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Monday 18 February 2008

Nepal: The Coming April Crisis, and India’s Role

Sharply contending parties in Nepal agreed to have the future of the country contested in a elections for a constituent assembly. This has given rise to huge debate within Nepal, and among its people, over what kind of future to have, what kind of state and social system. Various forces (including the pro-Indian Nepalese Congress party NC) have repeatedly postponed and impeded those elections — leading the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) to point out that the future can also be settled by other means. There are (as several commentators note) two undefeated armies in Nepal — one belonging to the government, the other led by the Maoists. Currently the elections are scheduled for April — and there is great tension over whether they will be sabotaged again, and (if so) what will follow. India is accused of helping torpedo the elections by stirring up secessionist forces in the Terai, the strategic agricultural border area in southern Nepal. Possibilities include renewed Maoist armed uprising, broad mass protests, a crackdown by the Nepalese military, continued stalemated crisis and possibly an invasion by the powerful nearby Indian army — or various combination of these things. A piece from the Nepal Times follows.
Plan A…. India Doesn’t Seem to Have a Plan B on Nepal
by PRASHANT JHA in NEW DELHI (India’s Capital), Nepal Times: Sat Feb 16, 2008 5:39 am (PST)
New Delhi is confused and frustrated about continued uncertainty over elections in Nepal.
Nepal watchers here are convinced that missing the deadline yet again will mark the collapse of the peace process. They say they are working on politicians in Kathmandu to get their act together, but admit their leverage is limited.

An exasperated official told Nepali Times : “We can’t do much if Kathmandu’s myopic political class doesn’t want elections. They will create new excuses, and this time the excuse seems to be the Madhes.”
Indian agencies are said to be in touch with all Madhesi groups, but deny India is instigating trouble in the Tarai. “Why would we want to prolong instability and bloodshed in the Madhes when its first negative fallout is on our own side in Bihar and UP?” asked one official.

Delhi has alerted the Bihar authorities about the presence of Madhesi militants, but officials say without more engagement from Kathmandu it is unlikely that Patna will step up the heat on the extremists.
The policy thrust now is for a quick fix on the Madhes to enable polls to go ahead. It is a difficult balancing act of backing the larger process while maintaining influence over Madhesi groups. India is happy with the unity and alliance of Madhesi groups and the distilled six point demands.
“The government must sincerely reach out to the Madhes, and Madhesi groups shouldn’t allow themselves to be used as a pretext to cancel polls. They should consolidate and get votes,” said a senior diplomat, summing up Indian policy.

India is also keen on an understanding between the NC and Madhesi groups to strengthen ‘democratic forces’ so they can stand up to the Maoists. On her recent visit to Delhi, sources said US ambassador Nancy Powell warned her interlocutors that the Maoists were bullying their way through the process. There is concern here that the Maoists will use the YCL to intimidate voters and rig elections.
India doesn’t seem to have a neat Plan B in case elections do not happen. But one top policymaker told us, “We don’t even want to think of that scenario…it will be like a civil war.”
Meanwhile, the king is lobbying hard in Delhi to retain the monarchy. Son-in-law Raj Bahadur Singh was in town this week meeting the BJP’s Rajnath Singh and Jaswant Singh, among others. The message is that the Maoists plan a power grab, and only the monarchy can counter it. The royals were pleased about BJP prime ministerial candidate L K Advani launching a blistering critique of India’s Nepal policy last week.
Nepal is high on New Delhi’s agenda these days. Minister for External Affairs Pranab Mukherjee personally tracks Nepal and speaks regularly with Prime Minister Koirala. The visit to Kathmandu this week by senior Congress leaders Digvijay Singh and Verappa Moily is described here as testimony to the importance Sonia Gandhi attaches to the situation in Nepal.
Source: Nepal Times, February 16, 2008

Saturday 16 February 2008

Crisis continuum

S D Muni
No one disputes the fact that the fate of Nepal's peace process hinges precariously on the election to the Constituent Assembly scheduled for April 10, 2008. While the Government leaders continue to promise that free and fair election would be held, the ground reality is not at all encouraging. Even the Election Commission has expressed serious reservations regarding the security situation, particularly in the Terai region. If the election is again postponed, all the interim arrangements -- the Government, Parliament and the Interim Constitution -- would lose credibility. The disruptive forces, trying to sabotage the election will get emboldened and the prevailing non-governance will get worse. The international community which has put very high stakes in facilitating Nepal's smooth transition will get alienated, further complicating the prospects of peace and stability in Nepal.

The challenge to smooth election come from three sources: The Madhes agitation (Terai region), the monarch and the Maoists. The recently emerged United Madhes Democratic Front (UMDF), headed by Mahanta Thakur, is agitating for the acceptance of their six demands before they can participate in the CA election. The Government has accepted federalism and assured representation to Madhes in administration, including the Army.

But what has been conceded falls far short of the expectations. Though there is scope for further accommodation, it is virtually impossible to concede all the demands before the election. The questions of autonomy and self-determination are linked with similar demands raised by other groups. The demand for the full electoral representation to Madhes cannot be met without redrawing constituencies and that means indefinite delay in election. The continuing agitation of the Madhes parties is not allowing smooth campaign in the Terai to the ruling coalition.

There are violent and unruly groups outside the UMDF which have not been reined in by the Government. Some of them are even demanding secession. On the whole, the situation in the Terai is chaotic, violent and insecure. Elections can be held only with the use of heavy force, which will neither be credible, in the absence of Madhes participation, nor free and fair.

While, Madhesis' fear that they will not get their demands met adequately after the CA election, the monarch fears that he will lose whatever he has as soon as an elected CA comes into being. Non-governance of the ruling coalition, tension among the allies and turmoil in the Terai have combined to encourage the King to "break his silence" and debunk the interim Parliament's decision to declare Nepal a "Republic". The opinion polls show greater acceptance of the monarchy, not necessarily him as the King. Through funding of the Terai and ethnic agitations and sporadic violence, King Gyanendra is trying his best to get the election atmosphere vitiated. His cronies in various ruling parties, including the Maoists and the Madhes agitating groups, along with the traditional royalist parties, are all helping him in his agenda.

The Maoists had got the November 2007 election postponed under the fear that they would be marginalised. They have overcome those fears, collected adequate funds, united the scattered Left groups under their banner and also regained some support among the ethnic groups. They have also been hobnobbing with the erstwhile royalists. The party organisation has been geared to face the election and Maoist leader Prachanda has even spelt out his ambitions to be the first President of the 'Republic of Nepal'. The problem with the Maoists, however, is their persisting resort to strong arm methods through their Youth Communist League (YCL) cadre and their refusal to vacate captured property. Other political parties fear that the Maoists will rig the election through YCL wherever possible.

The hurdles in the way to smooth election can be easily overcome if the Government has a firm resolve. The ruling coalition parties, particularly the Nepali Congress, the Maoists and the Communists (United Marxists Leninists), are locked in an internecine power struggle, trying to outwit each other. Inherently insecure of the outcome, each of them want to ensure that election yields power to them. They have decided to launch a united campaign in favour of free and fair election but without any real zeal or enthusiasm.

In such a situation, hope lies only with civil society groups and the international community. The civil society groups need to reactivate themselves to the level they did during the Jan Andolan-II. The international community, by all indications, is seriously pushing the Government towards a credible CA election. India has even encouraged its political parties to visit Nepal to boost morale. There are, however, allegations that sections in India, both within and outside the Government, are conniving with the Terai agitating groups as well as the royalists to derail Nepal's peace process. The possibility cannot be ruled out that isolated mavericks in the Indian establishment are cultivating the Terai card to ward off the eventuality of the Maoists emerging as dominant players in Nepal.
Source: The Pioneer, February 16, 2008

Prachanda's dream and the stuff of kings will not mix

C K Lal
On February the 13th, Maoists celebrated the 13th anniversary of the armed rebellion in Kathmandu with the pageantry befitting a proletarian party seeking to establish a "people's republic". Presumably, such a state will be patterned after North Korea, the sole surviving model of a Maoist republic in the world. Under the benign gaze of Chairman Prachanda, Nepal will then probably begin building better presidential palaces than the gawky Narayanhiti or jinxed Diyalo Bangla constructed by kings. The Maoists will be careful not to emulate the official residence of the prime minister at Baluwatar, reputed to have been intentionally designed by royal astrologers and architects with a flawed feng shui to ensure that its occupant never serves a full term.Unfortunately for Comrade Dahal, nobody in Kathmandu takes his presidential dreams too seriously. The buzz in town is that royal representatives have succeeded in persuading the Indian establishment about the necessity of keeping some form of kingship in Nepal. The delegation of ruling Congress (I) from New Delhi scoffed at all such rumours, but there was no mistaking the body language of Digvijay Singh, a former jagirdar himself, who is believed to be a close confidante of the Uncrowned Empress of India — Sonia Gandhi.StrangleholdImmediately upon his arrival at the Tribhuvan International Airport, still named after the grand-father of suspended king Gyanendra, Diggy Raja pointedly told the media that the success of the peace process depended upon everyone faithfully implementing past agreements. What we don't know is that the Sujata Koirala model of cultural monarchy may have been a part of the quadrilateral deal between mainstream parties, Maoists, monarchists and their Indian mediators in New Delhi. If that was so, the future of Constituent Assembly(CA) elections rescheduled for April 10 is probably still uncertain.Speaking at an interaction early this week, Maoist ideologue Baburam Bhattarai urged royalists not to obstruct the polls. His party will have to do more than that to ensure that the elections are held at all. There is no way entrenched interest groups will let an election happen that is sure to dismantle their stranglehold over Nepali society and the state.Royalty"If the King is nationalist, he should help in smooth conduct of the election," Bhattarai reportedly told the audience. BP Koirala had said something similar prior to the referendum in 1980. Events proved how naïve he had been by not learning from history. In the past, almost every hereditary ruler of Nepal, at least since the time of Jang Bahadur, has bowed and scraped before imperial agents in Calcutta and New Delhi to protect their privileges and keep all possible challengers in check. Kings and princes are pragmatic people; they know that nationalism is for the rabble, not for nobles.Gyanendra knows that had Indians not backed his grandfather, he would have been the king in 1950s. He also knows that almost every Rana prime minister and their progenies had to find shelter in India once their time was up. Clearly on the instigation of someone else, Gyanendra overplayed his hand with February 1, 2005 power grab. But that doesn't mean that he hadn't kept his channels of communication with the Indian establishment open. It seems CA elections are impossible unless some space for the suspended king is found in the new scheme of things to come.The idea of the "Baby King" floated by Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala is a non-starter. Egyptians tried that with King Ahmad Fu'ad, aged 7 months. The baby reigned for less than a year and became the last monarch to ascend the Egyptian throne. With Hridayendra, son of Crown Prince Paras, as Baby King, royalists will have no use for the likes of Girija or Sujata in Baluwatar. At best, they will be politely asked to leave the country, on health grounds of course.The concept of cultural monarchy holds better promise. Long after privy purses of ex-royals were abolished, the Maharaja of Mysore and King of Tehri Garhwal still preside over colourful Dusshera processions. When a young Chogyal was "crowned" in Sikkim, all legislators of the tiny state of India dutifully lined up to offer him khada. In tribal societies, chieftains fulfil an emotional need of identifying oneself with real or imagined glories of the past. Perhaps this is what Herbert Spencer had in mind when he opined that removing monarchy is like snatching the favourite toy from a shrieking child.There are models of rulers without realm. Dalai Lama presides over the Tibetan community spread all over the world. The Syedna is the spiritual leader of all Bohra Muslims with power and prestige worthy of a king. Prince Aga Khan is the hereditary Imam of all Ismaili Muslims. Most Rajputs still defer to the Maharana of Udaipur even though he is just another hotelier in Rajasthan. It's probably possible to have a mention of something like "Emperor of Nepali Jati" or "Gorkhali Samrat" in the interim constitution and give him — or her — the status equivalent to a minister of state. His or Her Majesty can then continue to do business and pay taxes like everyone else. People will be happy to greet them on temple doors and Buddhist stupas.FacilitatorUnless something is done quick time, the D-day of CA elections will turn out to be a mirage once again. The list of political bigwigs doubting elections is impressive. The challenger to Koirala's prime ministerial throne in Nepali Congress party is ex-premier Sher Bahadur Deuba. This is what he says, "The elections cannot be held in the current fragile security situation." Shekhar Koirala, the octogenarian prime minister's nephew, concurs, "As the securitysituation is deteriorating, holding the polls is impossible." Home Minister Krishna Prasad Situala warns that the country will get into a deeper crisis if elections are not held on schedule. Prachanda threatens to launch a stir if polls are once again scuttled. Who are these worthies talking to? They need to be part of the solution rather than add to the mounting problems of Prime Minister Koirala.The last agreement between warring parties of Nepal was reputed to have been facilitated by Sitaram Yechury. Probably the new agreement will require the initiative of Rajnath Singh of the Bharatiya Janata Party, an outfit that has been backed by kings of Nepal since its Jan Sangh days. The Royal Palace in Kathmandu is eagerly waiting for the arrival of a BJP team in the country.The writer is a commentator and columnist based in Kathmandu.
Source: Mail Today, February 16, 2008

A Dangerous Hurry

Bhaskar Roy

If their role models are any indication, Nepal's Maoists seem to be moving swiftly to install a regime based on terror in our neighbourhood. Nepal's Maoists, or the Communist Party of Nepal -- CPN(M) -- appear to be in a tearing hurry to establish an iron grip on the country's Government, Parliament and other institutions through threats, muscle power, forced indoctrination and a "second revolution" if they are not allowed their way. It should be of serious concern that the Maoists propose to celebrate the birthdays of Kim Il-Sung, known as the 'Great Leader' of North Korea, his son and the current dictator Kim Jong-IL, known as the "Dear leader" and even North Korea's national day.

It would be quite understandable if Prachanda and his Cabal demanded only the stopping of observing the Nepal King's birthday as a national holiday. That is already happening, anyway. It would have been more encouraging if the Maoist leaders adopted some of the late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping's policies of moving forward. Equally, if not more important, Deng worked forcefully to rid China of the personality cult.

North Korea, or as it calls itself the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), never had any democracy and the people have been rendered utterly poverty-stricken, almost Zombies, with no voice whatsoever. On a walk through the streets of Pyongyang one can see posh restaurants with glass doors, stores stocked with food, but not a soul inside them. These are shows for the few foreigners who get a visa to enter Pyongyang. The displayed food go to the most senior cadres.

The elementary indoctrination book used by the CPN(M) in their schools and for the slave labourers has big pictures of Prachanda. Mao Zedong's Red Book had only Mao's photograph. In North Korea, the only photographs are those of the "Great Leader" and the "Dear Leader".

Mao kept one moderate leader with him, to try and repair some of the most critical damages wrecked upon the state by his Red Guards and the "Gang of Four". This man was Premier Zhou Enlai. Since Zhou never coveted the top position and remained personally loyal to Mao, he remained safe. Even then, Mao spied on Zhou to ensure that he was not being betrayed. Mao, the 'Great Helmsman' needed somebody on his side permanently.

Who is Prachanda's Sancho Panza? The party ideologue, Baburam Bhattarai, is seem to be performing Zhou Enlai role for Prachanda. But Bhattarai is not half as astute as the wily Zhou. There have been rifts between Prachanda and Bhattarai, some reported to be serious. This would suggest Prachanda is not as powerful as Mao and that Baburam has his own power group within the party.

Mao Zedong was a preceptor of the Maoist, especially Prachanda. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP), however, dismisses any connection with the Nepalese Maoists and have only declared the CPN(M) adoption of the adjunct "Maoist" is not accepted by Beijing. Though the Madhav Nepal-led CPN(UML) is China's closest fraternal party in Nepal, Beijing has not desisted from engaging the top Maoist leadership.

What would be most uncomfortable to China is the CPN(M)'s apparent open admiration of the North Korean dictatorship. To the CCP, the CPN(M) is trying to swim against the stream, inkling towards Pyongyang's Korean Worker's Party (KWP). China's relationship with North Korea is no longer the old "lips to teeth" relationship. It is only strategic compulsions that forces Beijing's support to North Korea.

The movement against King Gyanendra, which ultimately led to the abolition of the monarchy, should in itself be a lesson for megalomaniac politicians. Gyanendra came to the throne through a yet unexplained massacre of the royal family allegedly by the heir apparent to the throne. He quickly showed his driving greed for absolute power, but was brought down by his people. One wrong decision to yoke the people destroyed a 200-year-old proud dynasty.

The Maoists have been recently accused of transgressing the 23-point agreement. The Nepal Congress vice-president and Minister, Ramchandra Poudel, has pointed to the violent methods still adopted by the Maoists. Former Prime Minister and NC leader, Sher Bahadur Deuba, and other senior leaders have accused the Maoists and their youth arm, the Young Communist League (YCL), of atrocities that could put the scheduled April 10 Constituent Assembly (CA) polls in jeopardy. In fact, the largest Left party, the NCP (UML), which made moves to establish some common cause with the Maoists, are having second thoughts.

Prachanda has yet to make any serious move to return the confiscated property of civillians. If this is being done in the name of Communism then such land and immovable property should have been distributed among the poor and landless peasants long ago. Instead the Maoist cadres continue to enjoy their properties like warlords. Given the track record of the Maoists, it does not appear that their demand to have their fighting cadres absorbed in the Nepalese Army is out of an intent to accommodate the PLA into proper working engagements. There are other motives, perhaps. The then United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) has set a formula for absorption of a part of the PLA in the Nepalese Army. The rest are to be paid a stipend of Rs 3,000 a month till alternative employment is found for them. This has not satisfied Prachanda and his comrades.

The Maoist leadership may be trying to sell the idea that Mao's "long marchers" subsequently became China's official Army after the success of their revolution. But there are crucial differences. China's millet-and-rifle soldiers commanded by officers who were mostly trained in the Soviet Union. The Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) was a disciplined force, and their commanders were real military strategists of whom many professional armies in the world would be proud of. They did not get absorbed into any other army after liberation.

The most shocking practice of the Maoists are their "Labour Camps". Here poor people imprisoned are mad to work like slaves, with no pay and no freedom. They are also imparted forced indoctrination. The Prachanda Red Book is compulsory in some Maoist controlled schools.
Is Prachanda also trying to run a Gulag? While trying to camouflage his intentions periodically, he makes no secret of his willingness to repeat in Nepal some of the worst crimes committed on humanity by Communist regimes elsewhere.

Source: The Pioneer, February 16, 2008

Monday 4 February 2008

Can Nepal's Rebels Help Rebuild?

Ishaan Tharoor/Chitwan
Comrade Sandhya's voice trembles as she speaks of her father. "He was a major in the Royal Nepalese Army," she begins, cupping her chin with one hand while rearranging a neat schoolgirl plait with the other. "When he found out I had gone underground, he said I was no longer his daughter — only his enemy. The next time he wanted to meet me was on the battlefield."

That encounter, to Sandhya's relief, never came to pass. In 1996, as a 14-year-old student from a town north of the capital Kathmandu, she joined Nepal's Maoist cadres at the moment when their armed insurgency had just begun to take hold of this rugged Himalayan nation, long a magnet for foreign backpackers and adventurers. Her father's military income meant Sandhya did not grow up among the country's many poor, but she chafed under the rigid caste laws and gender norms that blunted her parents' ambitions and stripped her of the same opportunities as men. The Maoists, led by their talismanic leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal, a.k.a. Prachanda, promised her and thousands of others nothing less than a complete reordering of society, and Sandhya gave herself to the struggle, fighting as a soldier in a decade-long civil war that claimed over 13,000 lives and displaced countless more.

Today, Sandhya sits batting away mosquitoes in a sparse wood cabin, part of a sprawling Maoist cantonment in the southern district of Chitwan. She believes victory is at hand. A peace process triggered by mass protests in April 2006 against the autocratic rule of Nepal's King Gyanendra brought the Maoists into the political mainstream, paving the way for the extraordinary transformation of a country ruled for two and a half centuries by Hindu kings into a secular republic. Both the Royal Nepalese Army and the Maoist guerrillas — the civil war's bitter foes — returned to their barracks and camps with the stated intention of eventually reforming into one new national force. "We all want democracy. No one here wants to fight again," Sandhya insists. Even her father, who has since retired, has reconciled with Sandhya. "He respects my decisions now," she says. "He realized I was a figure of change."

Change can bring uncertainty, however, not just for Nepal but for other countries. Nepal, a country of 28 million, is sandwiched between the world's rising giants, India and China, who both have cast their eye over the Himalayan nation as a buffer against the other. Any unrest in Nepal — hostilities have been suspended, not buried — could spill across into its restive borderlands, particularly Chinese Tibet and the troubled Indian state of Bihar — developments that Beijing and New Delhi would view with alarm. Nepal's Maoists, moreover, are still on the U.S. State Department's list of terror groups. They have traded their guerrilla hideouts for plush offices in the capital, but had a fearsome reputation for committing violence when the armed struggle raged.

Indeed, the hatreds that fueled the civil war threaten even now to bubble over. Elections for an assembly that would draft Nepal's new republican constitution are slated for April 10, but only after much bickering and dithering. Nepalis of all stripes are losing faith in the seven parties, including the Maoists, that make up the country's feuding interim government and see corruption and cynical power-politicking stifling the nation's slow reconstruction from the ashes of war. Over a third of the population still lives below the poverty line.

As the politicians fiddle in Kathmandu, a hundred mutinies burn around the country: vigilante gangs run rampant in the countryside, while ethnic groups long marginalized under the monarchy have taken to armed uprising, especially in the southern lowlands of the Tarai where over 40% of Nepal's population lives. A cocktail of anarchist elements, militant factions and a growing separatist movement hold sway there and prove a daunting challenge with elections coming in little more than two months. "What happened in Kenya could happen here," says Jayaraj Acharya, a former Nepalese ambassador to the U.N., speaking of the ongoing ethnic conflict in the African nation triggered by disputed elections, which has claimed hundreds of lives. "Only here," Acharya adds, "it will be worse."

A False Dawn
The security situation in a nepal under cease-fire is dismal. During the civil war, both the Maoists and the Royal Nepalese Army held brutal sway over segments of the country, but now, as they wait in their camps, law and order has deteriorated. Reports filter in every week of kidnappings for ransom. Last December, a Swiss trekker was beaten up after refusing to pay money to a few rogue Maoists, a worrying sign for a country heavily reliant on the money brought in by foreign tourists. Many in Kathmandu blame the Youth Communist League (YCL), created by the Maoists less than a year ago, for much of the disorder. Red YCL banners around parts of Kathmandu urge Nepalis to report "suspicious, reactionary activity" to cell-phone numbers emblazoned on the cloth. As soon as night falls in the capital — which, as a bastion for the King's army, had been safe during all of the years of the civil war — the usually teeming streets grow deserted. "The police have no motivation at all right now," complains Kanak Dixit, editor of Himal magazine and an outspoken advocate of democracy. "There is an alarming surge in crime."
Public safety isn't the only challenge the interim government has failed to negotiate. Fiscal mismanagement has led to chronic fuel shortages across the country; lines in Kathmandu extend for kilometers and prices have tripled in less than half a year. Last week, protests against rising fuel prices shut down the capital. Kathmandu residents face at least six hours of power cuts a day. The government has been unable to raise Nepal's middling growth rate, which hovers around 2%, and funds many of its programs on an IV drip of foreign aid. Trade-union activism and general strikes, some suspect spurred in part by the YCL, disrupt factories in outlying areas and basic services in the cities. During Christmastime around Kathmandu, sanitation workers had been agitating for over three months. Piles of garbage festered around every cobblestoned corner of the city, visceral reminders of a deeper rot seeping into the nation.

"We live in a broken state," says Mandira Sharma, a leading human-rights activist. For the past five years, she and her NGO, Advocacy Forum, have investigated hundreds of cases of disappearances that took place during the decade-long civil war. To Sharma, both the Maoists and the Nepal Army are guilty of a catalog of atrocities, from forced recruitment to extrajudicial killings. Attaining justice for the victims (and compensation for the nearly 200,000 displaced) ought to be as important to the country's push toward democracy as elections. "But human rights don't seem to be anyone's priorities here," she laments. "The problem is a failure of political leadership."

Elections for a Constituent Assembly, which have thus far been canceled twice, became the focal point of political squabbling. The first date, June 17 last year, was missed for mostly logistical reasons. Nepal simply wasn't ready at the time to hold a fair and efficient poll. But the Maoists scuppered the next date, November 22, much to the chagrin of many Nepalis as well as the international community. Reneging on earlier understandings, the Maoist leadership grandstanded on a set of demands that included the outright abolition of the monarchy before its fate could be determined by popular referendum. When the other parties — including the establishment Nepali Congress, the party of the country's current Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala — refused to accede to the Maoist agenda, the Maoists pulled out of the government and plunged the peace process into a rancorous impasse.

"It showed how unnatural the alliance is between all the interests in the interim government," says Kamal Thapa, a royalist politician who served as Home Minister under Gyanendra. Up till last year, the Congress Party had always defended the idea of constitutional monarchy, a commitment enshrined by their party following similar protests in 1990 that curbed royal power. But the need to assuage the Maoists changed the equation. "The Congress has had to understand the new political reality," says C.P. Gajurel, a top Maoist politician, "and it has been difficult for them."

The Maoists see themselves as the agents of democracy in Nepal, stifled by the objections of reactionary, status-quo forces, while many in the Congress, let alone in factions aligned still to the ancien régime of the monarchy, doubt the radical guerrillas' commitment to any political scenario where they may not retain complete control. Despite a compromise thrashed out at the end of last year, which set elections for this April, observers expect conflict to be inevitable. "What more must we give the Maoists?" asks R.S. Mahat, Nepal's Finance Minister and a Congress Party member. "Their strategy is simply to create crisis. They are not honest."

This distrust speaks volumes of Nepal's present predicament, where parties spar over everything from the distribution of ministries to the appointment of ambassadors. "There is no genuine consensus at all," says Rhoderick Chalmers, Nepal expert for the International Crisis Group. Continued discord only strengthens the hand of the weakened King. Though the throne has lost much of its credibility under Gyanendra, many Nepalis still look to the institution as a source of stability and unity. "You can't legislate away the emotional link of the people," says Thapa. Others, including journalist Dixit, fear further squabbling and political anarchy could lead to a more ominous "right-wing backlash ... where royalist elements in the army would step in on the pretext of stability." Further heightening tensions, Prachanda, the Maoist leader, made noises as recently as November about returning the people's war to the jungle if progress toward a republic wasn't made. "Either through [the Maoists] or through the army," warns royalist Thapa, "we are going to see some sort of authoritarian solution."

The End of Kings
The threat of a coup may be exaggerated, but it points to perhaps the single greatest achievement of the Maoist insurgency: the unraveling of a national myth. Nepal came into being through the 1768 military campaign of King Prithvi Narayan Shah and his army drawn from Gurkha tribes in the hills near Kathmandu. Ever since, Nepal's polity has remained largely unchanged: its borders an approximation of the land conquered, its political élites tied to old families close to both the monarchy and the army, and its princely rulers all descended from the same messianic line. Power and legitimacy radiated outward from the palaces of Kathmandu into a highly hierarchical society in the countryside, where feudal mores and caste discrimination still hold sway. Propped up first by the British, keen to have a client buffer to the north of its imperial heart, and later India, this arrangement rarely had to fear outside interference and had remained roughly intact for more than two centuries.

Nepal's monarchy hammered the nail in its own coffin in spectacular fashion in 2001, when Crown Prince Dipendra gunned down 10 members of the royal family, including the much beloved King Birendra, and then allegedly shot himself. The attack, clouded by conflicting reports and conspiracy theories, sent shock waves around the world and plunged Nepal into existential crisis. With a centuries-old dynasty virtually eliminated overnight, in stepped the reigning King's brother, Gyanendra. As the Maoist insurgency raged, Gyanendra declared a state of emergency in 2005, arresting mainstream political leaders and assuming absolute power. But he could not quash the Maoists, whose influence grew apace in rural areas around the country. Rumors swirled depicting Gyanendra as a man given to superstition and mysticism, who would sooner look to the stars or a coterie of tantric priests for counsel than his political advisers. "He wanted control, he wanted to be a heroic savior," says a source close to the court, "but he had few actual ideas, if any."

Gyanendra's power play worked to the advantage of the Maoists. Their urban cadres and activists played a prominent part in the 19 days of mass demonstrations in April 2006 that ended King Gyanendra's absolute rule and led to the reconvening of parliament. The surge of popular goodwill at the time catapulted the guerrillas out of their jungle redoubts and into the international limelight. Prachanda, whose very existence had been in doubt only a few years before, appeared on televisions regionwide, saluting crowds and pressing the flesh. A King had been toppled, a war ended, and change in Nepal looked very much on the way.

The Way Forward
Little has gone according to script since the people-power protests 22 months ago. In November 2006, the Maoists committed to a peace accord with other prominent pro-democracy parties in Nepal and joined the new interim government that would rule until elections for a Constituent Assembly could take place. But the acrimonious squabbling that followed has dispelled many of the hopes raised by the success of the mass demonstrations. "We just felt so proud being Nepali then," says Sanjog Rai, a college student in Kathmandu. "The protests showed us how united we were and that feeling of brotherhood gave us real hope for a better future. Now we're stuck with politicians who have no vision and only care about keeping power."

There is a broad consensus among Nepal's strife-worn people that parliamentary democracy must come sooner rather than later. "A functioning government can't be in a permanent state of transition," says Bojraj Pokhrel, chief of Nepal's Electoral Commission. Now, Pokhrel will have to manage a staff of over 230,000 election workers spread across the mountainous country, some in polling stations miles away from local roads. Highways and bridges were routinely bombed during the civil war, making transportation in a nation with woeful infrastructure difficult at the best of the times. Still, Pokhrel is confident Nepal has the means to carry the elections out. "The people are all hungry for this," he says.

But they'll remain disappointed as long as the interim government's leaders fail to forge any meaningful political unity. "It's a testing time for them," says Acharya, the former ambassador to the U.N. "One wonders if they'll prove their statesmanship." The only indication that they will, most observers drily point out, is that neither the Maoists nor the Congress Party have any better alternative other than sorting out their differences and calming the many fractious forces that might undermine April's polls.

If they don't, the international community must do more to safeguard elections and move the peace process forward. Nepal's giant neighbors, India and China, both backed the monarchy during the civil war, supplying it with weapons and aid. India, which has close ties with virtually every faction in Nepal, eventually shepherded the peace process along, forcing the main political parties to come to terms with the Maoists. China has remained a bit more circumspect, letting India flex its geopolitical muscle while building bridges with the Nepali Maoists it shunned until not long ago and beefing up its hydropower investments along Nepal's glacial rivers. As the budding superpowers expand in influence and ambition, many see Nepal falling into the crosshairs of a new "Great Game" for the 21st century.

Beyond the turmoil and political intrigue looms the very real chance that Nepal might join the region's sorry list of failing states — populated already by Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. Besides forging alliances and staging elections, the country and its politicians need to steel themselves for the thorny task of drafting a constitution that reconciles its feuding factions and enfranchises all its kaleidoscope of ethnic groups. "This is a crisis hundreds of years in the making," says S.D. Muni, a Nepal scholar formerly at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi. "Whole groups have never been in the political structure. You have to in effect create a new Nepal."

Back in Sandhya's Chitwan camp, the commander, named Biwidh, clings to such hope. From a poor, indigenous-minority family, he speaks urgently of peace and of the need for a competitive, multiparty democracy. A slight man with a scarred, weathered face, Biwidh looks much older than his 34 years, and describes his time spent warring in the jungle with primitive rifles and stones in hushed, quick breaths, as if he would rather forget about it. As Nepal lurches from one crisis to another, Biwidh says the soldiers in his camp are in a permanent state of readiness. "If the revolution must be fought again," he sighs, turning his head to the setting sun, "it will be."
— with reporting by Yubaraj Ghimire and Santosh Shah/Kathmandu
Source: Time Magazine, January 31, 2008