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Nepal:
Intrigue and Insurgency
By Li
Onesto, Pacific News Service, June 13, 2001
News of a very particular and bizarre multiple murder in Nepal
has been received and analyzed in a variety of ways. But few
have noted the possibility that this act represents -- at least
in part -- differences over how to best deal with a growing
Maoist insurgency. PNS Commentator Li Onesto is a photojournalist
who traveled to guerrilla zones in Nepal in 1999. Her 22-part
series, written for the Revolutionary Worker newspaper, "Dispatches:
Report from the People's War in Nepal," can be found at www.rwor.org.
The assassination of King Birendra of Nepal and eight other
members of the royal family hit headlines like a bizarre tale
of regicide out of Hamlet or King Lear -- with a Columbine,
automatic-weapons twist. But like all
such events, these took place in a context. And the context
here is the growing strength of Nepal's Maoist insurgency.
The defining political question in Nepal today is whether to
support or attack the Maoist revolution. And Birendra had been
deeply enmeshed in the crisis within Nepal's ruling class over
how to deal with the insurgency.
Current news stories about Birendra portray him as a figurehead.
But in fact, Nepal's constitution puts the king in charge of
Nepal's army. And one of the biggest disputes within the government
over the last year has been whether or not to send the army
against the Maoists. While some troops have been deployed to
areas hardest hit by the insurgency, Birendra has been reluctant
to unleash the army against the guerrillas. Now, there is speculation
that the new king, Gyanendra, will be more eager to do this.
Another big factor is India, which politically and economically
dominates Nepal. Birendra -- as well as the ruling Nepalese
Congress Party -- have had long standing ties with and backing
from the Indian power structure. And any analysis of the political
intrigue surrounding recent events must take this into account.
The crisis in Nepal didn't make headlines in the U.S. until
the assassinations. But concerns that the insurgency could shake
the already volatile South Asian region have been underscored
in recent months by the parade of diplomats from India, China,
Britain and the U.S. -- who held meetings with Nepalese officials
where the Maoist insurgency was a major item on the agenda.
Nepal's Maoist uprising is drawing strength from a number of
different directions, most importantly the demand of the rural
population for land and development, the demand of women for
equality, and the demand of millions of Nepalis for democracy
and independence.
For many decades, Nepal was ruled by a monarchy and all political
parties were banned. But in 1990, after widespread unrest, King
Birendra was forced to institute a constitutional monarchy with
an elected parliament. Hopes for freedom and improved living
standards were raised, but the new government, paralyzed by
internal disputes and seen by many as thoroughly corrupt, has
been unable or unwilling to deliver on its promises.
This was the setting -- in February 1996 -- for the Communist
Party of Nepal (Maoist) to launch its "people's war" to "surround
the cities and seize power." After five years, as many as 2,000
people have died in the fighting, which has hit almost all of
Nepal's 75 districts. Nepal's press regularly reports on military
encounters involving hundreds of guerrillas, and the Maoists
now control large areas of the countryside. The insurgency has
heightened the turmoil in Kathmandu, which has had 10 governments
in the same number of years.
In the spring of 1999, I witnessed just how powerful and deeply
rooted this revolution had become when I spent several months
traveling with a squad of "people's army" guerrillas through
Maoist-controlled areas in western, central and eastern Nepal.
I lived and talked with villagers, guerrillas, party leaders
and military commanders. Traveled in the western districts of
Rolpa and Rukum, where today some two million people live under
guerrilla control.
Nepal is one of the poorest and most undeveloped countries in
the world, and living conditions are extremely primitive even
by Third World standards. Per capita income is $210 and 85 percent
of the people live in the rural areas without electricity, running
water and basic sanitation. There are few, if any, doctors and
malnutrition is widespread. Life expectancy is only 55 years.
Small farmers, who fed and sheltered us, talked bitterly about
landowners and corrupt officials stealing their tiny plots of
land and money lenders charging them exorbitant interest. "We
work all year," one farmer angrily said, "but the crops we harvest
only provide food for three to four months." His face lit up
when he described how the Maoists burned property-ownership
records and redistributed land.
Nepal's women give the insurgency much of its strength. Many
are revolting against arranged marriages, rigid control by husbands
and fathers, domestic violence, and denial of education. Thousands
have been attracted by the Maoists' offer of equal participation
in the war and new forms of government. In the guerrilla zones,
just about every village has a revolutionary women's organization
and about one-third of the guerrilla squads are female. Women
in these areas have the right to own land, choose a husband,
and go to school. One woman told me that after six unhappy years
in an arranged marriage, she ran away and joined the rebels
and now felt free for the first time.
In Kathmandu, I met middle-class intellectuals, artists, and
even high-level government workers drawn to support the Maoists
because of their program of democracy and ending foreign domination.
The Maoists in Nepal refute the notion that "communism is dead."
They argue that global capitalism has failed the Third World
and that Mao's socialist model is as relevant as ever. I interviewed
the leader of the CPN (Maoist), Prachanda, who pointed to the
global impact of his revolution, saying, "Nepal is a small country,
we are a small party. But we have a big perspective. Our People's
War may be a spark for a prairie fire."
When I heard the news of the palace massacre, I couldn't help
but wonder how these events will impact the big questions being
discussed when I was in the Maoist areas. Two key issues on
the minds of the political and military leaders of the insurgency
were how soon the Nepalese army would be used against them and
when India would get more directly involved in the conflict.
As the crisis deepens in Katmandu and people demand answers
about the palace murders, the inability of the king and the
ruling Nepalese Congress Party to crush the Maoist insurgency
has set the stage for this drama. |
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