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‘Nepal
election a nightmare for India’ says the Economist London
The unexpected
victory for the Maoists (Communist Party of Nepal) in the
April 10 elections in Nepal is going to be a nightmare for
India, writes the Economist London. How true!
Before the
situation in Nepal and the above presciently comment, by
the Economist, is discussed here in detail it is important
that the ‘where’, ‘what’ and ‘when’ of NEPAL, the
land-locked Himalayan, largely mountainous, buffer state
is explored. The kingdom of NEPAL is sandwiched between
China and India with a narrow strip of Indian land – 13
miles wide called the ‘chicken neck’– separating it from
Bangladesh. The erstwhile Kingdom of Sikkim (which became
a part of India under a May 1975 putsch) separates Nepal
from Bhutan. Nepal is a land-locked, rectangle-shaped
country (500 miles long and 125 miles wide) which has an
area of 56, 827 Sq. miles with a population of 28, 901,
790 -81% Hindu, 11% Buddhist, 4% Muslim and 4% others.
Nepal exports mainly carpets, clothing, leather goods,
jute goods, timber, grain, etc., – totaling about $822
million annually. It also exports Gurkha soldiers to the
U.K. & India, labor to Malaysia and the Persian Gulf who
send remittances back to Nepal.
There are just
over 8,500 km of paved roads in Nepal, (including an
all-weather road built in the 1960’s by the Chinese, which
connects Nepal’s capital city, Khatmandu to Lhasa in
Tibet, China. Nepal has a short 37 km long railway line in
the south connecting it to India’s railway system in
Bihar. China and Nepal share a 1,111-kilometer border,
(which has five separate open crossings) demarcated under
the Nepal-China Boundary Treaty of 1961. Astride this
northern border lies Mount Everest, (called Mount
Qomolangma in China and Sagarmatha in Nepal) and at an
altitude of 29,035 feet (8850 m) is the highest mountain
in the world shared by Nepal and China. Both these
countries have enjoyed friendly relations ever since
diplomatic ties were first established on Aug. 1, 1955.
Nepal also has an open 1, 778 kilometer long problematic
border with India. As a result there is the Kalapani
border dispute, over 372 sq. km. of land which has been
encroached by India. In fact India has encroached into
Nepalese territory in 53 places, a total of 589 sq. km.
approximately.
In 1950, Nepal
signed the Indo-Nepal Treaty of Peace and Friendship that
provides for agreement about movement of people between
the two countries and some other aspects of bilateral
relations like bilateral trade and trade transiting Indian
soil etc. Recently Communist Party of Nepal - Maoists -
has been raising questions regarding some provisions of
the 1950 treaty. In accordance with that ‘unequal’ long
standing treaty, Indian and Nepalese citizens may travel
to each others’ countries without a passport or visa.
Nepalese and Indian citizens may work in India and Nepal
without legal restriction. Although Nepal and India
typically have close ties, from time to time Nepal becomes
caught up in the problematic Sino-Indian relationship when
India pulls out accompanying letters to the Indo-Nepal
1950 treaty, which define security relations, whenever
Nepal seeks to improve its relations with China. Tensions
came to a head in the mid-1970s, when Nepal pressed for
substantial amendments in its favor in the trade and
transit treaty and openly criticized India’s 1975
annexation of Sikkim as an Indian state. In 1975 the then
King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev proposed that Nepal be
recognized internationally as a zone of peace; he received
support from China and Pakistan. India rejected the
proposal. Saying that if the king’s proposal did not
contradict the 1950 treaty and was merely an extension of
nonalignment, it was unnecessary; if it was a repudiation
of the special relationship, it represented a possible
threat to India’s security and could not be endorsed. In
1984 Nepal repeated the proposal, but there was no
reaction from India. Nepal continually promoted the
proposal in international forums, with Chinese support;
and by 1990 it had won the support of 112 countries.
Although economic issues were a major factor in the two
countries’ confrontation over the Treaty, Indian
dissatisfaction with Nepal’s 1988 acquisition of Chinese
weaponry played an important role. There after India
imposed an economic blockade on Nepal which was not lifted
until late April 1990 when Nepal backed down.
Since 1990, when
the late King Birendra yielded to pro-democracy protests,
Nepal’s experiment with democracy has been disastrous. The
multi-party parliament produced incompatible coalitions
and inefficient governments. Matters became worse in June
2001 when Nepal’s crown prince massacred much of the royal
family. Gyanendra, the murdered king’s brother, assumed
the throne and Nepal’s Maoist insurgency intensified. When
a ceasefire with the Maoists ended in 2003, Nepalis began
protesting against the monarchy. King Gyanendra responded
by assuming direct rule in February 2005, which led the
Maoists and mainstream political parties to ally together.
A farcical election in February 2006 was followed by mass
demonstrations against King Gyanendra’s regime. The unrest
ended when Nepal’s generals asked the opposition to form a
government. The king restored the parliament, and in
November 2006 the Maoists and the interim government
signed a peace deal. An election to a constituent assembly
was set for April 10th, 2008.
The above
background on Nepal will help the readers appreciate the
presciently comments by the Economist, London, in it’s
report headlined, “Nepal’s Elections - Maoists Take The
Lead-surprising early election results,” that, “an
outright victory (in Nepal) for the Maoists would be a
nightmare for India. Plagued by a Maoist insurgency of its
own, India until recently backed Nepal’s blundering King
Gyanendra, who tried to crush the Maoists in the field.
India forsook the king after he seized power in 2005. And
it played an important part in brokering the peace process
after his withdrawal from power following street protests
the next year. In February, for example, India persuaded
autonomy-seeking southerners (mostly Hindi/Bhojpuri-speaking)
of the Terai plain, not to boycott and derail the election
as they were threatening to do. India said then that the
election was a crucial part of the peace process—no matter
what the result. But it certainly did not predict these
results. NEPAL’S Maoists, who until two years ago were a
vicious rebel party to a decade-long civil war, look
likely to have won a general election. Of 186 seats
declared on Monday April 14th the Maoists had won 103. A
complicated electoral system mixing direct elections with
proportional representation makes the overall complexion
of the impending 601-seat assembly still hard to predict.
But the Maoists may have won an outright majority… How
they would respond to Nepal’s many other problems is hard
to judge. Yet it seems that they are not intent on
wrecking the means of production. Promising a ‘bourgeois
democratic revolution’, Prachanda, the Maoist chief, said
he would dismantle Nepal’s vestiges of feudalism, not
capitalism. How Nepal’s allies, especially India, would
respond to a Maoist-dominated government is almost as
important. Foreign aid accounts for most government
spending on development, including health-care and
education. Moreover India, Nepal’s biggest trading partner
by far, has a stranglehold on its economy. And with an eye
to China, it’s traditional rival for influence in Nepal,
India jealously guards its sway over the country.”
A report in the
Mumbai-based TIMES OF INDIA newspaper reveals that,
“There’s no doubt: there’s collective shock in the Indian
government about the Maoists’ sweep to power in Nepal. Of
course, India is making a virtue of a necessity,
considering it read the tea leaves so desperately wrong.
Sure, so did everybody else but India should have had a
better feel of the Nepali pulse.As South Block (Ministry
of External Affairs) scrambles to make sense of the
election results in the Himalayan state, there is one
dominant thought running through the Indian government at
present - the government in Nepal should be as inclusive
as possible. With the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified
Marxist-Leninist or UML) already deciding to stay out of
the government, South Block will redouble its efforts to
ensure that the Nepali Congress does not make the same
mistake. The Indian government’s view is that as
opposition, the Nepali Congress and UML will merely serve
to make the task of constitution drafting or governance
much more fractious, and intensely politicized, which
would negate the verdict. Apart from drafting a
constitution, the new government’s main task would be to
work on the country’s economic development, which has
taken a backseat as politics has held sway. This is where
India believes it can make the most difference. China will
be India’s natural competitor for the new Nepal
government’s heart and mind. But for the time being,
Beijing’s main interest in the new government is to ensure
the Tibetans are kept firmly under control, certainly
before the Olympics.
The Chennai-based
HINDU newspaper wrote that, even partial results make it
clear that the Maoists will be the single largest party in
Nepal’s newly elected Constituent Assembly (CA). Results
or leads for 200 of the 240 first-past-the-post (FPTP)
seats are available and the Communist Party of Nepal
(Maoist) has won or is ahead in more than 100. The
erstwhile ‘ruling’ parties — the Nepali Congress (NC) and
Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist) — have
been badly mauled and will be lucky to end up with more
than 40 seats each. The newly established Madhesi parties,
especially the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum, have done well
and are likely to bag about 40 seats. The Royalist parties
have been wiped out. For the new arrangement to work
smoothly, all the major political players in Nepal need to
accept the new power balance. Official India, which
erroneously worked on the assumption of a Maoist defeat in
the elections, also needs to accept the reality of Maoist
ascendancy. In practical terms, this means not standing in
the way of the Maoists heading the multi-party coalition
that will rule Nepal until the new constitution is
finalized and fresh elections are held. The Maoists have
won the democratic right to lead now. Their spectacular
victory seals the fate of the monarchy.”
A report in the
Khatmandu-based NEPALNEWS today says that “The Maoists
have won 116 of the 212 constituencies in which the vote
counting has completed till Tuesday morning. Nepali
Congress (NC) is a distant second with 33 seats followed
by Unified Marxist Leninist (UML) at 29 seats.
The Madhesi
Janadhikar Forum (MJF) has won 21 seats while Terai Madhes
Loktantrik Party (TMLP) bagged 7 seats. Nepal Sadbhavana
Party (NSP) led by Rajendra Mahato and Nepal Workers and
Peasants Party (NWPP) have won 2 seats each. An
independent candidate and a People’s Front candidate have
also won the election. Now, the counting needs to be
conducted in 27 constituencies of which in 21
constituencies, re-polling have to be first carried out in
certain polling centers. Of the total 240 constituencies
in the First-Past-The-Post system, the Maoists are very
close to garnering simple majority.”
India’s nightmare,
as predicted by the Economist, may have already begun!
According to a BBC report, dated April 14, 2008,
headlined, ‘India hit by two Maoist attacks,’ Maoist
rebels, in the Indian state of Bihar, (which borders
Nepal) surrounded and attacked Jhajha railway station in
Jamui district, last Sunday, killing five policemen and a
porter, as if their action was synchronized with the
Maoist victory at the polls I n Nepal. India’s Maoist
(read Naxalite) armed rebellion, which is spreading fast
like a prairie fire, has a strong presence in about 22
districts of Bihar as well as in the neighboring state of
Jharkhand. The BBC quoting Analysts, reports that India’s
Maoists operate in 182 districts (actually they operate in
265 districts) in India, mainly in the states of West
Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Madhya
Pradesh, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh thus providing a
land corridor for the Maoists in Nepal and the Naxalites
in each of these states. See map of Indian states at:
The other
nightmare for India will unfold when Nepal’s Maoists, led
by Chairman Parchanda, decides to do what he has promised
to do, to place Nepal at an equal distance from both China
and India thus ending India’s 60-years long hegemony over
the small buffer state of Nepal. Nearly two years ago,
this column carried a presciently headline, on August 30,
2006, which predicted that, “All is not well for India in
Nepal where the shadow of China (and Indian Naxalites)
looms Interesting times ahead as China is extending
Railway line from Lhasa to the Nepal border,” while
reporting that, “The Indian rulers are in a tizzy over an
interview, given to BBC’s Nepali service program, by
Nepal’s powerful Maoist supremo Prachanda, in which he has
said, that the people of Kashmir and India’s North Eastern
states (like Nagaland) should be given the right to
self-determination to resolve the problem.
More than that,
the Indian Naxalites (and their ‘cousins’ the Maoists of
Nepal) believe that they are fighting against the ruthless
and suffocating caste system for the rights of poor
peasants and landless workers. In sharp contrast, the
insecure Indian rulers – an evil nexus of the Brahmin and
the Bania castes - are trying to obtain security by buying
second hand Russian Aircraft Carriers, American Tank
landing ships and Brahmo missiles et al., all, ineffective
against the Naxalites on two legs whose writ rules supreme
in over 265 Districts of India to-date. Interesting times
are coming! |