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Maoists emerge as largest parliamentary bloc in Nepal
By W.A. Sunil
25 April 2008
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The Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M) was the clear winner
after provisional results in the countrys April 10 election
for a Constituent Assembly were announced yesterday. As well as
gaining 120 of the 240 directly-elected seats, the Maoists secured
97 of the 335 seats elected on a proportionate base. The overall
national vote for the CPN-M was 29.27 percent.
While lacking an outright majority in the 601-seat assembly,
the CPN-M is well ahead of its nearest rivals. The Nepali Congress
(NC) and Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML)
obtained only 37 and 33 directly-elected seats, respectively,
but boosted their result by securing 21.14 percent and 20.33 percent
of the national vote. The NC will have 107 assembly seats and
the CPN-UML will have 101.
Two groupings based on ethnic minoritiesthe Madhesi Peoples
Rights Forum (MPRF) and the Tarai-Madhes Democratic Party (TMDP)won
the next largest national votes, 6.32 percent and 3.16 percent
respectively. Their final tally of seats will be about 51 and
20.
The final number of proportional seats allocated to each party
may vary slightly as quotas have been set for women, lower castes
and ethnic minorities. The remaining 26 seats will be filled by
nominees of the new cabinet, when it is formed.
Significantly, the three royalist parties that back King Gyanendra
and the retention of the monarchy have been virtually obliterated.
These parties won none of the directly elected seats and secured
only a handful of proportional seats. The Rastriya Prajatantra
Party (RPP)received the highest vote of just 263,431, or
2.45 percent of more than 10 million votes cast, and will have
8 assembly seats.
Royalist politicians were prominent in the unelected cabinets
appointed by Gyanendra that provoked sustained mass protests in
April 2006, forcing the king to hand power to an interim seven-party
coalition administration headed by the NC and CPN-UML. Widespread
opposition to the monarchy, hostility to the traditional parties
and a deepening social crisis fuelled by rising food prices contributed
to the large vote for the Maoists.
CPN-M leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal, also known as Prachanda, declared
yesterday: The first meeting of the Constituent Assembly
will end the monarchy and establish a republicthere will
be no compromise. The Maoists insisted last December on
a motion to establish a republic as a condition of their participation
in the election. Final ratification without amendment is due to
be voted on by the incoming assembly.
Prachanda earlier issued an ultimatum to the king to step down
within a month or face possible punitive measures. At the same
time, the CPN-M has indicated that it would allow Gyanendra to
step aside gracefully, live as an ordinary citizen
and retain all his considerable private property and business
interests. Prachanda has announced his willingness to hold talks
with the king.
Gyanendra is particularly despised because of his autocratic
methods of rule and rumours of his involvement in the bizarre
palace massacre in 2001 that led to the death of his brother,
King Birendra. On Monday, a palace spokesman dismissed media speculation
that Gyanendra intended to flee to India as malicious.
Despite holding the largest number of seats, the CPN-M faces
obstacles in forming a new government. Maoist leaders have appealed
for a broad coalition involving the seven-party alliance, including
the NC and CPN-UML, as well as the MPRF. However, the NC and CPN-UML
have expressed reluctance to join a government dominated by the
Maoists, fearing they will be overshadowed.
NC leader Shekhar Koirala told the media on Tuesday: Congress
leaders are sharply divided over the issue. He said the
party would only join the government if it adheres strictly
to [the] peace agreement, [including] the return of all seized
property and dissolution of the parallel state mechanism.
Koirala did not explain what he meant by parallel state
mechanism but it appears to be the Young Communist League
(YCL), which has been accused of election violence.
The CPN-UML announced it was pulling out of the seven-party
alliance. Party leader Pradip Nepal said: The seven-party
alliance has an agreement to work together on the new constitution,
and we will. However, he continued, that could be done from
inside the government or outside.
The election outcome came as a shock to the NC and CPN-UML,
which had calculated that the Maoists would be incorporated as
a relatively minor partner in the next government. The Maoists
first entered the coalition government in November 2006 after
reaching an agreement to end their protracted guerrilla war, lay
down their arms and consign their fighters to UN-supervised cantonments.
It remains to be seen how the army would react to a Maoist-dominated
government. The CPN-M is demanding the integration of its fighters
in the military, which has opposed such a move outright. Army
spokesman Ramindra Chhetri reiterated this week: The army
is an apolitical organisation and this special characteristic
has to be respected by all stake holders. In fact, the army
has been the backbone of the monarchy. It is notorious for its
repressive methods during the civil war that began in 1996 and
claimed an estimated 13,000 lives.
Even before forming government, the Maoists are bending over
backwards to reassure the Nepali ruling elites and the major powers
that their interests will be safeguarded.
CPN-M leaders met for a second time on Wednesday with representatives
of the Federation of Nepalese Chamber of Commerce and Industries
(FNCCI). Prachanda restated the partys support for capitalism
and foreign investment. Maoists give first priority to the
domestic investors, but our party heartily welcomes foreign investors
in the country, he said.
According to the Himalayan Times, the CPN-M chairman
recounted the facts that his party workers, in the pretext
of trade union [work], hampered work at industries in the past
and reassured the business community that they wouldnt repeat
it in the future. Baburam Bhattarai, another senior Maoist
leader, called for the private sector to take the lead in the
countrys economic revolution.
Having the CPN-M removed from the US list of terrorist organisations
is a high priority for the Maoists. CPN-M international bureau
chief C.P. Gujurel appealed to Washington on Monday, declaring
the party was trying to establish close links with the US.
Talks are going on in several fronts in this regards. Our doors
are always open to all US officials if they want to talk us.
The US ambassador to Nepal, Nancy Powell, attended a meeting
of donor countries and agencies on Thursday with Maoist leaders,
but made no comment. There have been no immediate steps to take
the CPN-M off the terrorist list. State Department spokesman Tom
Casey remained non-committal on Monday, saying only that Washington
would look at a review if any movement ends its association
with terrorism.
The Bush administration is no doubt trying to calculate whether
a Maoist-dominated government could be exploited to further US
strategic interests. In recent years, the US stepped up its presence
in Kathmandu and provided weapons to the Nepalese army as part
of a broader strategy to counter Chinese influence. Far from being
a natural ally of the CPN-M, Beijing is reassessing its strategy
after providing arms and backing to the monarchy to crush the
Maoist insurgency.
Millions of voters supported the Maoists, hoping that it would
improve the desperate conditions facing Nepals urban and
rural poor. The Maoists, however, are already trying to dampen
down expectations. CPN-M leader Ram Bahadur Thapa told the Himalayan
Times that price rises were driven by international market
forces and thus beyond the governments control. Rural debt
relief would be limited. We may not fully waive the loans
of the downtrodden, but will try to fully exempt the loans of
those who are on the verge of losing property because of bad debt,
he said.
Under conditions where more than 30 percent of the population
lives below the poverty line, the pro-business policies of the
Maoists are likely to have explosive political consequences sooner,
rather than later.
See Also:
After election landslide, Nepalese Maoists
reassure investors and major powers
[18 April 2008]
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