Monday, September 19, 2005

Tulsi Giri Is Beyond Redemption


This guy Giri is beyond redemption. First democracy was in his way, and now the constitution is in his way. He says it is a choice between the monarchy and democracy, so say the Maoists. The Maoists and I say the 1990 constitution is the problem, so says Giri. Just when I was looking for some common ground.

This guy is such a hardliner that he actually has to leave the country whenever the country "deviates" away from an absolute monarchy framework. Giri is the poster child of everything that is wrong with the country, this king, and his father and ancestors.

Giri is the ultimate Rasputin.

This guy needs to pay for all those years BP Koirala spent behind bars.

The Truth And Reconciliation Commission should deal with him first before anyone else.

That the king should gravitate towards this weirdo tells one a lot about the character of the king.

Response To The Panchayati Ghost Tulsi Giri (March 18)

"I am not for democracy."

"It is a choice between monarchy and democracy."

"The government need not follow the present Constitution [Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal 1990], as the political parties who formed it have already removed the term 'constitutional monarchy' and accepted a republic and Loktantra."

"The Constitution has always been an obstacle towards resolving the crisis."

"We failed to take action against Kantipur due to a provision in the Constitution which bars us from annulling the registration of the newspaper."

"We can only sentence the editor and publisher to a two-year jail term but even then they could be released on bail."

In The News
  • Journalist Rathore arrested NepalNews
  • Ceasefire monitoring committee constituted A meeting of eminent personalities, rights activists and professionals in Kathmandu on Monday has constituted a 22-member 'Ceasefire Civil Monitoring Committee' under the chairmanship of president of Nepal Bar Association Shambhu Thapa. Members of the committee include former Justices at the Supreme Court Laxman Aryal and Krishna Jung Rayamajhi, former minister Nilamber Acharya, former Speaker Daman Nath Dhungana, president of Federation of Nepalese Journalist Bishnu Nisthuri, president of Nepal University Teachers Association prof. Bhupati Dhakal 'Kamal,' president of Nepal Medical Association Dr. Sudha Sharma, chairman of INSEC Subodh Pyakurel, president of Human Rights Organisation of Nepal Charan Prasai, prof. Birendra Mishra, Dr. Om Gurung, Sindhu Nath Pyakurel, Padma Lal Biswokarma, Harihar Birahi, Taranath Dahal and Shiva Gaule.
  • Over 100 professionals arrested from protest rally
  • Leaders, rights workers urge govt to reciprocate Maoist truce Dr Ram Sharan Mahat “The government must announce ceasefire immediately considering it as an opportunity to move towards peace.” "We are not talking about alliance; the Maoists are.” chairman of Janamorcha Nepal, Amik Serchan, said the king has no right to restore the parliament. He said, "It shall be decided by the supreme court." .... Serchan said that the seven parties' alliance is independently carrying out informal talks with the CPN Maoists. The Roadmap preparation for the talk is in the last phase...... those who can't tolerate the demonstrations in the streets couldn’t fulfill their responsibility in the peace talks. Dr Narayan Khadka of the Nepali Congress (Democratic) urged the CPN (Maoist) to extend their ceasefire..... The supporters are paving the king towards the road of the hell .....
  • A dozen journos flee Dailekh, Kantipur journo placed under ‘house arrest’
  • NC (D) flays government for ignoring ceasefire call
  • NRNs have mixed response towards the new ordinance
  • King likely to visit India Kantipur ...... the King has been seeking an opportunity to visit India, to discuss bilateral matters, including resumption of arms supply to Nepal ..... is awaiting a green signal from India
  • Maoists abduct 12 schoolteachers in Ramechhap
  • Demonstration And Mass Meeting In Delhi INSN
  • UML Democracy Bulletin 26
  • Jailing of Nepal ex-PM questioned BBC News, UK
  • India devises policy to tackle Maoists Reuters AlertNet, UK ..... through better police coordination and reducing poverty in affected areas ..... combine force with a soft approach .... Indian Maoist insurgents, who number around 9,300, say they are fighting for the rights of the rural poor and against feudal land owners and corrupt local officials who siphon off development aid...... Thousands of people have died in nearly four decades of Maoist violence including hundreds of policemen.
  • Melamchi Connection UWB ..... RCCC has leveled four charges in the case (1) tender call being made prior to the approval of cost estimates of the construction contract (2) acceptance of non-responsive (unqualified bidder) (3) keeping ADB under deception by not submitting the report of the Evaluation Committee that assessed the responsiveness of the bidders and (4) issuing the Letter of Acceptance to the contractor even before waiting for the report of the National Vigilance Center investigating on the irregularities in Melamchi Drinking Water Project....... Mr. Harish Chandra Shah, expected to be the brain behind RCCC is the husband of Ms Pratima Shah and Ms Shah is the relative of Mr. Mohan Bahadur Shahi who is the husband of King Gyanendra’s sister. Ms. Pratima Shah is also the local agent of Hanil Koneco who got the earlier contract to construct access road and was terminated in May 2004 for non-performance by the government of Mr. Surya Bahadur Thapa. Mr. Harish Chandra was also a member of the investigation team of National Vigilance Center who was later kicked out a day ahead the report was to be submitted. Hanil Koneco is to be penalized for all additional cost incurred during the second contract work awarded to CCECC/Sharma/Lama Joint Venture by the Deuba Government. What is the relation of Ms Arzu Deuba with these Shahs and Shahis? How can Mr. Harish Chandra be an independent advisor to RCCC? Is not the personal stakes of the people involved are clear? ........ One of the partners of the joint venture company to whom Deuba awarded contract, Mr. Jit Tshering Lama, is the central committee member of Nepali Congress- Democratic...... Why no charges on Norplan? Did RCCC lost courage to charge Norplan? Is this the reason why Norwegians Embassy showed displeasure by curtail aid to Nepal? ...... Henceforth if RCCC verdict is to be set as legal judicial precedence in Nepal, no Prime Minister can issue “verbal order” to get work done. And all government secretaries cannot just describe/prescribe options in the tippani – s/he had to give decision to elicit “yes” or “no” response from the final decision maker. ...... If you are bored with this material, try reading RCCC verdict in one go.
  • Official Melamchi Verdict
  • Tear Gas: Bounce Back To Police UWB Today’s pro-democracy rally, started from Dilli Bazar, in the beginning seemed lavish and I thought that would wipe out police barricade and enter the restricted areas of Putalisadak and Baghbazar and Ratna Park. ..... Demonstrators took advantage of their ‘strategic location’, height of Dilli Bazar Chowk to hurl stones at police situated in the low point of the road. ...... protesters, dispersed by the tear gas, entered inside the houses of Bada Guruju, king’s chief priest. Army personnel stationed there for security flushed them out of the compound by point gun at the protestors. Then angry protestors burnt abandoned telephone cable on the main road...... The army in the priest’s house must have informed about that to their headquarters. And from there to the Armed Police Forces. A team of APF men led by SSP Madhav Thapa instantly arrived and inquired about the situation to the army security personnel...... The rumor was that the army fired at the protestors. That was not correct..... the public of Dilli Bazar throwing water over the tear gas and defusing that instantly. May be they did that for themselves and not necessarily for the benefit of the protestors...... Police fired 10 tear gas shells in one minute. In total, police fired at least 30 tear gas shells (I counted) in the protest program that lasted for one and a half-hour from 3:30 PM. Many of the shells were misfired; they went out of target. One went over a 5-storey house. And many of them were picked up by the protestors and fired back to the police themselves. That was interesting to see. Policemen who fired the shells were apparently loosing the control over little gun....... “Don’t target the protestors,” one jawan was yelling at the man in charge of the shells. “Fire that above the protestors, on the 90 degree angle.” That wasn’t an official order though. He was just venting out his friendly opinion.
  • Corrupt Crime From Cabinet UWB “Three Ministers’ Plan to Import Fertilizer Illegally Blocked” is the two-line 8-column-long front-page headline of today’s Kantipur daily. And a front-page story on today’s Kathmandu Post daily has this headline: “Fertilizer mafia’s smuggling plan jolted/Three cabinet ministers involved.” Those three ministers from the royal cabinet are Badri Prasad Mandal (Agriculture Minister), Dan Bahadur Shahi (Home Minister) and Madhukar Shumsher Rana (Finance Minister)........ Three ministers involved in an organized crime against the state? ..... fertilizer mafia’s grand plan to smuggle twenty thousand metric tons of chemical fertilizer from India ..... and fertilizer businessman, Gyanendra Shrestha...... the plan was finalized at the agriculture ministry last Thursday at 4 pm through a meeting of the three ministers and businessman Shrestha. Senior civil servants Govinda Prasad Pandey, secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture; Rishi Ram Lamichhane, joint secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture; Shiva Sunder Shrestha from the Department of Agriculture; Madhav Dhakal, director general of DRI; and Bodh Nath Niraula, deputy director general of Department of Customs were also invited to the meeting to execute the plan...... The meeting decided that Shrestha would be allowed to smuggle urea from India unhindered for the next two months. In the meeting, Finance Minister Rana directed the DRI not to raid trucks carrying fertilizer for Binayak International, an importing firm owned by Shrestha. Similarly, it was decided that Home Minister Shahi would order the police and security not to intercept trucks carrying the contraband. It was also decided that the fertilizer would be smuggled to Nepal through Bangkul, a small customs check point in Gaur and Matorawa, customs check point in Bara, and a third check point in Sarlahi.
  • Everything, Well Almost, That I Saw UWB Today, Nepali Congress and CPN UML jointly took out a rally (for a few seconds though) from the Bhaktpur Bus Park in Bagbazar only to be dispersed by riot police within a minute....... two baton-barricades of police. Facing the protestors was of Janapath Police’ (regular). That barricade was backed up by another of the members of Armed Police Forces (APF). Former ANNFSU, a student organization, office building Rato Ghar these days houses one of the Valley offices of APF....... I guess he too was habituated with throwing stones and participating in demos before he joined police force a few years ago. He arrested Khadka (he was holding the hip of Khadka) and wanted to put the former home minister in a separate police vehicle. There was none. And APF policemen tried to take Khadka away from that Janapath Inspector. “No, no. Leave him to me,” he screamed at the APF guys. Then the inspector took Khadka on the main road and communicated via his set to have a van for Khadka. I guess that Inspector was recruited when Khum Bahadur Khadka was home minister........ a few policemen were finding real difficulties carrying Gajendra Karki, former central member of Nepal Student Union ...... Karki was tough. That was a first real struggle against possible arrest I have ever seen in this phase of demonstration. Karki jumped off twice from the pick-up van. He finally was thrown into a police van by more than two dozen policemen. His eyebrow was swollen by a possible baton charge by police. I didn’t see police beating him but I am sure he must have suffered terribly in that heavy struggle against more than two dozen policemen........ a trend that after “senior” leaders are safely arrested, the protest program quickly shifts to the colleges........ It is like leaders handing over the leadership of movement to students. Then the real show begins: stone pelting and tear gas firing etc....... girls were screaming slogans via a mike and burning tires in front of the main entrance gate of PK. The same Chaudhari girl (I forget her name, sorry) who was on the cover of Nepal Magazine with catapult in her hands targeting police two years in the movement against regressing, was in charge of the mike........ There were two police team on two ends of the road that goes from the main gate of PK. Students had to deal with both the teams with stones. Then, suddenly, the police team on the Putalisadak side started firing tear gas shells. I was on the Bhaktpur Bus Park side. I could see 10 shells fired within 20 or so seconds. Some shells came on the road, some inside the PK campus. The police team on my side backtracked because of the gas that was approaching us quickly. And for about 3 minutes, the road was empty, totally......... A secondary school neighboring PK college suffered the unbelievable. According to a teacher, gas from three tear gas shells (fired inside the college) entered the school premises and severely affected the students of the school. Students of lower grades in Neptune Secondary School were affected most......... I saw two shells of tear gas attacked the police themselves. That was because of the wind. The wind flowing from Ratna Park to Putalisadak blew away the gas to Putalisadak and the police team on that side dispersed........ The shell of tear gas directly hit the head of a young man. Bleeding started. It was no possibility of asking his name at that time........ I saw a doctor emerging out from the hospital in his operation theatre uniform pushing police....... Police today indiscriminately baton-charged thrice to onlookers and pedestrians........ I also heard a big sound of rock music coming out of a house on the road as the situation was tense outside. All the windows of the house were closed. But music was a solace!....... The bad thing about the protest was police firing back with stones....... As and when police threw back stones targeting protestors, students’ anger intensified. Once, stones thrown by the police hit the main electricity gird in Bagbazar and created lightning......... police were using foul language to protestors. Students were doing so ...... some policemen were in drunken state. One of them beat human rights activists who are present in all protest program these days to monitor the situation........ Policemen were in the mood of baton-charging all the HR activists and journalists........ Police also arrested a boy who they charged of leading the team that threw stones. He 22-year-old was Pasang Sherpa of Dolakha district and was living in Bagbazar. (He told me that as he was being whisked away by the police). I fear his safety because he is nobody and police might torture him........ Buddha Bir Lama ..... That young and strong man of Nepal Student Union was the leading figure in yesterdays’ tension in front of Shankar Dev Campus. He is a protest-specialist. Students say a protest program gains momentum when he arrives. Today, he was wearing helmet and escaped the initial arrest session. He was leading students from inside the PK College. I do not exactly know how he was injured but he was serious, very serious......... At 17:30, a group of police, very much agitated, entered the PK College. They went up to 3 meters from the main gate and fired a shell of tear gas inside the college premises. That shell, I was told later by a member of the PK student union, entered the science lab of the college....... The road was full of pieces of bricks. ..... Its 10 PM, everyone in my house has gone to bed and I am really tired. One thing that I have discovered this evening is that if I go on running like this from one end of Bagbazar to another for the next few days, I will definitely do one of the two things. Either I will do something significant in track and field or end up resting in a hospital for a few days. But I am hopeful about my strength.
  • Questioning The Constitutionality Of The RCCC Nepal Bar Association has officially decided not to plead on behalf of RCCC. ..... even diplomats and UN agencies are critical of this extra-constitutional body.. Along with European Parliament, US Government has also demanded for the continued independence of CIAA.... It has even power to investigate the corruption cases of judiciary....... the body is formed more to create terror then to dispense justice...... in the name of giving continuity to RCCC, by switching from Article 115 to Article 127, the Royal Government is making a joke out of constitutional provisions........ Except the secretary, no other members of the commission have a legal background. Even in the case of the secretary he is a presiding district judge....... any one going critical against RCCC works can be penalized of Rs10, 000 or six months of imprisonment or both........ a constitutional body may give a wrong verdict but an unconstitutional body like RCCC can never give a right verdict.
  • Arrests, Tear Gas And A Quick Plate Of MoMo One from Baghbazzar and another from Old Bus Park. .... police indiscriminately baton-charged for about 30 seconds over pedestrians and some protestors. As protestors tried to break the police barrier and went to the main road in front of OBP, army personnel inside the Sainik Manch were alert with their guns in position....... a team of APF led by the famous DSP Madhav Thapa, roamed through the narrow alleys of Baghbazzar in search of stone throwers....... Two groups of police were having close watch to the student activities and they were responding with same pieces of bricks occasionally........ the situation became such that the busy traffic of Putali Sadak came to standstill as students intensified throwing stones targeting police and at times passers by. Police too fired back, with same bricks........ a boy approached me. “Are you a journalist?” he asked. “Yes, I am,” I replied. “Oh…I am his brother,” he told me naming a reporter of the Kathmandu Post. He was there “to experience the fighting live”........ I ate one and a half plate of Mo Mo, occasionally rising from the seat and gauging the tense situation outside...... After an hour of exchanging bricks, police decided to do something decisive. They fired at least three rounds of Tear Gas and the crowd immediately dispersed. People started doing huss and buss as the gas started showing effects. Whole area was terrorized. Some people started washing their faces. I met Prabhu Narayan Basnet, journalist and former political activist. He was caught in the middle of the gas and his face was full of tears........ Majority of the crowd were onlookers.
  • Army Does This, Army Does That “Army fires in air as students pelt stones” and the other “Army misbehaves with MK Nepal.” ...... “fired six warning shots in the air to hold off students of the Mahendra Ratna Campus at Tahachal in the capital on Monday [Sept 12], as protesting students blocked an army truck and ransacked a vehicle belonging to a corporation.” ....... The question is not about whether we are heading toward militarization of Nepal. How much has Nepal been militarized in recent months? ...... No one were hurt or killed on that in that firing-in-air incident but the impact is huge. The whole area was sort of terrorized...... “The army men scolded the police and asked them to return to the party office” ...... Even police are helpless. What is this? One security organ of the state promises security and escort to a people’s leader and the other one ignores that promise and insults and misbehaves the leader.

Contents

Contents July-August
Contents February-June

Protests Protests
Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests

Indian Maoists And The Nepal Movement For Democracy
The RNA Could Be Disbanded
Pyar Jung's Jumbo Size Love For The King
The Foreign Powers Need To Come Clean On The Constituent Assembly Question
Sadbhavana Meets In Janakpur
The Maoist Ceasefire: The Devil In The Details
The Royal Court
Protests
Madhav Nepal, Commander Of The Movement
Bimalendra Nidhi US Tour
Gagan Thapa US Tour
What's Going On In Nepal
For The First Time In A Decade, Permanent Peace Feels Possible
The Mutual Attraction: King G And Tulsi Giri
Ahobhagya Shaubhagya: Confusion InThe Monarchist Camp
Physical Abuse Of Peaceful Protestors
Protests
Tom Pain Has Praise For This Blog
Gagan Thapa Amerika Tour
Email From Madhav Kumar Nepal
Tulsi Giri Is Beyond Redemption
Options For The Maoists And The Democrats
To: DFNYC
Charlie
The King, The Army, The Ceasefire
September 16 Protest Rally
Beyond Royal Rule: An ICG Report
The King In Janakpur
Video Blogging The Movement
Face To Face With Prachanda
Sharad Chandra Shaha Is A Dazzling Person
Mahabharat Or Soap Opera
Wish Me Luck
Could The King Impose Another Emergency?
Interview With Comrade Prachanda
Protests
Bharat Mohan Adhikari Is In Town
Alliance Of Steel
Nepal's Terai People In Deplorable Conditions: Mahto
Down With The Monarchy
The Obstinate Monarchists
Protests
Dear Charlie
Caution: Alliance Approaching
Irresponsible Response To Ceasefire
Prachanda, Do Not Break The Ceasefire
Positive Signs
Protests
The King Should Now Move To Step 2
King Cancels UN Visit
Protests
To Trust Or Not To Trust The Maoists
Protests
The Nepali Rasputins Want A Revolution
Sumit Pokhrel On Democracy For Nepal
Proposed Constitution
RNA, Declare Your Own Ceasefire, You Have No Choice
After Ganapathy, A Ceasefire
What Is Prachanda Doing?
Protests
Protests
Protests
Protests
Protests
Power Woman Protest
Is Prachanda For Real?
Girija Koirala Must Be Doing Something Right
Protests
To: Dr. Baburam Bhattarai

Sunday, September 18, 2005

Options For The Maoists And The Democrats


The obstinate Monarchists are hellbent on bringing the Maoist ceasefire to an end. They are utterly puzzled by the move. This is the worst piece of news they have had since 2/1. They basically don't know how to respond.

I have a few suggestions for the Maoists and the Democrats. (Alliance Of Steel)

To: The Maoists

If bringing your ceasefire to an end were not in the interests of the RNA honchos, they would not be trying so hard. These hardliner Monarchists have been dealt a serious blow by the ceasefire. No matter what you do, do not break the ceasefire. If you break it, you play into their hands. Pull back your troops if you have to. Take them all into the jungles away from possibilities of direct confrontations with the RNA if you have to. Your success lies in sticking to the ceasefire. If your entire strategy is that the Monarchists will do the sensible thing, you will not be acting that smart. Expect them to make the wrong and the dumb moves. Expect them to act unreasonable. Make room for all that.

Your ceasefire is the reason the king cancelled his trip to the UN. You have scored a major global victory already. Don't now squander it.

Launch a new, almost independent political wing/party if you have to for a massive nationwide organizational effort. Set up committees in all the villages. Like the IRA had a political wing, and a military wing.

Work on an alliance with the Democrats.

And do not place all your bets on a UN involvement. Unless the regime wants it, the UN can not get involved. So there has to be a strategy for success even if the regime does not come along. The Maoist-Democrat alliance might have to do the work the UN might otherwise have done. Are you up for it?

A major human rights activist informed me a few days back that Nepal is not a signatory to the Internatioal Criminal Court, so the Hague is not an option. On the other hand, the UN does have the authority to set up a country tribunal. Similar stuff.

To: The Democrats

To get offended that the Maoists are an armed group is like saying I am offended the night is dark, the sun is hot, and the air is windy. The news is not that the Maoists are an armed group, but that they have already made an ideological move away from that, and they are also eager to implement the same in practice, but for that they need at least one of the other two camps to cooperate. If both the Monarchists and the Democrats were to ignore the major move they have made in the form of this ceasefire, at some point down the line, sooner rather than later, they will call off the ceasefire, and the next round of the civil war will likely be more vicious. That is my analysis. That will be a disaster. That will be a serious blow to our plans of making this a decisive winter. If the Maoists are back up in arms, we will have less political space for our movement. Why would we want that?

Don't play into the hands of the Monarchist hardliners. Engage the Maoists in a serious, respectful dialogue. It would be a serious mistake to think their ideological transformation away from the classic Maoist emphasis on the gun is a weakness on their part. It would be a serious mistake to think their ceasefire has been declared from a position of weakness. The truth is they have taken these two major moves after some major internal analysis. It is important to respect that. Just look at the major political victories they have scored through the ceasefire. Their move is not weak, rather it is smart. Very smart. The proof is in the pudding.

As long as they can work at least with us, they are less likely to allow the Monarchists to push them away from the ceasefire. And we can not afford an end to the ceasefire. So let's act like it.

Get engaged, and stay engaged.

As for the protests, we might need a rethink there.

I have been on record suggesting the strategy should be to
Take Over Tundikhel. But the regime has been putting all its effors into denying us that segment of the town. So why not alter our strategy? Instead of Tundikhel, why not target New Road?

Create an artificial lake of people. When you dam a stream, the valley turns into a lake. You go to the police line, and then stop. Do not get adversarial with the police. Instead, at the frontlines have smooth talkers who will engage the police front lines in small talk. And encourage a buildup behind that line. It can be all of New Road, and as many adjoining streets as possible. Jampack.

We have to treat the police officers as people that soon our interim government will be commanding. We should thus not treat them like they were our enemies. Our strategy should be to push a wedge between the police and the regime, then between the bureaucracy and the regime, then finally between the army and the regime. Puncture the monarchists' tires. Push the pins. The police, the bureaucracy and the army all belong to us, to the people. Those are all people on the people's payrolls. Let's start acting like it.

The roads might be better than Tundikhel. The police can not disperse a New Road crowd as it might a Tundikhel crowd. It is easier to reach to the demonstrators with supplies like food items in a New Road setting than it might be in a Tundikhel setting. People can take pictures from inside their homes. And download them and upload them without leaving their homes.

Protest smart. Outthink the opponent.

But this is for when we decide on a decisive struggle. Before we can do that, we need to form a formal seven person committee. I think the names are obvious. Girija Koirala, Madhav Nepal, Gopal Man Shrestha, Bharat Bimal Yadav, Narayan Man Bijukchhe, CP Mainali, and Amik Sherchan. Going by the media photos. That seven person committee chooses its leader. If they decide on Girija Koirala, fine by me. If they decide on Madhav Nepal, fine by me. But that has to be decided now. That seven person committee is the interim government in waiting, and the chosen leader is the interim Prime Minister in waiting, and the leader of the movement. I mean, informally there is a sort of understanding. But a formal decision has to be taken now. So as to make the movement totally focused.

Once the committee and the leader have been formally decided upon, then a program has to be agreed upon. I have suggested a 10-point program here: Alliance Of Steel. But if that is too comprehensive, we can come up with a shorter 5-point program. Let that seven person committee finalize the program. You need such a program to ignite the imagination of the masses. Once ignited, the masses will show up, and there will be no stopping them.

Once we have an interim government in waiting, a single leader, and a clear program, then it will be time to go for a decisive showdown.

And that is when we create our artificial lake of people starting out at New Road. Forget Tundikhel.

How do you like this?

The King, The Army, The Ceasefire
Beyond Royal Rule: An ICG Report
Down With The Monarchy
The Obstinate Monarchists
Caution: Alliance Approaching
Irresponsible Response To Ceasefire
Prachanda, Do Not Break The Ceasefire
Positive Signs
The King Should Now Move To Step 2
King Cancels UN Visit
To Trust Or Not To Trust The Maoists
The Nepali Rasputins Want A Revolution
RNA, Declare Your Own Ceasefire, You Have No Choice
After Ganapathy, A Ceasefire
What Is Prachanda Doing?
Is Prachanda For Real?
To: Dr. Baburam Bhattarai
Baburam Bhattarai, Pramod Aryal, Ram Chandra Poudel

In The News
  • Supreme Court issues show cause notice to RCCC NepalNews ..... demanding reasons for detaining former Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and former Minister Prakash Man Singh.
  • Maoists abduct over 60 teachers Notwithstanding their call of a three-month long unilateral ceasefire, Maoists have abducted at least 60 teachers from different schools of Morang district....... The whereabouts of the abducted teachers is still unknown.
  • Shahi rules out dialogue with Maoists One day after the Royal Nepalese army described the unilateral truce declared by the Maoist as a ploy, Home Minister Dan Bahadur Shahi, Saturday categorically ruled out any prospect of the government opening talks with the Maoists ....... also ruled out any chances of the government announcing a ceasefire on its part saying that Maoists have in the past used ceasefire as a break to accumulate arms and cash...... adamant on the government's stance that talks cannot be possible unless they (Maoists) submit their arms and ammunition....... Shahi also added that the government would not mind going for an election to the constituent assembly if the Maoists come with a serious state of mind.
  • Pro-democracy demonstration in the US
  • SC scraps court of contempt case against Kantipur Kantipur
  • Kantipur threatened again In what appears to be an attempt to threaten the pro-democracy media houses, Kantipur Publication has received another threat from Pralhad Sah, secretary of the organizing committee of the forthcoming pro-king gathering in the eastern region...... "Kantipur Publications may face a repetition of the devastation of September 1," he warned. .... Sah's threat comes few days after Hindu fundamentalist Shiva Sena issued a similar warning here...... On September 1, 2004, a mob of miscreants had attacked Kantipur Publications and demolished its property worth millions of rupees.
  • SC issues show cause notice on Deuba case
  • Authorities detain Kantipur correspondent in Dailekh
  • NRN ordinance positive, says Mahato
  • 16 countries decide to develop Lumbini as a World Peace City Nepal, Japan, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Korea, Singapore and Thailand.
  • Nepalis in US stage pro-democracy demonstration
  • Nepal urges Maoists to give up guns Gorkhapatra, Nepal
  • Talks with Maoists going on: Nepal Kathmandu Post Madhav Kumar Nepal, has revealed that talks with Maoists are already underway..... dialogues with the rebels are being held in order to use the ceasefire period to transform it into a long lasting peace .... "Talks are underway and we are looking for a common package after doing away with all the impediments" ...... the present government was afraid after the sudden announcement of ceasefire by Maoists. "The autocrats are not willing to reciprocate as yet, but are hell-bent on using force in the name of resolving the crisis in order to prolong their tenure." .... "The troubled government due to the public's countrywide protests might do anything to political parties and those who support the people's movement"
  • Nepali Congress (D) to monitor ceasefire .... urged Maoist rebels to stop all violence -- murder, intimidation and extortion, so as to create a conducive environment ..... create an atmosphere for the unhindered return of displaced people to their homes and for smooth functioning of political parties' activities ...... flayed the government for failing to respond to the Maoist ceasefire positively. "This has established that the present regime is against peace, and is going against the people's will." ...... party also decided to monitor the ceasefire through its central representatives deployed in all 75 districts ......
  • Parties burn effigies in valley
  • Rights groups condemn police brutality
  • ‘Civil servants’ agitation justified’
  • Nepal says talks only after Maoists surrender arms:- Webindia123, India ...... Nepal government has ruled out peace talks with the Maoist rebels ...... there can be no dialogue unless the outlaws lay down arms ..... Dan Bahadur Shahi said the government could hold a roundtable conference with the guerrillas and discuss political issues only after they surrendered arms ...... ruled out the government reciprocating the rebel gesture by offering a truce...... "Despite the so-called ceasefire, atrocities like kidnapping, extortion and forcible recruitment continue...... So there is no question of the government following suit." ..... "In the past too, they have repeatedly announced ceasefires and called them off..... So there is no basis to trust them." The Maoists too, on their part, have said they would hold talks with the opposition parties and members of civil society but there was little possibility of a dialogue with the government...... "We will hold talks with the government only if the king returns the power he has usurped," Maoist supremo.... the rebels have continued abducting people for forcible recruitment, have been looting vehicles on the highways and mining roads.
  • Nepal on the brink as protests against monarchy intensify Sunday Herald the 40-year-old unemployed hotel worker said: “I’ve been coming here every day as I want the king to go. He does nothing for us.... “People are out fighting for their rights,” said Suvash Darnal, leader of the Collective Campaign for Peace (COCAP), a network which includes associations of teachers, doctors, lawyers, journalists, civil rights groups and trade unions....... COCAP estimates that more than 2000 arrests have taken place in the last two weeks. Police frequently use violence to intimidate activists, said Darnal......... “They are systematically beating peaceful demonstrators. Police are using weapons and tear gas but the more violent they become the more our numbers increase.”..... Protests against the king intensified when Maoist rebels declared a unilateral three-month ceasefire on September 3, to which the monarchy refused to respond........ The palace looks increasingly isolated as opposition parties, civil rights groups, and the rebels demand an end to the king’s rule....... “This is the first time that Nepalese civil society has spontaneously come out into the streets,” he said, pointing to reports of protests spreading to other parts of the country ..... Analysts believe that the monarchy has little interest in a return to democracy despite having fewer and fewer friends at home or abroad....... All opposition parties support the Maoists’ demand for UN involvement in brokering and monitoring a ceasefire....... “The king is waiting for something to happen but there will be chaos if he does not act soon” ..... “This situation can’t last much longer” ...... warning of a potentially violent crackdown by the army....... “The international community should be making urgent contingency plans. The monarchy’s days of direct rule appear to be numbered . As the pressure mounts there is a real risk of a bloody upheaval.” ........ the greatest risk of violence is from the king’s staunchest supporters, the army ...... “None of them were very happy with the democracy we had in the 1990s and they’ve helped to dismantle it ever since” ...... “The government is not responding, which means they don’t want to talk. They want to solve the problem with guns

Saturday, September 17, 2005

To: DFNYC


Granted, DFNYC is the largest Dean inspired group in the country.

Granted, I have been in town only a few months now, and kind of skipped the local races you all were so involved in, due to my newbie, lost status, but also because, primarily because Nepal has been taking so much of my time.

Granted, you all keep so busy with so many different issues and events all at once, but the big primaries are over, and that might give the group more breathing space.

Granted, the Democrats are so totally out of power in all three branches and at all levels of government that a serious rethink needs to be done for 2006 and 2008.

Granted, Howard Dean chairs the Democratic Party.

Granted, Dean started something that will last a generation.

Granted, the Democrats have been totally giving ground to the Republicans on the foreign policy front.

Granted, the War On Terror is the same magnitude as the Cold War.

Granted, democracies do not go to war with each other.

Granted, the message of democracy is more acute where no democracy exists at all.

Granted, a total spread of democracy has to be the ultimate progressive goal, and the message can not be stopping at the borders.

Granted, 200 billion dollars, 2000 American lives, and tens of thousands of Iraqi lives are a major waste of life, resources and half the time are self-defeating.

Granted, there has to be a better way, and there is.

Granted, strong on defense for progressives has to be in the form of spreading democracy the progressive way.

Granted, democracy will have to be spread proactively.

Granted, if it is between progressives who will do nothing, and neo-cons who will wage war on Saddam, I am for war.

Granted, Nepal can be turned into the Iraq for the progressives.

Granted, Nepal is best positioned to become the Ukraine for 2005.

Granted, a Democratic Party energized on the foreign policy turf will do better in terms of seizing the initiative also on the domestic front.

Granted, logistical support can help, but moral support expressed in loud voices by large numbers spread across the country can mean so much more.

Granted, there has to be a major effort to take back the Congress in 2006, but it can not be done by continuing to be weak on defense.

Granted, Dean could run for president again in 2008.

Granted, the road to the White House might as well go through Nepal.

Granted, Nepal is hence so central to the overall progressive vision.

I hereby propose that DFNYC get behind the movement for democracy in Nepal in a major way.

Democracy For Nepal, DFN
DFNYC Research And Advocacy Group
Tracey Denton Of DFNYC
The Three Pillars

Charlie
Dear Charlie
Email To Charlie Szrom
Email From Charlie Szrom

5 Steps To Democracy

September 16 Protest Rally
King Cancels UN Visit
Power Woman Protest

Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests Protests

Katrina
Alliance Gathering At Queens Bridge Park
Senator Leahy To US Congress On Nepal
Keith Bloomfield
Gagan Thapa Case Taken To The United Nations
2005 Young Republican National Convention (US) Resolution 1 On Nepal
Tom Daschle
The Road To The White House Goes Through Nepal
Getting Interviewed By A Cornell University Student


Mary Joyce, Demologue

Charlie


Dear Charlie.

Sorry for the delay in my response. But we had a major protest rally yesterday here in NYC near the UN building attended by Nepalis from across the country, from as far away as Wisconsin. (September 16 Protest Rally) And for the few days before that we had some major visitors in town, the Deputy Prime Minister who got arrested when the king did what he did on 2/1, a former Prime Minister, a right hand man and a key advisor to the king, and the Speaker of the dissoved House. I got to meet three of them, which was plenty of homework. I did not make the progress I intended to make, but at least something might have got started, at least I got a firmer window into their mindsets. (Bharat Mohan Adhikari Is In Town, Wish Me Luck, Mahabharat Or Soap Opera, Sharad Chandra Shaha Is A Dazzling Person) I have believed there has to be a holistic approach to peace making. And hence my forays.

But coming back to your letter. Immediately after I read it, I felt it was a great response you gave, plenty to work on.

Where will the money go? The money will go to the seven party coalition leading the democracy movement as long as they agree to transparent, online book-keeping. The SGD Chief Financial Officer and I will work closely at all stages. And since all decisions will be reached to in a transparent manner, individuals and organizations will be welcome to participate in all the ensuing discussions online. It will be open source.

But the money part is secondary. The moral support that can be extended can go further than the monetary support, although logistical support helps. Frankly, I dream of a peaceful version of the Pentagon, a large, networked group of democracy activists constantly coming up with new tools that can be put to use in democracy movements, country after country after country. The size and quality of the individuals in the network and the sophistication of the network will compound the impact of the limited amounts of money involved. Ideas for protestors can be floated around. Maybe there are ever creatives ways of protesting. Perhaps some tools work better than others. There has to be a democracy contagion.

Imagine SGD having branches in all 50 states, and then SGD members calling up their Senators and Representatives in a coordinated fashion. And those elected officials responding. If they were to speak in unison, that might mean so much.

Another, perhaps more important, possible tool is helping those in Nepal who brave the police out in the streets feel there is a large global crowd that keeps intimate knowledge of what they are going through and extends moral support to them. Things like that. Such gestures might fall in the priceless category.

Nepal has to be seen a human laboratory for spreading democracy first in the South Asia region and then in the larger Global South. Tools we might bring to use to positively devastating effects in Nepal could be put to reuse elsewhere, and that is a big part of the idea.

"(Y)ou would have to lead the campaign and fundraise. SGD could provide you with advice and the use of our pending 501(c)(3) non-profit status (which will significantly help fundraising in the US). SGD's Chief Financial Officer will also keep track of funds raised in a transparent manner."

This is great. This is empowering. Let's do it both ways. Let's tap into the existing SGD chapters across the country, and I will also put my efforts into expanding the SGD into as yet untouched colleges and universities in the 50 states, with my primary focus on the later. So the impact is two-fold: the SGD ends up with many more chapters, and Nepal gains a much-needed element of focus.

"Have you had any previous experience in organization-building, fundraising, and/or recruiting?"

I was active with the student government at my college. Please google my name and check out the resume page.

"What kind of timeline/activities do you see for this fundraising?"

I expect the movement to succeed over the course of the next few months. That is Plan A. But I am also open to improvising a Plan B. This is to be one decisive winter, I feel.

In sum, I would like Nepal to be the Ukraine for 2005.

I look forward to working closely with you and the SGD.

All the best.

Paramendra.

Dear Charlie
Email To Charlie Szrom
Email From Charlie Szrom


Date: Sun, 11 Sep 2005 12:40:20 -0500
From: "Charlie Szrom"

To: "Paramendra Kumar Bhagat"
Subject: Re: Dear Charlie

Paramendra,

Thanks for the proposal and letter, it sounds quite inspiring.

Some issues need addressing, which I'll put here:

1. Where will this fundraised money go - dollar for dollar - and how will it effectively help the democracy movement in Nepal? Many pro-democracy groups certainly need money, but then again just throwing money at the siuation is not going to improve it - unless you take the time to ensure accountable, correct usage of the funds.

2. Who will raise this money? With all of SGD's active chapters currently involved in preparing for the Worldwide Walk for Democracy in Belarus (http://www.sfgd.org?wwdb) on Oct 15, we can't really spare anyone for fundraising in another manner like this. In order to raise these funds, we would need you to join SGD and begin a fundraising campaign. You could also help to recruit for SGD among the Nepali community in the US and other countries in order to expand your fundraising base - but you would have to lead the campaign and fundraise. SGD could provide you with advice and the use of our pending 501(c)(3) non-profit status (which will significantly help fundraising in the US). SGD's Chief Financial Officer will also keep track of funds raised in a transparent manner.

3. Have you had any previous experience in organization-building, fundraising, and/or recruiting?

4. What kind of timeline/activities do you see for this fundraising?

5. What does Somnath's group do, and what relationships does it have to other groups in Nepal? How has it used past funds?

It looks like the start of a good campaign, Paramendra. I agree, in order to have the greatest effect you have to contribute to situations that have the possiblity of changing soon - situations like those in Nepal and Azerbaijan.

I look forward to working more with you.

Best,
Charlie.

1 Mary Joyce, Demologue