Tritiopokhkho

September 20, 2008

Koshi River’s Fury, misery in Nepal and India

Filed under: news, perspective — Tags: , , , , , — ujaan @ 9:41 pm

Dear friends:

You have heard it all; maybe, many times over.
The mighty Koshi river, flowing from the
Himalayan ranges of Nepal and flowing into the
plains of Northern Bihar until it merges with the
Ganges, has burst its man-made barricades and
embankments, and has turned vast areas of Nepal
and India into an ocean of massive misery.
Millions of people turned homeless; a countless
dead, and the suffering continues unabated.

A vast number of well-informed people, including
those who know about rivers and dams, have
pointed out that what we are witnessing is not
really a natural disaster, but fundamentally a
tragedy which is created by the callous,
irresponsible, government of Bihar. It is, once
more, a MAN-MADE tragedy.

We send you some of these reports – for you to go
through and make your own assessment. The first
one, by Analytical Monthly Review, is
particularly useful to get a comprehensive view
of the Koshi River project.

Although the government at various levels have
taken up the job of helping the millions of flood
victims, there is a lot that is needed. We send
you below two links for channeling your material
support, one for Nepal, and the other for India.

And, finally, also appended below is field report
from Medha Patkar on behalf of the National
Alliance for People’s Movements.

Thank you for your time and your support.

hari sharma
for SANSAD

The Making of the 2008 Koshi Disaster
by Analytical Monthly Review

Analytical Monthly Review, published in Kharagpur, West Bengal, India, is a sister edition of Monthly Review.  Its September 2008 issue features the following editorial. — Ed.

We know that the immediate future holds the certainty of severe climate change, and an ever increasing strain on not only the much publicised issue of reserves of fossil fuels but also on the basic vital environmental resource of fresh water.  Nowhere in the world is the margin so slight between the daily life of tens of crores and mass disaster as in the plains and deltas of the Ganges and Brahmaputra.  A storm or a draught, excessive or inadequate rainfall, will have a “natural” cause, but the ensuing disaster — and even more the response — is the product of social practices and historical events.  A clear instance is the flooding of the River Koshi, and the resulting massive disaster over half of Bihar and the Sunsari district of Nepal.  Parts of Assam and Orissa, as well as much of West Bengal and the nation of Bangladesh, also face flooding in almost every monsoon.  Though there may be reasons for events that depend on the unique geography of a sub-region, the common environment and social history entail a shared danger, and require a shared response if ever more terrible disasters are not to overwhelm the region — however remote the prospect of rational social action may appear at the moment.  But first the myth must be demolished that immediately declares the climate event a natural calamity, for which the rulers are not responsible and about which nothing can be done except some temporary relief.

The Koshi River is notorious for its unstable dynamic character, and for its frequent floods.  The river drains the southern face of the Himalaya through the entire eastern third of Nepal, from the Nepal border with Sikkim and the Kanchenjunga massif west to the regions north of the Kathmandu valley.  The Koshi enters Bihar and merges into Ganges.  The steady gradual erosion of the relatively “young” Himal mountain chain occurs throughout the immense fan-shaped drainage basin, and the river Koshi carries a part of this load as sediment.  This sediment is deposited every year in the Nepali Terai and Bihar where the river slows down after racing through the mountain valleys.  As silt accumulates the previous route of the river is blocked, floods result, and the river finds new channels to meet the Ganges.  In historical time the river has moved over great distances; in the last 250 years the Koshi has shifted over a distance of 112 kms from Purnea in the east to Saharsa in the west.  The question of whether or not to try to capture the river within embankments so as to check the shift as well as to control flood became a subject of discussion long before Independence.  It was well understood early in the 20th century that the existence of embankments often increased the adverse effect of floods.  Absent embankments floods were frequent but not severe, the land benefited from the sediment deposited, and housing could be constructed on slightly higher ground (or even on stilts) so as to remain habitable in all but the most severe floods.  The 1937 Bihar Flood Conference centered on the “Embankments versus No embankments” debate.

Two characteristics of the new Indian governing class after Independence set the course that resulted in the Koshi disaster of 2008: the illusory pursuit of development without social revolution by means of gigantic technological projects (such as massive dams), and the imposition of (sub)imperialist control over the Himalayan nations of Nepal, Sikkim, and Bhutan.   In 1950 an ambitious multipurpose project was prepared to moderate floods, generate hydropower, to irrigate land in both India and Nepal, and provide navigation facilities in a reservoir and the river downstream.  The project envisioned that the land to be flooded and the barrages to be built would all be on the Nepal side of the border.  Obtaining agreement from Nepal was obviously a problem, but in 1954 the Nepal government of M.P. Koirala, generally agreed to be the most subservient government to India in the second half of the 20th century, was compelled to sign the Koshi agreement.  The Indians obtained “extraterritorial” rights within Nepal.

The barrage building engineering knowledge was wholly based on rivers of Europe and North America not subject to extensive silting.  And the project was inaugurated in March 1955 by the President of India, who had himself expressed the view in 1937 Bihar Flood Conference that the silt brought down by a river descending from the Himalayan range would be on a scale different from anything experienced elsewhere.  The Koshi was barraged at Bhimnagar on the Nepal-India border, and management entrusted explicitly and exclusively to the Government of Bihar.  Long levees were built on both sides upstream of the barrage to guide the water to the barrage, there to feed two large irrigation canals.  Downstream, another 125 km of embankments were constructed to the south to safeguard eastern Bihar from floods.  For 50 years the Koshi has deposited its silt, which previously had been deposited over a wide region, on its bed between the confining embankments.  As the bed was raised, the embankments were raised as well.  And by a gradual but inexorable process, the Koshi came to flow on what was now a plateau up to five metres higher than the surrounding plains of Terai and Bihar.

As a result of these measures, 386 villages spread across the four districts of Saharsa, Supaul, Madhubani, and Darbhanga, and over eight lakhs of cultivators were trapped within the embankments of the Koshi, whose waters pass over these villages every year at the end of the monsoon.  This is a land of utter misery, lacking electricity, roads, hospitals, cinema house, bank, block, or any other government office.  And outside the embankments the flood control measures have been a total failure.  Eklavya Prasad of Megh Pyne Abhiyan, a recognized expert, has estimated that the flood-prone area of Bihar has tripled since the construction of the Koshi barrage.  The record of the Government of Bihar in maintaining the embankments has been one of scandalous corruption and failure.  Embankments were breached in Dalwa (Nepal) in 1963, Jamalpur (Darbhanga) in 1968, Bhatania (Supaul) in 1971, Bahuarwa (Saharsa) in 1980, Hempur (Saharsa) in 1984, and Joginia (Nepal) in 1991.  For the Bihari politicians the resulting floods were a welcome opportunity for theft and extortion.

On August 18, 2008, and at a time of relatively moderate flow of the Koshi, the embankment was breached in Western Kusaha Panchayat in Nepal.  The Government of Bihar failed to respond, and this time the damage became in all probability irreversible.  The Koshi spilled out of the plateau it had been permitted to build and immediately inundated four Panchayats of Sunsari district in Nepal, with a population of some 35,000.  The river now spread out to the east through Bihar, seeking its old channels on its way to the Ganges.  Blocked on the west from its bed by its towering embankments, and from a direct route to the south by raised roadways, the river created an inland sea.  The Koshi did not break through to the Ganges until well into September.  By this time official sources acknowledged that 35 lakh people have been flooded out, and the true figure is surely far higher.  The response of the Bihar and Union governments has been worse than inadequate, verging on the criminal.  Deaths number in the thousands, and continue in the improvised camps where water and food are scarce, and disease flourishes.  As you can see, neither the flood nor the response were a “natural calamity” but one squarely the result of the acts and omissions of the rulers of India and Bihar over the last fifty years, continuing to this very moment.

In this stench of death and failure of the Indian post-Independence regime, came the first hint of a better future.  Nepal Prime Minister Prachanda said after a visit to Sunsari, one of his first tasks as PM, that the Indo-Nepal Treaty of 1954 was“a historical blunder.”  Indian promises to Nepal in the 1954 Koshi agreement (and its subsequent amendments) of benefits have without exception turned out to be lies.  The irrigated land lies (today submerged) within India, “concessional” electric power is charged for at high rates, payment for Nepali lands submerged or leased has not been made after many decades,  promised roads were not built by India, and maintenance of the embankments — and the embankments themselves — collapsed.  See SB Pun, “Kosi River: From ‘Sorrow of Bihar’ to ‘Sorrow of Nepal?’” Spotlight, Sept 5, 2008.

It is not only the embankments that have been breached, the 1954 Koshi agreement — an unequal treaty if ever there were one — has been breached as well.  Under international law it is now no more than a scrap of paper.  There is no hope for a rational solution to the dramatic challenges of the ecological water crisis from the criminal gang of bourgeois Bihari politicians, from deranged giant dam proponents, from Chidambaram&Co, from the “cross-fire” murdering generals of Bangladesh, or from the gentle hands of the Sangh Parivar.  But Nepal is a necessary participant in any water plan; that is where the rivers commence.  When Prachanda sits down to renegotiate the water treaties he will be representing not only Nepal, but the hopes of all in the region for a better future.  Yet ultimately if we are successfully to manage the looming environmental water disaster it shall require a radical change in the balance of class forces in society in both India and Bangladesh; we can hope that Nepal will light the path.

August 25, 2008

Nepal Updates: Lingering Bickerings over Cabinet Formation and Radical Noise

Filed under: news — Tags: — ujaan @ 12:40 pm

I/III.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug23/news03.php

Nationalism, republic and socio-economic change;
three mantras of new govt: PM Dahal

In his first message to the countrymen as the prime
minister, Pushpa Kamal Dahal has laid heavy emphasis
on promotion and consolidation of nationalism,
republic and socio-economic change.
Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’. (File
photo)
Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’. (File
photo)

“Certainly, there are high expectations from the
public from the new government. We will fulfill their
aspirations by working in objective and planned
manner. For which, we have outlined a number of
national priority issues,” he said.

“First and foremost is the protection of national
sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity.
If Nepal does not exist, then there is no meaning for
anything else including the republic. But we have to
strengthen the national unity based on full equality
among people from Himal, Pahad, Terai and Madhes,” he
said.

PM Dahal, who is also the chairman of the CPN-Maoists,
said that the new government will strengthen
democracy.

“I want to extend full commitment towards modern
democratic principles like multi party competition,
period elections, rule of law….” he said, adding that
the democracy now must become ‘a democracy of people
and not become only a formal system.’

“Our attention will be concentrated on addressing
socio-economic issues such as poverty, unemployment
and so on. We will work to bring about modern
industrial economy for which
private-public-partnership model will be followed,” he
said.

PM Dahal said the new government will encourage
foreign investments in priority sectors including
‘agriculture, tourism, water resources and
infrastructure.’

“The industrial peace will be maintained by improving
relations between labour and employers,” he said,
adding that the government will address the problem of
high market prices, which is affecting the ordinary
people.

“Taking the peace process to logical conclusion and
writing constitution on time is the main task of this
government,” he said.

Appeal to Army

“This government also has huge challenges. We need the
support and cooperation from army, police,
administration, international community and general
public to meet the challenges,” he said.

The PM also appealed to security organs for their
support.

“I appeal to Nepali Army, Armed Police Force, Nepal
Police, National Investigation Department to forget
the bitterness of the past and extend their support
for national unity. There will be no prejudices from
our side,” he said.

In the past one decade since 1996, PM Dahal’s party
had waged armed rebellion against the state, with his
party’s armed combatants directly pitted against state
security bodies resulting in the deaths of around
15,000 people.

The PM also asked for support from Maoists’ People’s
Liberation Army, families of martyrs and promised them
of full cooperation.

PM Dahal has also urged the international community,
particularly the neighbouring countries, to provide
‘moral and physical’ support during the ‘historic
transition’ of Nepal.

“We will follow the Panchasheel in building our
relations with all the countries including our
neighbours,” he said. nepalnews.com sd Aug 23 08

II.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug22/news10.php

We will not join govt if UML not given second
position, says Poudel

A senior leader of Unified Marxist Leninist (UML) has
said that his party will not join the government until
and unless the Maoists agree to provide second
position in the cabinet to them.

Bishnu Poudel, senior UML leader, told journalists
that his party cannot join the government in the
current situation.

“Frankly speaking, the Maoists have tried to put their
minister Dr. Baburam Bhattarai in second position in
the cabinet after Prime Minister. This is not
acceptable to us,” said Poudel.

“If the Maoists do not agree to our demand, we will
not join the government. It is as simple as that,” he
said.

He accused the Maoists of trying to breach the
precedents and traditions in trying to provide second
position in terms of seniority to a Finance Minister
instead of Home Minister.

Earlier, the UML had nominated its senior leader
Bamdev Gautam to lead the party in the cabinet by
assigning him Home Ministry along with deputy prime
ministership. nepalnews.com sd Aug 22 08

III.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug22/news09.php

Current model of democratic republic will give no
relief to people: Bijukchhe

President of the Nepal Workers and Peasant Party
(NWPP) Narayan Man Bijukche has said that the
democratic republic modeled by the big parties would
not give any relief to the poor Nepalis.
Chairman of Nepal Workers and Peasant Party, Narayan
Man Bijukchhe (center) in a rally prior to the
inaugural of the 5th general convention of his party
at Ratna Park in Kathmandu, Friday, Aug 22 08.
nepalnews.com/rh
Chairman of Nepal Workers and Peasant Party, Narayan
Man…

Addressing the inaugural function of the party’s fifth
national convention in the capital Friday, Bijukchhe
further said the federalism proposed in the interim
constitution would disintegrate Nepal instead of
making it stronger.

He accused the bigger parties of applying the model
prepared by foreigners, which he said was to meet
their vested interests. He also challenged the UML,
Maoists and other communist groups to begin socialist
reforms in the country at a time when the constituent
assembly has two-third communist majority.

Citing the recent disaster brought about by the
bursting of dam in Sapta Koshi, Bijukchhe predicted
such incidents would recur in future as well.
nepalnews.com ia Aug 22 08

August 24, 2008

The Nepali Revolution Moves On

Filed under: perspective — Tags: — ujaan @ 1:25 pm

Source:- http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/templer210808.html

by Bill Templer

In a historic vote on 15 August 2008 in Kathmandu,  Pushpa Kamal Dahal (aka Prachanda), chairman of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M), was elected first Prime Minister of the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, where now a “Maoist leads from the top of the world.” Prachanda garnered 80% of the votes cast in the Constituent Assembly.  This turn came on the heels of the surprise election of Ram Baran Yadav of the Congress Party as new President of the Republic on 22 July, a move then regarded as a momentary serious blow to the CPN-M.

In elections on 10 April 2008, the CPN-M gained a clear popular mandate (40% of all elected delegates to the Constituent Assembly) after a decade-long armed struggle by the CPN-M against the recently deposed monarchy.  As Shyam Shrestha stressed after the elections: “The Nepali people are rising, their level of arousal is amazing.  They are more ahead in consciousness than the leadership of the political parties.  The feudal class will try to resist change, but the CA composition and the level of awareness of the people is very high, they cannot withstand this pressure.”

With Prachanda now at the helm of state, the CPN-M is expected to gain ministerial control of a number of key ministries, as the CPN-M and its movement are given a chance to prove themselves: “to show they are serious about the social transformations in whose name they went to war.  They have a very strong presence in the villages, and many now long for them to be able to build on the starts they have made at eroding caste and gender discrimination.  They also promise a more equitable system of land ownership.”

Yet Prachanda and his party, even after the landslide electoral victory and now a democratically chosen Prime Minister, still rank high on Washington’s Terrorist Exclusion list.  The DoS and the US Embassy in Kathmandu are juggling various definitions of ‘terrorism’ which they can try to apply to the CPN-M.  U.S. Ambassador Nancy Powell is cautious in a recent interview in expressing how Washington really views the transformation in Nepal and underscores neoliberal concerns for promoting “the private sector, the free market and foreign direct investment” in the country: “We strongly hope that the new government will recognise that the private sector is by far the most powerful engine for economic growth.”  Roshan Kissoon stresses: “When groups on the ‘terrorist’ list start winning elections, another curious thing takes place.  The very term’ terrorist’ becomes inverted, its utter falsity is seen through, and a kind of moral collapse of the US and what it represents take place.  There is a kind of moral reversal.”

It’s really important for progressives everywhere to better grasp the significance of what is happening in Nepal.  Reportage on these pretty momentous developments is generally eclipsed in both the corporate and independent media, including much of the socialist press.  As Gary Leupp commented last April, “It ought to be the ballot heard ’round the world.  It ought to be front page news.”  But it hasn’t been.  You can read The Red Star, the English bi-weekly of the CPN-M, for firsthand reporting and views.  A broad spectrum of local opinion on the Revolution and the challenges ahead in Nepal is reflected on a unique blog, well worth exploring.

The CPN-M is a major party within the Coordination Committee of the Maoist Parties and Organisations of South Asia (CCOMPOSA), made up of parties from Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, and the Communist Party of Iran (ML-M).  CCOMPOSA also needs to be better known outside the region, however we may critique particular positions or tactics.  Its Declaration was adopted in August 2002 and can help us to better understand the orientation of revolutionary socialists in South (and West) Asia who see themselves as part of a Maoist movement.

In Europe, the (n)PCI (nuovo Partito Comunista Italiano) in Italy, founded in Oct. 2004, has been especially outspoken in its support for the people’s struggle in Nepal.  Its Founding Declaration sets out a new vision for revolutionary socialist reconstruction and mass mobilization in Italy and beyond.  An article “The First Great Victory of the International Communist Movement in the 21st Century,” published in Italian in the party paper La Voce (1 July 2008), stresses the historic importance of what is happening in Nepal.  The Party of the Committees to Support Resistance — for Communism (CARC) in Italy, closely allied since 2005 with the (n)PCI, issued an article on the Nepali Revolution in the current edition of The Red Star, drawing on the earlier article in La Voce. It is reprinted below, and raises important points for the broader international workers’ struggle.

The article notes the strong support for the Nepali revolutionary upsurge inside the International League of People’s Struggle.  The ILPS, formed in 2001, is an umbrella organization of many NGOs.  It recently mobilized activists to assist Dave Pugh in connection with his detention in India for his fact-finding work on the anti-displacement movement.  Jose Maria Sison, ILPS chairperson, issued a “Letter of congratulations to Comrade Prachanda on his election as Prime Minister.” Few socialist parties or organizations have done so.

The Nepali Revolution deserves international solidarity.  It can be a source of direct inspiration for people’s resistance hands-on along the southern face of the Himalaya and well beyond.  In the region, it is feasible that “given the extreme and intensifying contradictions in Indian society, a real revolutionary regime in Nepal will have immediate and deep reverberations throughout India, especially the north and northeast.  Furthermore, although it has no common border with Bangladesh, Nepal is only a few dozen kilometers from that country, most of whose 150 million people live in conditions of great hardship.”  Writing in The Red Star, Kissoon is apprehensive but confident: “we have seen how a coup was engineered to stop Hamas becoming the government of Palestine.  There is every reason to believe that the US is trying to plan something similar in Nepal. [. . .]  Here, the CPN Maoist has planned accordingly, and prepared for any necessity.”  The gains now being achieved and on the pathway forward need to be protected.

I worked many years in Nepal, but I and my students then never thought we would see the day of a Federal Democratic Republic dawning on Sagarmatha (Mt. Everest), now a reality.  Roshan Kissoon, who taught English and much else to men and women of the People’s Liberation Army in the countryside, and who knows the people’s movement at the grassroots, puts it well: “For the masses of people in Nepal, the poor and the oppressed, the destitute and the landless, history is only just beginning.”

August 3, 2008

Nepal Updates: 4th August 2008

Filed under: news — Tags: , — ujaan @ 7:01 pm

I.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug03/news06.php

Parties busy in parleys as race to form govt
increases

The Maoists are keeping themselves busy in parleys
with other parties, Sunday, as the deadline for
responding to the president’s call to form government
draws closer.

After the president, on Tuesday, called on the Maoists
to form a government within a week, the latter have
stepped up efforts to forge consensus with other
parties.

A day after they presented their Common Minimum
Programme (CMP) to other parties, the Maoists are
holding talks with the Unified Marxist Leninist (UML)
at the latter’s central office in Balkhu on Sunday
morning.

Maoist leaders Prachanda, Dr. Baburam Bhattarai, Ram
Bahadur Thapa Badal and Mohan Baidya are holding talks
with UML leader Jhal Nath Khanal, Iswor Pokharel,
among others.

According to Bhim Rawal, UML leader, the two parties
will discuss on ways to form government of consensus.

The Maoists will also hold talks with Nepali Congress
(NC) while the NC and UML will hold separate
consultation to discuss the CMP. nepalnews.com sd Aug
03 08

II.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug03/news01.php

Victims of Maoist atrocities gather in capital for
‘decisive movement’

Victims of Maoist atrocities from 32 districts have
gathered in the capital for what they call “decisive
movement” to fulfill their demands.

Living a life of a displaced in district headquarters,
in other cities and towns of the country and some even
in India after being forced out of their homes, these
people have now gathered in the capital, Kantipur
Daily reported.

“Our movement would be decisive now. We won’t waste
our time in rallies and demonstrations,” Bhoj Raj
Timalsena, central coordinator of Maoist Victims
Struggle Committee, told the Daily.

Majority of these victims are those whose properties
have been seized or who have been driven away from
their villages after being accused of acting as an
informer or not helping the party. Profession wise
they are farmers, teachers, students, daily wage
laborers and VDC level political activists.

The Maoist victims have demanded that their 15-point
demand be met and which include arranging for a
respectful return of the displaced to their homes,
making public the condition of those forcibly
disappeared by the Maoists, return of seized
properties, compensation for the family of those
killed by the Maoists, among others.

The victims, who came from various districts on
chartered buses along with their families, said that
they would start their movement in a day or two. The
coordinator of the struggle committee said that the
movement they are waging this time would be different
from the past ones.

“Our movement would bring the government to its knees
this time. We won’t budge an inch until all our
problems are solved,” the committee’s Rolpa
coordinator Iman Singh Giri told the paper.
nepalnews.com Aug 03 08

August 2, 2008

Nepal Updates: Tussle over Government Formation

Filed under: news — Tags: , , , — ujaan @ 8:02 am

UPDATES ON NEPAL

http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug01/news08.php

Maoists decide to form govt

The two-day central committee meeting of CPN (Maoist)
concluded Friday deciding to take the leadership of
the new government under three ‘conditions’.

After the conclusion of the meeting, party
spokesperson Krishna Bahadur Mahara told reporters
that the party would make efforts to form a government
of national consensus. However, the party has kept
open the alternative of a majority government by
making alliance with a few parties, if a consensus
government failed to take shape.

Mahara also said his party was ready to take the
leadership of new government even if it is a minority
government but on the condition that other parties
make commitment not to bring on-confidence motion
against the government until the new constitution is
drafted. The party has also stressed the need to end
the current alliance of NC, UML and MJF.

If the conditions are not met, the party will remain
in the opposition, he said.

Meanwhile, the Maoist leaders have admitted their
mistake for eroding relations with CPN (UML) during
the recent presidential election, and have now
expressed commitment not to repeat the errors in
future.

The party had called its central committee meeting
after coming under pressure from all sides to take the
leadership of the next government.

The party has discussed the common minimum programme
for a consensus government to be tabled before the
meeting of 25 parties, which is likely on Saturday or
Sunday. Mahara said the draft of the CMP, which will
incorporate the suggestions from the central committee
members, would be ready by the evening. nepalnews.com
ia Aug 01 08

II.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug01/news10.php

CPN (ML) for a communist government

As the Maoists make more efforts to take leadership of
the new government, another communist party, CPN (ML),
has asked the Maoist leaders to hold talks with other
fringe communist groups on the issue.

Stressing the need of communist unity for formation of
new government, the meeting of the politburo members
of party held on Friday urged the Maoist leaders to
make sincere efforts for bringing all communist groups
together in the government, if Nepali Congress and
other rightists refuse joining it.

The party asked the Maoists to hold talks with eight
communist parties represented in the constituent
assembly to include them in the new government.

The party has also demanded for immediate end of the
prevailing black market of petroleum products causing
shortage purposely to panic consumers.

Further the party has drawn the attention of the
government regarding the growing food crisis in
western districts. nepalnews.com ia Aug 01 08

III.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug01/news07.php

NC leaders propose govt without Maoists

At a time when the central committee of CPN (Maoist)
is busy discussing ways to win support from other
parties for a Maoist-led government, Nepali Congress
has made a proposal to CPN (UML) for formation of new
government without involving the Maoists.

During a meeting between the leaders of two parties
held Friday morning, NC leaders proposed to form a
government of NC-UML-Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF)
alliance including few other fringe parties.

UML leader Bharat Mohan Adhikari told journalists
after the meeting that his party stressed on formation
of an all party government, without excluding Maoist.

NC leaders also said that the NC-UML-MJF alliance
should remain intact as the Maoists have ‘failed’ to
abide by the past agreements.

The Maoist central committee meeting that started on
Thursday has been discussing the strategies for the
new government, power sharing and the party’s role
while leading the government after the President
formally invited the party to form the government.
nepalnews.com ia Aug 01 08

IV.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug01/news13.php

UML keenly watching Maoist efforts to form govt, says
Khanal

The general secretary of the Unified Marxist Leninist
(UML) Jhalnath Khanal has said that his party is
keenly watching the Maoist efforts to form the
government.
Jhalnath Khanal (File Photo)
Jhalnath Khanal (File Photo)

Speaking at a programme organised by Tulsilal Smriti
Pratisthan, Friday, Khanal said that being the largest
party, the Maoists ought to finalise composition of
government within a week as urged by the president.

He also warned that in case the Maoist fail to forge
consensus government, his party will join hands with
Nepali Congress (NC) to form a majority government.

The NC, UML and Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF) had
earlier forged an alliance to elect their candidates
as president, CA chairman and vice president,
respectively.

His remarks have come on the same day when the
Maoists’ central committee has decided to form the
government under its leadership. nepalnews.com Aug 01
08

V.
http://www.nepalnews.com/archive/2008/aug/aug01/news09.php

New constitution not even in 6 years if present
situation persists: RPP chairman Rana

Rastriya Prajatantra Party (RPP) chairman Pashupati
Shumshere Rana said Friday that because of the
inter-party wrangling, the country is mired in
uncertainty and turmoil and warned that if the
situation persists, then the Constitution Assembly
would not be able to draft a new constitution even in
6 years.
Rastriya Prajatantra Party (RPP) chairman Pashupati
Shumshere Rana.
Rastriya Prajatantra Party (RPP) chairman Pashupati
Shumshere Rana.
(File photo)

Rana, who suffered a humiliating loss in the CA
election, managing to scrounge only a few seats, also
opined that the CPN (Maoist) party has committed a
serious blunder by apologizing to its communist
counterpart CPN (UML) over the issue of presidential
election.

Addressing party activists after inaugurating a
training camp for them in Lalitpur today, Rana further
said that it would be inappropriate for the CPN
(Maoist) party, which is poised to lead the next
government, to leave its stance and follow in the
footsteps of other parties. He was apparently miffed
by Maoist renewing negotiations with UML after the two
fell out on each others nominees during the
presidential election, putting in jeopardy his plans
to forge some sort of alliance with the Maoists.

He said that although the people view CPN (Maoist)
party as a kind of power that is quite distinct from
others, the recent events have shown that it isn’t any
different from big parties like Nepali Congress or UML
that forges and breaks up political alliances
according to their benefit. Rana blamed that because
of this kind of political tendency there is no
political stability in the country, delaying the
constitution-making process. nepalnews.com ag Aug 01 08

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