: If the supply of consumer and
other essential items is affected at this crucial period then
it would have a long-term impact on the Nepal-India relationship.
The comment harks back to 1988 when India imposed a trade blockade
on Nepal after the government attempted to purchase weapons from
Chinaa move that had a devastating impact on the Nepalese
economy and led to spiralling inflation.
Last weeks election result is certain to transform Kathmandu
into a den of diplomatic intrigue that will only compound the
countrys political and social instability.
See Also:
Nepali Maoists rejoin interim
government to contest elections
[18 January 2008]
Nepalese king bows
to mass protests and offers to recall parliament
[25 April 2006]
Bizarre royal murders
plunge Nepal into political turmoil
[6 June 2001]
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