| |
______________________________________________________________________________
News
Briefs
Nepal
declared federal republic
|


(Afghanistan and
Myanmar in the
map are not members of SAARC)
|
|
Fragmenting
Peace
BY
PRASANTA KUMAR PRADHAN
Research Assistant, Institute for Conflict Management
On
December 10, 2007, while addressing a programme organised by the
Nepal Human Rights Commission in Lalitpur, Prime Minister Girija
Prasad Koirala observed that he envisioned a Nepali society that
embraces everyone, from the common man to the King, making it amply
clear that his party would seek to retain some space within the
system for Nepal’s monarchy. Koirala remarked that, "We have,
to date, advocated a republican setup with a federal system of
governance, but we are yet to discuss what form of republic and
federal structure we want, that would be suitable for our
country."
|
The Prime Minister’s stance was echoed more vocally
by his daughter and a Nepali Congress (NC) Central Committee member,
Sujata Koirala, who stated that, "In any case, our party
favours the institution of monarchy to continue, as most of the
Central Committee members support the cause of the constitutional
monarchy." She added, further, "An individual can do wrong
but the institution as such can’t be penalized… King Gyanendra
and his coterie might be bad but the institution of monarchy cannot
be penalized only because of their past fault… I have always
favoured a constitutional monarchical framework." These
statements have complicated the already fragile political and
security situation of the country.
The
Communist Party of Nepal – Maoist (CPN-Maoist),
on its part, warned that Koirala had till December 15 to sack the
King or be sacked himself. Maoist Chairman Prachanda warned at a
public meeting on December 8 that if the NC failed to sack the King
within a week, the Government would be ‘reshuffled’.
Negotiations, however, continue, and the Maoists are still to act on
their threat at the time of writing.
Throughout
the year 2007, persisting political volatility as well as insurgent
activity continued to augment Nepal’s instability. Though the
number of insurgency-related fatalities has remained low, subversive
activity of the CPN-Maoist continued to grow unchecked across the
country. According to the Institute for conflict Management
database, 95 persons have been killed this year (provisional data
till December 13), including 55 civilians and 40 Maoists, against a
total of 480 fatalities in 2006, which included, 61 civilians, 181
security force (SF) personnel and 238 insurgents. According to the
Kathmandu-based Informal Sector Education Centre (INSEC), 20 people
were killed by the SFs and 22 persons were killed by the Maoist
youth wing, the Young Communist League (YCL) ever since the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) came into effect in November
2006. An INSEC report disclosed that 772 people were abducted by the
YCL over this period, adding that the Maoists were continuing with
their illegal activities and violating the rights of the general
people. It is, nevertheless, the case that the number of fatalities
has declined dramatically since the Cease-fire Code of Conduct was
signed between the Government of Nepal and CPN-Maoist on May 25,
2006.
Fatalities
in Nepal, 2005-2007
|
Year
|
Civilians
|
SFs
|
Maoists
|
Total
|
|
2007*
|
55
|
0
|
40
|
95
|
|
2006
|
61
|
181
|
238
|
480
|
|
2005
|
231
|
310
|
1307
|
1848
|
*
Data till December 14, 2007
Source: Institute for Conflict Management
As
the CPN-Maoist came over-ground to join the mainstream political
process after its agreements with the Government, it revived its
militant youth wing, the YCL in November 2006. The YCL, which was
formed by the CPN–Maoist at some point (there is no definite
information on the year of its creation) during the ‘people’s
war’ as an affiliate to provide support and energy to the
‘revolution’, is presently involved in activities including
intimidation, extortion, looting, abduction attacks on members and
cadres of other political parties. The YCL has reportedly received
extensive training in unarmed combat and cadres openly carry knives,
sticks, iron bars and other improvised weapons and have paraded
themselves around the countryside and the Kathmandu region without
fear or restriction since the CPA. Reports indicate that the YCL
"is a group of highly trained commandos of the Maoists who,
instead of being sent to the cantonments, have been deliberately
kept in the open by the party high command to meet exigencies."
It is also believed that the reactivation of the YCL and the
appointment of top Maoist commanders as its leaders at a time when
the United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) is conducting the
verification of arms and armies of the Maoists is evidently a part
of the grand strategy to keep Maoist cadres outside the scope of
UNMIN scrutiny and to use their energies to dominate the CA
elections.
The
UNMIN has been monitoring the verification of the arms and armies of
the Maoists in each and every cantonment of the PLA. This has
certainly troubled and angered the Maoists, as the UNMIN found large
numbers of child soldiers in the Maoists ‘Army’. As the UNMIN
term is due to end on January 23, 2008, the Government decided to
extend its term by six months. At this point, however, the Maoists
have raised question marks on the UNMIN’s role. Senior Maoist
leader Ram Bahadur Thapa a.k.a. Badal alleged that UNMIN was going
beyond its mandate and behaving like activists and journalists.
Badal also accused the UNMIN of being involved in the process of
dissolving the PLA, instead of working for the merger of two armies
of Nepal.
While
the YCL continues with its intimidation across the country, other
pro-Maoist groups have also pitched in. The Buddhist ethnic group,
Nepal Rashtriya Tamang Mukti Morcha (Tamang National Liberation
Front), is pressurizing the Government by demanding autonomy and a
republic. They have organised strikes and shut downs in the
Kathmandu, Makawanpur, Sindhupalchowk, Kavrepalanchowk, Makawanpur,
Dhading, Nuwakot and Rasuwa Districts. Similarly, another
Maoist-affiliated organisation, the Samyukta Ganatantrik Dalit Mukti
Morcha (United Democratic Dalit Liberation Front), comprising
members of the dalit (lower caste Hindus) community, is
demanding proportional representation for dalits in the
impending election, and a republic.
Earlier,
on January 15, 2007, all Members of the Interim Parliament,
including 83 Maoist representatives, were sworn in, marking the
commencement of a new phase in Nepal’s politics. While in
Parliament, however, the Maoists used various pressure tactics on
the Government to weaken and subdue other parties in the Alliance.
Finally, they quit the Interim Government on September 18, stating
that their twin demands – a proportional representation system to
be adopted for the Constituent Assembly (CA) elections and the
declaration of the country as a Republic by the Interim Parliament
before the CA elections – were non-negotiable. The Maoists quit
the Government as no consensus could emerge on their demands even
after repeated rounds of talks. On October 21, Prime Minister G. P.
Koirala said that the Nepali Congress is ready for a ‘commitment
proposal’ to announce a republic after the Constituent Assembly
election, but is opposed to a fully proportional representation
system as demanded by the Maoists. Koirala also stated that the
Maoist proposal to adopt a fully proportional representation system
would not be accepted by the Nepali Congress under any
circumstances.
The
much-hyped CA polls, which were originally scheduled for June 2007,
and then rescheduled for November 22, were deferred indefinitely
after the Eight Party Alliance [the Seven Party Alliance (SPA) plus
the Maoists] failed to reach any consensus over the two key Maoist
demands. Strongly opposed by the NC, which is the largest party in
the Interim Parliament, the Maoists called for a special session of
Parliament. After prolonged deliberations, the House, through a
majority voice vote, passed the amendment proposal of the Communist
Party of Nepal – Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) which directed
the Government to immediately determine all necessary procedures to
proclaim the country a republic and to take concrete steps in this
regard. The Interim Parliament also decided to adopt a fully
proportional representation system for the CA polls. The
parliamentary voting clearly demonstrated a unity of the Left
parties, with the CPN-UML and the Maoists supporting each others’
proposals. Under this arrangement, the Maoists withdrew their motion
for immediate declaration of a republic and supported the CPN-UML's
proposal for a ‘federal republic’. In return, the CPN-UML
supported the Maoists proposal of a fully proportional electoral
system. However, these motions cannot be implemented without
amending the Interim Constitution by a two-third majority of the
House, which remains impossible without the NC’s support. However,
as the proposals have been approved by the Interim Parliament by a
majority voice vote, Koirala faces a measure of moral pressure to
act quickly on these issues, despite his party’s strong line
against the proposals.
But
without any significant initiative in this direction by the Koirala
Government, Prachanda issued a ‘48-hour ultimatum’ on December
13, stating that the Maoists would start a ‘new movement’ from
December 16 and seek to reshuffle the cabinet if their demand of
abolition of the monarchy was not met. He also repeated his stand
that his party would rejoin the Interim Government only on condition
that his party was given the position of Senior Deputy Prime
minister and that the Home, Defence and Finance Ministries be shared
among the three major parties.
The
emergence of armed groups in the volatile Terai region has
multiplied the woes of the embattled Government, with sporadic
violence and armed activity continuing throughout the year.
Killings, abductions, violence, and disruptive political
demonstrations and strikes continue in the region without any sign
of relief for its beleaguered people. Currently, there are
approximately 20 armed groups operating in the Terai with diverse
agendas. The most prominent among these are: the Madheshi Janadhikar
Forum (MJF,
also known as Madheshi Peoples’ Rights Forum) and the two factions
of the Janatantrik Terai Mukti Morcha (JTMM, Democratic Terai
Liberation Front) led by Jaya Krishna Goit (JTMM-G)
and Nagendra Kumar Paswan a.k.a. Jwala Singh (JTMM-J),
respectively. With well-trained armed militias, these groups are
currently orchestrating unrest in the region, engaging in killings,
abduction, looting and extortion. Other active entities include the
JTMM – Bisfot Singh faction, Madheshi Rashtriya Mukti Morcha (Madheshi
National Liberation Front), Madheshi Mukti (Liberation) Tigers,
Terai Cobra, Terai Baagi (Rebels), Terai Army, Madheshi Virus
Killers Party and the Royal Defence Army.
On
December 4, 2007, the breakaway faction of the Nepal Sadbhawana
Party (NSP) led by Rajendra Mahato unveiled its militant youth wing
called Madhesh Raksha Bahini (Madhesh Security Brigade) at
Birgunj in the Parsa District. The party’s district secretary,
Shiva Patel, said the cadres were trained in self-defence tactics
such as using lathis (batons), judo and karate and claimed
that there were 23,000 such members across the country. On December
7, four parties of in the Terai region, MJF led by Bhagyanath Gupta,
Dalit Janajati Party, Madhesi Loktantrik Morcha (Madheshi Democratic
Party) and Loktantrik Madheshi Morcha (Democratic Madheshi Party),
came together to float the Broader Madheshi National Front (BMNF).
In a joint statement they said that they all believe in the
liberation of the Madheshi people through a federal democratic
republic, proportional representation and autonomous Madhesh region
equipped with the right to self determination.
Though
these groups are present across the Terai region, major incidents
have been reported mainly from eight of the region’s 20 Districts
– Siraha, Dhanusha, Morang, Sarlahi, Bara, Saptari, Mohattari, and
Rautahat. These incidents include the killing and abduction of
civilians, Government employees and also Maoists, the last of which
are regarded as the foremost enemies of the Madheshi movement and
people. According to an INSEC report, 33 persons were killed by the
MJF, JTMM-G killed 18 persons, JTMM-J killed 27 persons and eight
others were killed by other agitating groups in the Terai since
November 2006. The report also claimed that the armed groups seized
properties of more than 279 people in the Terai region.
Gradually,
however, the Terai movement is becoming more political in
orientation, with more and more leaders across party lines coming to
support common issues. On December 10, senior Nepali Congress leader
and Minister for Science, Technology and Environment, Mahantha
Thakur, along with Hridayesh Tripathi of the Nepal Sadbhavana Party
(Anandi Devi), Mahendra Prasad Yadav of the CPN-UML and Ram Chandra
Raya of the Rastriya Prajatantra Party, tendered their resignations
from Parliament. Other Madheshi leaders quit their respective
parties, including Sarbendra Nath Sukla of the Rastriya Janatantrik
Party, Anish Ansari, Ram Chandra Kushbaha and Brishesh Chandra Lal
of the NC and Shri Krishna Yadav, chairman of the Madhesi Rastriya
Manch, which is affiliated to the CPN-UML.
Discontented
with the Government, many marginalized groups and ethnicities are
demanding their wider spaces in governance, bringing the Government
under intense pressure from various indigenous communities. Their
major demands include a federal restructuring of the state based on
ethnic lines, the ‘right to self determination’ and a
proportional representation-based electoral system. All the major
groups representing the indigenous communities have united for a
common struggle on these demands. Groups like the Nepal Federation
of Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN), Nepal Federation of Indigenous
Nationalities Students, Indigenous Nationalities Joint Struggle
Committee, National Indigenous Nationalities Women’s Federation
and Nepal Indigenous Nationalities Youth Association have joined
hands to pressurise the Government, resorting to strikes and
agitations across the country. They have also engaged in occasional
violence, including the destruction of public property during
demonstrations. The leader of the Government talks’ team, Ram
Chandra Poudel, expressed the Government’s inability to entertain
all such demands by ethnic groups, stating: "There are over 100
ethnic groups in the country and if all of them are to be
represented, the Constituent Assembly will be more of an ethnic
assembly and less of a political assembly."
Similarly,
the two other agitating ethnic groups, the Limbuwans and Khumbuwans,
have been organising strikes in the eastern Districts, demanding an
autonomous federal state based on ethnicity. Their avowed goal is
the creation of autonomous regions along the boundaries of the
traditional areas of their ethnic groups. They have resorted to
sporadic violence and organized strikes in many Districts where
these communities are in a majority. The Sanghiya Limbuwan
Rajyaparisad [Federal Limbuwan State Council (FLSC)] has demanded
that nine Districts lying east of the Arun River – Panchthar,
Taplejung, Terhathum, Sankhusabha, Ilam, Jhapa, Dhankuta, Sunsari
and Morang – be declared the Limbuwan State. Similarly, the
Khumbuwan Rastriya Morcha (Khumbuwan National Front) is demanding a
‘Khumbuwan State’ comprising seven Districts – Solukhumbu,
Okhaldhunga, Udayapur, Bhojpur, Khotang, Siraha and Saptari. In
response to a talks offer by the Government on August 9, both these
outfits have decided to suspend their agitation and have also formed
negotiating teams to hold a dialogue.
Meanwhile,
on December 4, the Limbuwan State Council claimed that it had given
‘military training’ to 6,000 cadres. According to reports, the
organisation has provided a basic one month training in the jungles
in the eastern hilly Districts. The Jhapa District secretary of the
Council, Dhanraj Subba, said they were preparing to give another
phase of training soon. Cadres aged between 18 and 40 years have
been trained in weapons’ use, and other guerrilla tactics.
Chure
Bhawar Ekta Samaj–Nepal (CBES-N, Chure Bhawar Unity Society) is
another group which has been demanding security and protection of
the rights of the people of hill origin living in the Terai region,
seeking autonomous status for the Chure-Bhawar region. This group is
a direct response to the activities of the Terai armed groups and
represents the interests of the Tamang, Magar and some other
hill-ethnic groups. They demand that the Government ban the Terai
armed groups that are killing pahades in the Terai, and
declare as martyrs the CBES-N cadres who are killed.
Similarly,
the dalits are calling for the fulfillment of their demands,
which includes 20 percent reservation for people from their
community in the Constituent Assembly, scholarships and free
education for dalit students. An association of dalit women
– Dalit Women for Ensuring Proportional Participation of Dalit
Women in Constituent Assembly and New State Structure – issued a
15-point charter of Nepali Dalit Women in Building New Nepal-2007 on
November 30 and, among other things, called for securing 13 per cent
seats for Dalit women in the Constituent Assembly election,
providing 20 per cent reservation to Dalit women in every
level of the state in the overall women’s reservation and 50 per
cent in reservations made for Dalit community, and ensuring
proportional representation in the political parties from the
decision-making level down to the grassroots level. The President of
the Association, Durga Sob, warned that the Dalit women would
launch a strong movement if the state did not take their demands
seriously.
There
has been little significant change in terms of patterns of
governance, with the interim Government constantly under threat from
the Maoists and pressurised by other groups. With the Government
simply unable to put its house in order, civil administration has
been seriously undermined as the Maoists frequently attacked and
closed the offices of the District Development Committees and also
attacked the restored Police posts throughout the country (the posts
had been closed down during the peoples’ war phase). Similarly,
there were reports of the Maoists running their own kangaroo courts
to ‘resolve’ civil disputes, undermining the country’s
judicial system. The weakness of the state in this regard peaked
when armed groups in the Terai region attacked the Village
Development Committee (VDC) secretaries drawn from the hill region.
VDC secretaries across the Terai resigned en masse in protest
against the inability of the Government to provide security. In
response, the Government has now deployed some Special Task Forces
in Terai Districts.
According
to Dharma Adhikari, a senior journalist, the Government's efforts in
"addressing new grievances, curbing violence and listening to
new voices of dissent can, at best, be described as haphazard and
ill-equipped. Dialogue with the new rebels is hindered by the fact
that these groups don't have a clear leadership or a common
political agenda, just like in the national political scene."
In
retrospect, the peace process is hinged on several complex realities
and most of which are not amenable to solution. Nepal is going
through a period of unstable transition. Many issues remain
unresolved among the major parties since the postponement of the CA
elections. Many groups want their space in the new arrangement and
are exerting pressure on the Government and have not hesitated to
even resort to violence to push their demands. While the Maoists
will not engage in a good-faith process to ensure long-term peace,
the Government remains unable to contain or tackle the insurgents,
and fears that the rebels may revert to the insurgency at any stage.
Nepal is clearly on the edge.
[Source:
South Asian Intelligence Review]
Nepal
declared federal republic
DHAKA: The Parliament
today passed the third amendment bill in the Interim Constitution by an
overwhelming majority, declaring Nepal a federal democratic republic,
subject to endorsement by the first meeting of the Constituent Assembly.
Speaker Subash Nemwang authenticated the Bill soon after the parliament
endorsed the same to make it a law.
[Read
More...]
News
Briefs
Parliament
amends Interim Constitution to make Nepal a Federal Democratic
Republic: On December 28,
2007, with the passage of the Third Constitution Amendment Bill by
the Parliament, Nepal turned into a Federal Democratic Republic. Out
of 273 members of Parliament, 270 voted in favour of the Amendment
Bill that set a mid-April 2008 timeline for Constituent Assembly
(CA) elections. As per the Amendment, the Prime Minister will bear
all the responsibilities of the head of the state until the CA
elections. A simple majority of the CA will implement the Federal
Democratic Republican order. Nepal
News, December 29, 2007.
Maoists
to rejoin Government following the signing of 22-point agreement: The
Seven Party Alliance (SPA), following a six hour-long negotiation in
the capital Kathmandu, signed a 22-point deal on December 23, 2007,
agreeing to declare the country a federal democratic republic
through the Parliament, subject to implementation by the first
meeting of an elected Constituent Assembly (CA). The Nepali Congress
(NC) leader Mahesh Acharya also said that the Maoists will rejoin
the Government, following the agreement. The 22-point deal provides
for 60-40 allocation for proportional and direct election – of 601
total seats in the CA, 335 has been set aside for proportional
representation, 240 for direct election and 26 will be nominated by
the Cabinet. The negotiating parties also agreed to allow the
Government to decide on the date for the CA election. .Nepal
News, December 24, 2007.
LTTE
chief injured in air attack: The
LTTE chief, Velupillai Prabhakaran, was wounded in an air strike on
November 28, 2007 by security forces shortly after his annual policy
broadcast, The Nation reported on December 16. The report
stated that Prabhakaran was wounded in an underground bunker in the
northern District of Kilinochchi. "A section of the bunker had
crumbled and some falling debris had struck the LTTE leader,"
the newspaper said, quoting sources in the LTTE-held territory. The
paper added that Prabhakaran, who delivered his annual policy
statement a day earlier, was treated at an underground medical unit
and recovered fully from "minor" injuries. There has been
no reaction so far to the report either from the LTTE or Sri Lankan
defence authorities.
AFP, December 10, 2007.
[Source:
South Asian Intelligence Review]

|