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Nepal News April 23rd
Daytime curfew in Kathmandu on Sunday as well
The government imposed an 11-hour long curfew from
9:00 this morning in Kathmandu as the pro-democracy
activists continued their protest against the royal
proclamation ...
Over 200 injured in Kathmandu; protests continue
nationwide
More than 200 pro-democracy activists protesting
against Friday’s royal address and defying the
curfew orders were wounded when security forces
opened fire at them and ...
Rights groups, civil society call for immediate
release of prisoners of conscience
Some thirty leading rights groups and civil society
organisations have demanded immediate release of all
political prisoners, including party leaders and
human rights ...
General strike hits the financial sector hard
(Nepalnews Feature)
The call by the seven-party alliance (SPA) to
the countrymen not to pay taxes and duties to the
royal government and Nepalis working abroad not to
send remittances back home ...
Seven parties reject royal proclamation, vow to
continue agitation
(news update)
In their first reaction to the royal
proclamation, the seven party alliance (SPA) has
rejected the royal call to form a new government and
has insisted on the reinstatement of the...
Mobile phones go down
Mobile phone connections in the capital have gone
down since Saturday afternoon.
UN, US, EU and Canada welcome royal proclamation
Though pro-democracy activists across the country
continue to take out rallies denouncing Friday’s
royal proclamation, international community have
taken King Gyanendra’s...
Kathmandu remains tense, police open fire at several
places to control crowd
Latest reports say tens of thousands of
demonstrators are marching through inner parts of
the capital, Kathmandu—a restricted zone—Saturday
afternoon chanting slogans ....
Seven party meeting kicks off
The much-awaited meeting of the Seven Party Alliance
(SPA) has kicked off at the residence of former
premier and Nepali Congress president, GP Koirala,
at Maharajgunj Saturday...
Daytime curfew in Kathmandu
The government imposed an 8-hour long curfew
from 12:00 this afternoon in Kathmandu as angry
protests snowballed in the capital against Friday’s
royal address.
UML leaders Khanal, Gautam released
Two central level leaders of UML, Bamdev Gautam and
Jhalanath Khanal, who were arrested on Friday at
Tribhuwan International Airport released on Saturday
morning.
Nepal Maoist and seven political parties 12
points agreements
In September 2005, the Maoist guerrillas
announced a three-month unilateral ceasefire. This
was the first time that a ceasefire has been
declared without any negotiations with the
government. The Royalist coup in February exposed
the illegitimacy of the entire political set-up in
Nepal. It seems that the ceasefire was a hint aimed
at the “democratic” parties that an alliance was
possible. The events that have unfolded since the
ceasefire demonstrate that.
Talks and contacts between the seven parties and
the Maoists and also between the Nepalese groups and
their Indian allies show that there is a clear
willingness to get to some agreement to remove the
king and call for a Constituent Assembly before the
elections in February.
Months of “peace”
Already in September the Maoists left it clear
that they wanted a deal with those they once used to
call traitors and enemies. Prachanda, the leader of
the Maoist movement, declared that through the
ceasefire he wanted, “To create an environment at
both the national and international level for a
forward-looking political way out, to inspire the
seven political parties to come in cooperation by
clarifying their immediate slogan, to reinforce the
movement of civil society, to increase political
intervention upon the old state and to consolidate
[the] party's relation with the broad masses by
honouring their sentiments and aspirations etc., are
the main motivating reasons behind the declaration
of cease-fire” (People’s March, September 6).
Basically the Maoist leadership are sticking to
the old Stalinist theory of the two stages: first a
democratic Republic (and at this stage they only
talk about a Constituent Assembly) and tomorrow,
some time in the future, the socialist
transformation. According to their thinking, the
international context is not ripe for a “People’s
Republic, so they are happy with a nice little
democracy in the form of a Parliamentary Republic”,
or something along those lines.
The problem with this is that in Nepal there is
no scope for developing a stable democratic regime.
The history of the whole of the twentieth century
shows that. The Nepalese ruling elite is extremely
corrupt and bound hands and feet to imperialism.
They are incapable of meeting the democratic
aspirations of the masses.
In spite of this, the Maoist leaders believe that
a new regime will help to develop the country and
overcome the semi-feudal conditions that some of the
provinces are submerged in. In fact, this is more or
less what the Maoists have done in the territories
they control: abolition of the caste system, the
building of basic infrastructures run by the
community (roads, schools, basic surgeries, etc).
They have reached a point where their “liberated”
areas need to connect and work with the urban areas.
They can do this in either of two ways: lead a
socialist revolution in the urban areas or attempt
to come back into “legality” on a bourgeois basis.
It seems clear which of these two options they see
as the most likely.
On their part the CPN-UML (Communist Party
Unified Marxist Leninist) have been mobilizing their
forces against the king, forming an alliance with
the Nepali Congress and strengthening their links
with the Indian Communist Parties and the Indian
government. All this is only a recipe for disaster.
In fact India has withdrawn its support for the king
and has more or less openly helped to establish an
alliance between the seven parties and the Maoists.
Ironically the only reliable ally of the king at
this moment is China, but this support is also very
shaky. China’s only concern is to maintain
stability, so if a joint government of the illegal
parties can guarantee this, China can easily swap
sides. The Chinese pro-capitalist bureaucracy has in
fact been immersed in
realpolitik
for decades.
The talks between the Maoists, the CPN-UML and
other forces held in India, ended with a 12-point
resolution to oust the King and establish a
democratic regime. In mid November the Maoists were
repeating the same line they had put forward three
months earlier. Prachanda said: “We are fully
committed to bring the armed conflict to an end and
establish permanent peace after ending the
autocratic monarchy” (quoted in The Guardian,
November 24).
In a desperate attempt to cling to power, the
King announced local elections for February 2006 and
Parliamentary elections for 2007, but these seem to
be very far away and the isolation of the regime
continues. If the monarchy loses all its allies
(i.e. China) which is a concrete possibility if
the Western imperialists and India manage to keep
the Maoist guerrillas in check and the seven party
Alliance is led by the pro-capitalist Nepali
Congress then the King cannot last much longer.
All this indicates that Nepal is heading towards a
pact where the Maoists are going to be brought into
the fold. They will be called on to guarantee this
process.
This “democratic alliance” in agreement with the
Maoists is politely asking the UN to help out. But
it is also collaborating not only with the Indian
government the godfather of the whole affair but
also with American and European imperialism. The US
have not been too enthusiastic about accepting the
Maoist guerrillas as part of the deal, but they have
little option now as the King seems to be on his way
out. In fact the latest on the diplomatic front has
been a clear indication to the seven party alliance
that is the road that should now be taken. On
Tuesday the ambassadors of the United States and
Britain to Nepal said their respective countries are
likely to back any Nepali political
parties-guerrillas understanding to bring the
guerrillas into the political mainstream, if the
latter surrender their weapons. (Nepalnews.com,
November 22).
The King is a maverick who has no sense of
reality after killing his own family to get into
power and he has thrown the entire country into
disarray. The ruling elite in Nepal (or at least a
section of it) has realised that this crazy element
is incapable of stopping the guerrillas. Therefore
they are using a much cleverer tactic. They are
trying to use their political parties (the Nepali
Congress and all its splinter groups, that do not
represent anyone but have a voice in the seven party
Alliance) to get the Maoists to adopt a more
“moderate” stance and join the already moderate
CPN-UML. In fact as the declared period of the
ceasefire drew to a close and the seven parties
agreed the 12 points to establish a new regime, and
as the international situation has become more
difficult for the King, the guerrillas have
announced that the ceasefire is to be extended until
early 2006.
The King is under a lot of pressure, but the
masses in Nepal see the spectacle of their beloved
leader busy solving the problems of the country by
spending huge wealth on his own personal enjoyment.
They can read in the news items such as the
following statement by a political analyst: “The
king is today on safari taking one of two of the
country's jets with him. The trip has cost
impoverished Nepal $2.5m [£1.5m]. This sort of thing
cannot be overlooked... Before the politicians could
only offer people democracy, now they can offer them
peace as well. This could spell the end for the
king.” (The Guardian, November 24) This reflects the
sheer madness of a man on his way out.
The real meaning of the pact
On November 22 the CPN (Maoists) announced that
they had entered into an alliance with the
democratic forces for the “establishment of total
democracy by abolishing the autocratic monarchy” (Nepalnews.com,
November 22). The Maoist statement says: "The
country is in need of a positive solution to the
armed conflict and permanent peace. We [Maoists] are
fully committed to bring the armed conflict to an
end and establish permanent peace after ending the
autocratic monarchy and hold elections to the
Constituent Assembly as a process of establishing
total democracy”.
The problems are found when one reads the small
print. The Maoist guerrillas some commentators
reckon they are around 10,000 fighters are going
to be under the control of the new Nepalese Army,
that is to be placed under a UN mandate. The Maoists
have thus made a 180-degree turn from their
classical “surround-the-cities” line to an agreement
with the imperialists of the world. A mandate rubber
stamped by the Security Council of the UN may be to
the satisfaction of the imperialist powers. It may
be acceptable to both the Maoist and bourgeois
elements within the country. But what does all this
hold for the poor masses, many of whom have
struggled for years? The masses will see no real
improvement in their lives.
Throughout these talks and deals one important
elements was missing, the voice of the masses. The
Maoist leaders should know better. But this is the
road they have chosen to go down. In their thinking,
if they can achieve the overthrow of the regime in a
bloodless coup, in alliance with the bourgeois
parties and the CPN-UML, who in turn are seeking the
support in the Indian imperialists, what need do
they have of a mass movement of the poor peasants in
alliance with the urban?
The Maoists seem to have abandoned their
“traditional” demands for a Democratic People’s
Republic and seem to be content with establishing a
Constituent Assembly. For Marxists the forms of
government are important but they cannot become a
fetish. The monarchy has a strong tradition in
Nepal, but if the king continues to pose a threat to
the very survival of the system, a section of the
ruling elite could easily move over to the idea of a
Republic, and they would do this under the banner of
the Constituent Assembly. Thus the demands of the
Maoists as they stand now could end up playing into
the hands of the Nepalese ruling class.
Again, Maoist
realpolitik
means that removal of the monarchy becomes an end in
itself, no matter who you ally with. This is a very
risky policy indeed. What the Maoist leaders do not
understand is that one cannot use the peasantry and
the urban working class as if they were a tap, which
can be turned on and off according to their own
political aims. A genuine Marxist leadership would
evaluate whether the mood among the masses was ripe
for an uprising. They would lead the workers in the
cities by declaring a general strike and they would
combine this with the guerrilla forces to take
power. They would explain the need to break with the
bourgeois elements.
Unfortunately Prachanda and his comrades are
doing exactly the opposite. After having built up a
powerful force in the countryside they now seem
prepared to bow to the wishes of the ruling elite,
abandon their previous positions and fuse their
forces into some form of “democratic” bourgeois
regime. This will do nothing to solve the problems
of the masses. They risk dismantling all that has
been achieved in these years of struggle. This has
nothing to do with the policies of Bolshevism.
The next period will show which way the process
will finally go, whether some kind of compromise can
hold, or whether the intolerable living conditions
of the masses will push them beyond the present
stance of the Maoist leadership.
December 2005
King Announcement of Democracy
King calls on SPA to recommend name for Prime
Minister
Kantipur Report
KATHMANDU, April 21 - King Gyanendra has called
the seven-party alliance to recommend the name of
a consensus Prime Minister at the earliest.
Addressing the nation this evening, the king said
he has handed executive powers to the people as
per Article 35 of the Constitution of the Kingdom
of Nepal 1990. In the royal address, the King also
said that the current government under his
chairmanship would be in place until the formation
of the next government headed by the
SPA-recommended Prime Minister.
Full text of the Royal Proclamation
(Unofficial Translation) Proclamation to
the Nation from His Majesty King Gyanendra Bir
Bikram Shah Dev
7(21 April 2006)
Beloved Countrymen,
You are all aware that, given the situation
prevailing in the country then, we were compelled
to take the decision of 1 February 2005 to set in
motion a meaningful exercise in multiparty
democracy by activating all elected bodies,
ensuring peace and security and a corruption-free
good governance through the collective wisdom,
understanding and the united efforts of all the
Nepalese. By supporting our decision, the Nepalese
people made amply clear their desire for peace and
democracy and the civil servants demonstrated
sincerity towards their duties. We are
appreciative of this. We also have high regard for
the dutifulness, valour and discipline displayed
by the security personnel, upholding their
glorious traditions.
By visiting different parts of the country, we
made honest endeavors to acquaint ourselves with
the hopes and aspirations of our people, mitigate
their hardships and boost their morale. We also
called on the political parties to enter into a
dialogue in the interest of the nation and people
afflicted by violence and terrorism. However, this
did not materialize. The ideals of democracy can
be realized only through the active participation
of political parties. In keeping with the
traditions of the Shah Dynasty to reign in
accordance with the popular will in the greater
interest of the nation and people and our
unflinching commitment towards Constitutional
Monarchy and multiparty democracy, we, through
this Proclamation, affirm that the Executive Power
of the Kingdom of Nepal, which was in our
safekeeping, shall, from this day, be returned to
the people and be exercised in accordance with
Article 35 of the Constitution of the Kingdom of
Nepal - 1990. As the source of Sovereign Authority
is inherent in the people, harmony and
understanding must be preserved in the interest of
the nation and people in an environment of peace
and security. While safeguarding multiparty
democracy, the nation must be taken ahead along
the road of peace and prosperity by bringing into
the democratic mainstream those who have deviated
from the constitutional path. Similarly, a
meaningful exercise in democracy must be ensured
with the activation of representative bodies
through elections as soon as possible. We,
therefore, call upon the Seven Party Alliance to
recommend a name, for the post of Prime Minister,
at the earliest for the constitution of the
Council of Ministers which will bear the
responsibility of governing the country in
accordance with the Constitution of the Kingdom of
Nepal - 1990. The present Council of Ministers
will continue to function until the appointment of
the Prime Minister. May Lord Pashupatinath bless
us all! Jaya Nepal!
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