Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Organization: Hamro Nepal


This is very much in the discussion phase, and so far the talk has been in a few meetings, a few phone calls, a few emails. I figured why not take it online.

Narayan Singh Pun, I Want Your Number
Your Many Identities
Blogalaxy For Global Democracy

Right to peaceful assembly is a fundamental human right, like free speech. You exercise that right when you join this organization.

Several names came up. One was Alliance For A Democratic Republic Of Nepal, another was Nepal Democracy Network. The name Hamro Nepal has gained currency. It is short, it has a Nepali flavor, it effuses a sense of community.

The primary reason for launching this organization is to send some major logistical support to the democracy movement in Nepal. Most Nepali organizations in the US are social, cultural organizations. The few that are political mostly do event organizing, and press statements. Most organizations claim their charters do not allow for them to extend logistical help. And hence the need for a new organization.

There is much emphasis on making this an organization of those who are for a democratic republic. This has not been decided upon yet. But I wonder if we should stick to the one word, democracy, while being very open to the idea of a democratic republic. That way we will get more people. Even if a democratic republic is what we want, we will only get it if we manage to convince a whole bunch of people to the idea. So we convince them before we let them join us. Or we let them be part of our organization and we convince them. I'd rather we do the work in-house. I am a little wary of political purity that might exclude many.

The organization will not go away once the goal of democracy has been achieved for Nepal. It will stick around to help the process of institution building, and help usher rapid economic growth in the aftermath, for democracy has to deliver. The organization will also be dedicated to the theme of empowering the Nepali diaspora in the host countries. For example, the issue of voting rights for non-citizens in cities like New York.

The methods are of course to be strictly non-violent. But we take it one step further: non-violent militancy: using words like they were bullets. Screen time, face time, phone time. Major, coordinated logistical support to the ongoing movement conducted with a business efficiency and acumen. Membership and work, open as well as clandestine. Outorganize the opponents. Money, message, organization. Creative group dynamics.

Membership fee. $100 per person or equivalent/similar amount in US, Europe, Canada, Japan, Australia. Each country chapter to decide on the amount. The US chapter might do a second $100 round should an emergency situation arise.

Guest members. A country chapter like the US chapter may have guest members from Nepal. These members will have to be sponsored by existing members of the US chapter.

There are to be 10 City Coordinators for each of the major cities in the US. These are people who have the option to meet in person. They are to reflect gender, ethnic and caste diversities. No president, vice president, and so on, to go with the egalitarian theme.

Chapter in India, membership fee more like Rs. 100 or 200.

Membership fees to be revised after the goal of democracy is achieved.

Chapter in Nepal: membership free. But you got to deliver out in the streets. A 10 strong committee of coordinators, one each from the 8 student groups, plus two others.

Members may stay open or stay clandestine: personal choice for the duration of the movement.

Legal details are to be looked into to get the organization registered, for the safe and secure movement of money, to keep the book keeping sound.

There will also be an Executive Committee of the most active members and the leaders of each city chapter. It will have a private Google Group.

Virtual parliament. All members will be invited to join a virtual parliament. Real or assumed names may be used. All members may talk. Anyone may participate in the comments sections. Anyone may read.

Committees will be organized for specific projects. They might have private Google Groups or open spaces like that of the parliament, depending on the need.

For lack of something better, free online polls will be used for voting purposes, to be sent out over email, and not displayed online until after the polls are closed. One IP address will not be able to vote more than once, and there would be a time limit on each such poll. Members could still technically forward around the polls and get sham voters to jack up the results. It is hoped the honor system will be followed. And any poll that has more votes than the size of the voter pool will be automatically invalid.

Maximal use to be made of text, audio and video online.

Those who donate less than $100 are donors. $100 is Member. A Member who finds at least 9 other Members is a Leader. A Leader who finds at least 9 other Leaders is a Senior Leader. The Senior Leaders are members of the Central Committee.

For Kathmandu, the concept is for the decisive street demonstration to surround the Narayanhiti.
  1. Someone willing to go out in the street for the decisive street demonstration is a Member.
  2. If a Member can get at least 9 others to come along, that person is a Leader.
  3. A Leader who can get at least 9 Leaders is a Senior Leader.
  4. A Senior Leader who can get at least 9 Senior Leaders is a Commander.
  5. A Commander who can get at least 9 Commanders is a Senior Commander.
The seven party alliance sits atop this structure.

Method: non-violence. Do not throw bricks. Win over the police. Surround the Narayanhiti with a crowd that is at least 100,000 strong, and do not leave until the goal of a democracy is achieved. The crowd to grow from 100,000 and on. No upper limit. The street demonstration should be the most sophisticated ever carried out in world history. A lot of logistical details will have to be looked into. All possible scenarios will be thought of. To lead to a unilateral declaration of a parallel government of the seven parties and/or House revival.
  1. The first draft. There is too much emphasis on screen time, the online world. There has to be a fundamental shift to face time. To target the 20,000 Nepalis in New York City. We should work on this model, report the work online, and hope to get replicated in the other cities.
  2. Fundraising. Organize house parties. Fundraisers in people's apartments. People come and eat and donate. There is some speech making. There are politial discussions.
  3. Screen time should be secondary to face time. Can we get 500 out of 20,000?
  4. Compile lists of names, phone numbers and email addresses to prepare a mega list for each city starting with New York. Most of the early work could happen over the phone.
On The Web

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ORGANIZE TO WIN - A GRASSROOTS ACTIVISTS HANDBOOK
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3-2 Books on Grassroots Action Organizing
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Environment/Grassroots Organizing
Democracy For America
2050 Grass Roots Organizing: How Can We Do It?: UUA General ...
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What We Do - Grassroots Organizing
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Grassroots - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Narayan Singh Pun, I Want Your Number

U.S. EMBASSY READY TO EVACUATION AS NEPAL'S KING PLANS FOR EXILE

February 15, 2006

KATHMANDU, NEPAL remains tense as the 7-Party agitation against the Monarchy gains strength and the Maoist continue to have success on the battle-field. Sources within the Palace report the King and his family are preparing for exile.

The recent Municipal elections proved to be a rebuff to the Nepalese King and have been denounced by the 7-Party Alliance, the Maoist, the UN and the International Community as un-democratic.

US Ambassador James Moriarty in a "Town Hall Meeting" for the American Community stressed, "the need for maps to everyone's homes", and promised GPS readings for all homes of US Citizens by February 20th.

"Things are going to get worse in the coming months so please have your "go-bag" ready so that you can evacuate in a minutes notice", the Ambassador warned and described the situation in Nepal as , "a mess and getting worse".

"The Maoist may take advantage of there being no government, and come in and take it over", cautioned the US Ambassador.

The Ambassador said the Maoist are threatening Nepalese employees of the US Gov., as well as Nepalese in US funded projects.

On February-1, 2005, King Gyanendra suspended all civil and democratic rights in Nepal and has ruled with an Iron-Fist from the throne. Journalist, peace and trade union activist, representatives of civil-society, and members and supporters of the 7-Party Alliance have been beaten, arrested, brutalized on a daily basis.

Human-Rights Organizations and the UN have condemned the Nepalese King and the RNA ( Royal Nepalese Army) for Crimes Against Humanity and demanded a return to Constitutional Democracy .

The US, a major arms supplier, and trainer of the RNA has steadfastly condemned any peace-talks between the Maoist insurgents and the 7-Party Alliance, while paying lip-service to peace.

A Senior US Military advisor, retired Army Lieutenant General Edwin P. Smith, President of the Honolulu-based Asian Pacific Center for Security Studies was rushed to Kathmandu last month to access the deteriorating situation. Without US arms and aid the Kingdom would be bankrupt. Economist estimate that after June there will be no possibility of paying civil-servants and the 150,000 strong RNA and police.

The Maoist have threatened the King with execution for, "crimes against the Nepali people".

It is not if, but when King Bir Bikhram Shah will leave the Himalayan Kingdom for exile. The major question is, will the Rana controlled RNA support the New Republic and allow the Maoist to lay down their arms and join the 7-Party Alliance in democratic elections, or will the RNA continue to suppress the democratic aspirations of the Napali people?

...........................................................................
D.MICHAEL VANDEVEER Freelance Journalist (SAJA), contributor to Pacifica's Free Speech Radio News & United We Blog (Voice of Democratic Nepal) Host OUT OF THE BOX KKCR-FM www.kkcr.org , P.O. Box:21218 Thamel, Kathmandu, Nepal.


Possible Framework For A Negotiated Resolution (February 5, 2006)
King's Peace Overture To Maoists: Fake Or Real? (December 14, 2005)
The Lake Freezes At 32 Degrees Fahrenheit Like Magic (May 26, 2005)

Minister Pun for dialogue with parties

Minister for Land Reforms and Management and president of Nepal Samata Party, Narayan Singh Pun, has said dialogue with mainstream political parties is essential for initiating peace talks with Maoist rebels.

Speaking at a face-to-face programme organised by the Reporters Club on Wednesday, Pun said, “Parliamentarian parties are the closest political forces to the government. They must support the government's roadmap to restore peace and initiate dialogue with the Maoists.”

He said he would not compromise with anybody at the cost of the multi-party democracy.

Pun, a member of government’s talks team during the last round of peace talks with the Maoists, called on the agitating political parties to join hands with the government to find a solution to the crisis facing the country.

He further said that Maoist activities were like that of a terrorist group.

Meanwhile, a meeting of the central working committee of the Nepali Congress held on Tuesday concluded that the reinstatement of parliament was only the way out of the present crisis.

A statement released after the meeting stated that all must work for re--establishment of people's sovereignty and human rights.

The party has also welcomed the decision of the Supreme Court to dissolve the Royal Commission for Corruption Control (RCCC), saying that it was a victory of people and rule of law.

Issuing a landmark verdict three days earlier, the apex court dissolved the controversial Royal Commission, declaring it as an unconstitutional body. nepalnews.com ia Feb 15 06

I am all for dialogue. The gravity of the situation demands that. I looked up the guy's phone number online. The closest I was able to get was to his ministry's barebones homepage that lists two numbers for the entire ministry. I doubt those would take you to him.

There are two things worth noting.
  1. He does intend to hold talks with the Maoists. But those have to happen second. The first round of talks will have to be with the parties. I could not agree more.
  2. He says multi-party democracy is sacrosanct. The rest is fair game. This is as open as open gets.
We have to talk to this guy. He has given ample opening. And he is in government.

I am so sick and tired of the political paralysis, I am ready for some song and dance. If the king will come around to a constituent assembly, but not to House revival, and the Koirala Congress will not budge beyond House revival, I am open to the possibility of breaking up the seven party alliance to form a six party alliance. A six party interim government will do just fine.

I am willing to go one step further. Take a conditional constituent assembly. Divorce the monarchy from politics and the army, but keep it around, the guarantee resting with the Supreme Court, while the country goes into a constituent assembly to decide on everything else, with the next paliament having the option to abolish the monarchy with 75% of the vote. Right to property is a fundamental human right, just like free speech, so he would lose the crown, but keep all his property. And if the Maoists will not come around to this idea of a conditional constituent assembly, I am open to the idea of breaking up the rather loose Maoist-Democrat alliance.

A six party interim government commanding the army that will march on to a conditional constituent assembly will be militarily stronger than the Maoists, with none of the king's utter global isolation, and with all the political capital it might need from the Nepali people. The Koirala Congress will be forced to come along and participate. If the Maoists do not do the same, they will face both national and international isolation, only this time permanently.

The 75% clause is as good as a republic. If the seven parties and the Maoists were to gang up in the next parliament, they could abolish the monarchy, if that is what they want. So anyone may be as republican as he might want to be. Just don't blame me for vacillations and your indecisions. If you can't make up your mind on if you are for a republic or what, that is your problem, not mine. I have plenty of my own.

We Want To Stop Bloodshed: Prachanda (February 6, 2005) We are talking of multiparty democracy in a specific sense, within a specific constitutional framework. We are not talking about bourgeois parliamentary democracy. This multiparty democracy will be anti-imperialist and anti-feudal. In other words, only within an anti-feudal, anti-imperialist constitutional framework is multiparty democracy possible. That is why armed struggle is also necessary, and unity in action with the other political parties against the monarchy is also a necessity. The socio-economic change we are fighting for is against feudalism and imperialism and it is within the context of that struggle that we are talking of multiparty democracy.

If it is between a conditional multi-party democracy, and a conditional constituent assembly, I'd rather have a conditional constituent assembly. What about you?

The Titanic Be Sinking, And Girija Wants To Revive The House

House revival is be all and end all to Girija and his clique. If it is between a constituent assembly and House revival, Girija would rather have House revival. If it is between peace and House revival, Girija would rather have House revival. If it is between democracy and House revival, Girija would rather have House revival. If it is between a communist republic and House revival, Girija would rather have a communist republic.

Girija has mentally not yet shifted to the constituent assembly idea, or he would not be so hung up on the House revival idea. He is in Janakpur. He says he is willing to go to Birgunj, but he would rather go to Biratnagar first. And if he can't go to Biratnagar, it does not matter to him that he might not be able to go to Birgunj. Maybe that is his way of saying he does not want to go to Birgunj. The bus needs to move without him. We can't wait forever.

In The News

Reconciliation is the only viable solution to the present crisis: Moriarty NepalNews
UML condemns bid to arrest top leaders
Three dozen seven-party leaders released
OHCHR officials meet with abducted Surya Nepal employees
NT employees gherao offices
Three army men killed in Dhurkot clash
Minister Pun for dialogue with parties
Families of disappeared people start signature campaign
Maoists disrupt drinking water supply in Dailekh: Report

US warns of Nepal Maoist takeover BBC News, UK
Rs 2 lakh spent on Nepal King's loo! Hindustan Times, India
A Royal Flush And A White Elephant MedIndia
'Nepal heading to humanitarian disaster' Expressindia.com, India
Soldiers killed by Nepal rebels Scotsman
Nepal's war leaves refugees in miserable limbo Reuters AlertNet, UK
Maoists kill 3 security men in Nepal Times of India, India
Three government officials abducted in Nepal NewKerala.com
Nepal fails to clear $26.5mn arms dues to India Times of India, India
India suspends USD 28 mn excise duty refund to Nepal Press Trust of India
Surya Nepal Abductees in good health: OHCHR Nepaleyes, Nepal
Nepal's government frees dozens of political prisoners, including ... San Diego Union Tribune, United States
US Warns Nepal About Standoff Durant Daily Democrat, OK
Nepal's Maoists need to back up rhetoric: rights group Tehran Times, Iran
Nepal – Visitors are advised to avoid travelling Asian Tribune, Thailand
India suspends USD 28 million excise duty refund to Nepal Zee News, India
Nepal police hunt for two senior Oppn leaders Zee News, India
Bangladesh's microcredit fights poverty best The Daily Star, Bangladesh

Visitors

15 February09:02Communications and communicate, Nepal
15 February09:54Bharti Enterprises, India
15 February10:41Indiana University, Bloomington, United States
15 February10:52Miami University, Oxford, United States
15 February11:02Northeastern University, Boston, United States

15 February11:10Beaumont, United States (lamar.edu)
15 February11:22HCL Comnet, India
15 February12:27Google Inc., Mountain View, United States
15 February13:03Univ. of Science Technology, Trondheim, Norway

15 February13:21Florida Inf. Resource Network, Tallahassee, United States
15 February14:04Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, United States
15 February14:07CTX Mortgage Company, Dallas, United States
15 February14:24Hawaiian Telcom Services Company, Inc., United States

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

संघीय गणतन्त्र


गणतन्त्र भनेकै स्वाभाविक रुपले लोकतान्त्रिक हुन्छ। बरफलाई चीसो बरफ भनिरहनु पर्दैन। त्यसैले अब लोकतान्त्रिक गणतन्त्र भन्न छाडेर यस आन्दोलनले संघीय गणतन्त्रको नारा अंगीकार गर्ने बेला आएको छ। नेपाल जस्तो सांस्कृतिक विविधता भएको देशलाई एकतावद्ध बनाउने एक मात्र उपाय संघीय सरकार हो। अहिले संघीय गणतन्त्रको नारा अंगीकार गर्न नसक्ने पार्टीले दुई अथवा चार अथवा छ महिनापछि अंगीकार गर्ला भन्ने मलाई विश्वास छैन। जनताको अधिकारकालागि लड्न तयार छु भन्नेहरुले यदि संघीय सरकारको महत्वलाई बुझ्न सक्दैनन् भने कुन जनताकालागि लडेको भनेर सोध्नुपर्ने हुन्छ।

राजाको शक्ति लुछेर २०४६ सालमा जस्तै आफुले लिने भन्ने दिवास्वप्न बोकेका उपल्ला जात भनाउँदाका पहाडीहरुले चिन्तन मनन गर्ने बेला यही हो। त्यो जमाना गयो, अब नया नेपालको निर्माण हुन लागेको छ, त्यसमा सामाजिक न्याय हुनेछ, मधेशीहरु दोस्रो दर्जाका नागरिक भएर बस्ने जमाना गयो, एउटा नया पुस्ताको जन्म भएको छ भनेर थाहा पाउने बेला आएको छ।

संघीय सरकारको अवधारणा अंगीकार नगर्ने कुनै पनि पार्टीले आफुलाई राष्ट्रिय पार्टी नभने पनि हुन्छ। २०४६ सालको आन्दोलनको पहिलो शहीद धनुषाको यदुकुहा गाउँमा भएको हो। नेपालको इतिहासकै सबैभन्दा ठूलो आमसभा हालै जनकपुरमा भयो। त्यस अनुसार त नेपालको राजधानी सारेर काठमाण्डुबाट जनकपुर पुर्याइनुपर्ने हो आन्दोलनपछि।

सत्तामा एकक्षत्र रजाइँ गर्दा भारतसँग नाना थरिका असमान संधि गर्ने आफु, ए भारतले पेल्यो हे, यो मधेशीहरु त कामै नलाग्ने जन्तु पो रहेछन् हे भन्दै उल्टै सयौं वर्षदेखि मधेशीहरुलाई मान्छे पनि नगन्ने पहाडीहरुको जमाना सकियो। रामायणमा राजा पृथ्वीको नाम छैन तर राजा जनकको नाम छ। यो मुलुक मधेशीहरुले साना दुखले आर्ज्या मुलुक होइन। यो लोकतन्त्र मधेशीहरुले साना दुखले आर्ज्या लोकतन्त्र हुने छैन। जसले मह काढ्छ उसले हात चाट्छ।

मधेशीहरुको महानता यो हो कि मधेशीहरु बदलाको भावनाकासाथ बोलिरहेका छैनन्। सामाजिक न्याय बदलाको होइन, लोकतन्त्रको भाषा हो। तर बुझ्नुपर्ने कुरा के हो भने संघीय सरकार बिनाको लोकतन्त्रको कल्पना गर्नेहरुले लोकतन्त्र के हो भनेर नबुझेको भन्ने स्पष्ट प्रमाणित हुन्छ। राजाले लोकतन्त्र त मैले पनि बुझें, लोकतन्त्रमा त चुनाव हुने रैछ ए भने जस्तो हुन्छ।

नबुझ्नेहरु छन्, बुझ पचाउने पनि छन्। ती दुवै थरिले लोकतन्त्रको ट्युशन पढ्ने बेला यही हो, लोकतन्त्र आएपछि अथवा संविधान सभाको घोषणा भएपछि होइन। नबुझ्ने र बुझ पचाउनेहरुको नेतृत्वमा न त संविधान सभा आउँछ न त लोकतन्त्र।

सामाजिक न्यायको मुद्दा कवि लेखनाथ पौडेलले भने जस्तै "टारेर टर्दैन त्यो।" सामाजिक न्यायको मुद्दामा व्यापक बहस हुनुले आन्दोलनलाई कमजोर होइन मजबुत बनाउँछ। लोकतन्त्र भनेकै समानता हो। सामाजिक न्याय नहुनु असमानता हो। चीसो नभएको बरफ होइन, तातो नभएको आगो होइन, सामाजिक न्याय नभएको लोकतन्त्र होइन। यो आन्दोलन पहाडीहरुले लोकतन्त्र प्रति आफ्नो प्रतिबद्धता व्यक्त गर्न पाउने स्वर्ण अवसर हो।

अन्तरिम सरकारको प्रधान मंत्री अथवा उप प्रधान मंत्री मधेशी हुनुपर्छ।

कांग्रेसले रोज्नुपर्ने बाटो
अहिंसाका प्रश्न
डा बाबुराम भट्टराईलाई शान्तिको सन्देश
डा बाबुराम भट्टराई: आन्दोलनको उत्कर्ष र त्रस्त सत्ता
मधेशी अधिकारको कुरामा पहाडीहरुको सहभागीता
प्रवासी नेपाली: "नैतिक समर्थन कायम राख्दै भौतिक समर्थन थप्ने।"
भूपि शेरचन, गोपालप्रसाद रिमाल, प्रवर जिसी
मधेशी पहचान
देशव्यापी पम्फलेटिङ
प्रहार गरिहालौं
अइ आन्दोलनमें मधेशी अधिकारके बात
लोकतान्त्रिक गणतन्त्र नै किन?
चुनाव बहिष्कार बाहेक विकल्प छैन: सात दल

Visitors

14 February21:01University of New Hampshire, Durham, United States
14 February22:58Internet Thailand Co. Ltd., Thailand
14 February23:22Nepal (wlink.com.np)
14 February23:36Telekom Malaysia Berhad, Malaysia
14 February23:50Ameritech, Indianapolis, United States

On The Web

Democracy For Nepal (DFN): Madhesi
Democracy For Nepal (DFN): PCP: Pahadi Chauvinist Pig
Maithili Net
madhesi : Madhesi
The Rising Nepal
Social Science Baha - Nepal Tari Conference
Chiyapasal - Dainiki
eKantipur.com - Nepal's No.1 News Portal
SINHAS
democracy
Madhesi Jagaran
The Rising Nepal
Article
South Asian Media Net
Samudaya.org: “Maybe Gulf countries are better, but never Malaysia ...

In The News


Appeal to release civil servants Gorkhapatra, Nepal
Election campaign intensifies Gorkhapatra, Nepal
Fear Grips Families of Poll Candidates Himalayan Times, Nepal
Dipta Shah is for February 8 Polls, I am against Samudaya.org, AZ
All necessary arrangement made for polls in Gulariya Gorkhapatra, Nepal

Activism And Entrepreneurship


The Nepal movement is a career move for me. I have been presenting Nepal as the Democrats' answer to Iraq for 2006 and 2008 in the US.

Your Many Identities
Blogalaxy For Global Democracy
Money, Message, Organization
"Robin Hood Im Internet"

2/1 sucked me in, true. I did not plan to get sucked in. But 2/1 hit me on the head. I had not realized how bad things had gotten in Nepal. 2/1 also helped me discover I cared about Nepal more deeply than I had so far known.

When I moved to New York City last summer, I did so to cultivate some of my business ideas. But instead I have been doing Nepal work full time, more than full time. I don't even take weekends off. I sleep till late though. Mornings are weekends.

My Nepal work tells me I am cut for political work, not business. But then the boundary is not obvious. It is possible to jump around. You can not separate the market from the democratic process. One can not be imagined without the other. The haat bazar in your village is the market in action.

I have been eating into my savings. That is something by definition you can not do forever. So I have been thinking of ways to make money. I don't much enjoy spending money. My needs are few. I have deliberately kept my costs low. And so I crunched a few numbers.

Say if 1,000 people were to visit this blog every week and click on an image ad when they do so, and if each such click were to bring me 20 cents, do the maths. You are looking at 200,00 cents is $200. Four of those a month, and my bills are paid.

I am the only Nepali in the diaspora I know of who has been doing this Nepal work full time. If I were your MP in Nepal, you would be paying my salary. Maybe not out of your pocket or your immediate family budget, but indirectly you would. Think of me as your MP, visit my blog, and click on the ads. That is the least you can do. Don't you think? You can click from anywhere in the world.

Word of mouth is the best advertising. Pass on the blog to people you know who have not yet heard of it.

I have also been building a mailing list. It is 400 strong now. I am hoping it will be 2,000 strong by the end of April, something like that. If you are not signed up yet, go to the bottom of this page and sign up.

Google Video will also make pay per view possible, and then I hope to have my own online talk show. Pay per view. But Google is not there yet.

Say I put out a clip that is 30 minutes long, and I charge 50 cents, and I get 100 views over a week, and I put out two such clips a week. I am looking at 100,00 cents. That is $100. Four times that is $400 a month. 500 views and you are looking at $2,000 a month. That is an up and running talk show.

I am ready, Google is not.

Date: Wed, 15 Feb 2006 08:43:52 -0800
From: "Google Video Support" video-support@google.com
To: paramendra@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [#46813418]

Hi,

Thanks for your interest in selling your videos through Google Video. At this time, we are testing our purchase feature with a select group of Video providers. We are unable to add more sellers at this time.

Please note, you may still set a purchase price for your video; however, your video will only be stored in your account and won't be displayed on Google Video. If you'd like to display your video, you must offer your content for free to all users.

Once this feature is released, you will be notified with further requirements and information on how to accept payments. We are unable to provide a specific date as to when this feature will become available, however, we hope to make this feature available to the public soon. Please check back for more updates.

Sincerely,

The Google Video Team

1

I also have a PayPal button, and today I added an Amazon button. But so far I have not received any donations. People have been reading my blog entries on the cheap. That adds to my public service credentials, sure, but that does not help in the bills department.

I have yet to prove myself. And I did not exactly plan this. But the numbers look good. I think I have bumped into a sound business model.

I have also been trying to help turn Mero Sansar and Blogger Nepal into full fledged businesses. Don't get me wrong. Those guys were there before I showed up. And they were already doing a few things. I have just tried to help take them to the next level so they are doing their work standing on their own two feet.

Umesh, Turn It Into A Business

Some suggestions I have made. Some have been implemented, some are in the works. And Umesh and I are both desperately waiting for Google Video pay per view to become possible. When that happens, Umesh becomes rich. That is my prediction.

Donate. Do it. Go to their blogs and donate. These two offer audio and video and raw stuff you can not get anywhere else. PayPal and Moneygram come in handy.

Google ads, Bidvertiser and Yahoo are other options. Display ads. Local ads can also be sought like some of the other Nepali sites do.

Google Groups allows you to create a mailing list for your blog. I have recommended it to them.

I have also suggested they reorganize the layout of their blogs.

Seeking sponsors is another idea. For equipment, for broadband. Some of them might like getting displayed at the blog as sponsors.

But for the short term, they rely primarily on donations. So go donate. Help the cause.

In The News

No Compromise With Values Of Democracy: Deuba Kantipur Publications
India withholds Rs 2b dues it owes to Nepal
115 political detainees released
SC moved to release NC spokesperson
Moriarty meets Koirala, Thapa
Govt deregulates retail prices of petrol, diesel
शाही घोषणाको नैतिक आधार सकिएको छ’
सशस्त्रद्वारा एमाले मुख्यालय घेराउ
भारतले दुई अर्ब भुक्तानी रोक्यो
नवनिर्वाचित मेयर बहिष्कृत
उर्लंदो जनसागरको भुमरी
सकियो निर्वाचनको नाटक
एकै दिन तीन ठाउँमा आक्रमण
माओवादी धरापमा सेना
प्रत्यक्ष अन्तर्वार्ताको अन्तरकथा
माओवादी

Visitors

14 February16:41Maroc Telecom, Morocco
14 February17:15Hampden-Sydney College, United States
14 February17:30University of Illinois, Urbana, United States
14 February17:32CTX Mortgage Company, Dallas, United States
14 February17:54Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, United States
14 February18:18Michigan State University, United States
14 February20:00United States Army, United States
14 February20:20NetCologne, Germany
14 February20:32United States Army, United States
14 February20:35Dallas/Fort Worth Airport, Dallas, United States
14 February20:42San Francisco State University, San Francisco, United States

Your Many Identities


There is talk of launching a new organization to provide some major logistical support to the movement in Nepal. I am all for it. But the task of organizing Nepalis in New York City and possibly in other major cities brings forth other immediate questions.

What about the political plight of the Nepalis in America, in New York City? Do Nepalis experience equality in New York City? The US ambassador to Nepal talks of human rights in Nepal, and I am glad for it. Why does not the Nepali ambassador to the US bring up the topic of police brutality in the US, in New York City? Why the double standards?

Why do taxpaying noncitizens not have voting rights? After all America was founded on the slogan no taxation without representation. Fernando Ferrer brought this up when he ran for Mayor of New York City. He is Hispanic.

The democracy theme has many layers to it. The message applies to Nepal as well to America. The message is of peace and equality. The message is of dignity and pride. You organize to achieve them when you don't have them.

This is also about the social dynamics among the Nepalis in the US. What about the tendency towards Madhesi marginalization? What about the distrust towards ethnic solidarity as expressed by the various Janajati groups? What about women's issues? I have heard of at least one South Asian network that reaches out to the battered South Asian wives. By extension that has got to be a problem also among Nepalis? Has that been pushed beneath the carpet so far? These social issues have to be faced by the diaspora because they are going to be some of the most challenging issues in the constituent assembly. There is no escaping the challenge.

Identities are social, cultural, political constructs. So when you talk of the attack on the Madhesi identity, it does not come only from the Pahadis. Madhesis themselves suffer from much self hate. Pahadis on the other hand have not advanced on to claim their larger identities, namely the Desi, Asian and non-White identies, without which genuine empowerment within the American context might not be possible. The anti-Indian sentiment that the Pahadis heap upon the Madhesis in Nepal gets in the way of their claiming the Desi identity in America. The attitude problems that come with growing up high caste Pahadi male in Nepal lead many of them to subscribe to the ugliest anti-black stories and stereotypes when they themselves are squarely non-White.

Self hate is at least half the battle when it comes to prejudice, discrimination and racism. The self hate among the Madhesis in the Nepali context is the same self hate among the Pahadis in the larger American context. There is a refusal to accept the identity that is yours. There is a resistance to claiming and taking pride in the identities. There is a resistance to coalition building.

People with advanced degrees who work below minimum wage jobs, how much better off would they be if they could also vote, if they could access credit and start small businesses of their own?

Identity has to be about positive pride in who you are and what groups you belong to. It does not have to be about exclusion. The rights one can earn is not eating into the political space of other individuals and groups. There is room for everybody. But that space has to be claimed. Rights have to be earned. That is where organizing comes in.

So if Nepalis organize to aid the democracy movement in Nepal more effectively, this is not exactly social service. This is very much self-interest.

In The News

Nepal situation "very, very serious": Commonwealth NepalNews
Local authorities release 115 detainees
Deuba says he is concerned about democracy, not the king
India to step up vigil along the border
Former PM Deuba, Singh released
10 years of Maoist insurgency costs over 13000 lives
Air fare to increase by 17 percent
NOC empowers private sector to fix retail prices of petro-products
US envoy Moriarty meets NC Chief Koirala
Newly elected representatives of KMC assume office
The DV lottery: A fantastic dream or an unexpected nightmare? Sheela Tripathee

Nepal's meaningless poll exercise Asian Tribune, Thailand
Nepal frees 43 rights activists, student leaders and political ...
CBC News, Canada
'No role for Nepal king' Gulf Daily News
Supreme Court Deals Blow to King's Rule in Nepal Voice of America
'Nepal situation very, very serious'
Times of India, India
Is China changing its stance towards Nepal? Newindpress
Chinese leader's stalled trip leaves Nepal agog Webindia123
Nepal students appeal to Kofi Annan to investigate killings by arm
Webindia123, India

Visitors

13 February13:23Sri Lanka Telecom, Sri Lanka
13 February13:27MCI, Fairfax Station, United States
13 February14:05Bharti Enterprises, India
13 February14:07University of Colorado, Denver, United States
13 February15:44Tele Danmark, Denmark
13 February17:01San Francisco State University, San Francisco, United States
13 February19:0088.144.13.x
13 February19:08University of Missouri, Columbia, United States
13 February19:17CTX Mortgage Company, Dallas, United States
13 February19:58Harvard University, Cambridge, United States
13 February20:10Harvard University, Cambridge, United States
13 February21:15TT&T, Thailand
13 February21:37Telstra Big Pond Internet Services, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
14 February04:00Department of State, Washington, D.C., United States
14 February04:03Department of State, Washington, D.C., United States
14 February04:49D. E. Shaw & Co., New York, United States
14 February05:05ONPT, Morocco
14 February05:28GaTel GmbH, München, Germany
14 February06:08Interbusiness/Telecom Italia, Italy
14 February06:57Tele Danmark, Denmark
14 February07:02Mahanagar Telephone Nigam, India
14 February08:04Primus Telecommunications, Australia
14 February10:25Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, United States
14 February11:20Sri Lanka Telecom, Sri Lanka


14 February12:03Biogen Inc., United States
14 February12:10Powys County Council, Llandrindod Wells, United Kingdom
14 February12:38University of Illinois, Urbana, United States


14 February13:13Tiscali, United Kingdom
14 February13:15MTU Intel, Russia
14 February13:38Tertiary Education Network, South Africa

Monday, February 13, 2006

Bravo Supreme Court


The Supreme Court has taken a major decision and stood on the side of democracy and rule of law. It has dismantled the illegitimate RCCC. But this is only the first step. Every other step taken by this regime since 2/1 has to be similary challenged and dismantled. Ultimately 2/1 itself has to be challenged and dismantled.

The Supreme Court has it within its powers to avoid unnecessary turmoil in the country. The people already fought in 1990. They should not have to fight again. And if the 1990 constitution be inadequate, as I strongly believe it is, it is sufficient to move from the 1990 constitution itself to the next constitution.

But 2/1 hijacked that 1990 constitution. There is no provision whatsoever in the 1990 constitution to turn the crown into the king, the president, the prime minister and demigod all in one.

RCCC was unconstitutional, and so was 2/1.

The democratic forces have to be put back into power so they can walk down their succinct roadmap to the constituent assembly.

The Supreme Court has it within its powers to avoid turmoil and possible bloodshed in the country. And it needs to be using those powers. Or the dictum of rule of law will ring hollow. The concept of democracy is being tested. The concept of rule of law is being tested. If there is rule of law in Nepal, as the Supreme Court claims there is, as the 1990 constitution claims there is, then that rule of law should be sufficient to prevent autocracy, that should be enough to push back any attempts at autocracy.

Rule of law and democracy mean people do not have to go out into the streets in large numbers to keep reminding they are the real owners of the country.

The Supreme Court has taken the first step in the right direction. Will it take more steps in the same direction? That is the question.

RCCC Out, RPP Split


These are signs the regime's days are numbered. I would not be awfully happy now if I were the king. The king has defended the RCCC nonstop. Now he needs to resign on moral grounds. That is how democracies work. This Supreme Court verdict is proof the king does not have any grasp of the 1990 constitution.

Human Rights And The Supreme Court

The various human rights organizations can at best make some noise on the issue. But it is the Supreme Court's supreme duty to protect human rights, and it has the powers to do so. The Supreme Court has no more important responsibility than to protect human rights in Nepal.

It needs to order all political prisoners released unconditionally and without delay. It needs to warn the government not to curb the people's fundamental right to peaceful assembly.

All political leaders need to be released immediately.

Order The King To Step Down

The Supreme Court needs to order the king to step down. The 1990 constitution at best makes him a constitutional monarch. He has not been that. He has stepped out of his bounds. The Supreme Court needs to order him to step back. The king has the protections and privileges granted by the 1990 constitution only as long as he stays within that constitution. And it is for the Supreme Court to make sure he stays within. If he steps out, he is on his own.

The People Own The Supreme Court

All the Supreme Court justices are on the people'a payroll because the people own the judiciary, just like they own all branches of government. The Supreme Court only answers to the people through the realm of rule of law.

The people have been robbed of their sovereignty by 2/1, something that was guaranteed to them by the 1990 constitution. Such a flagrant violation can not be tolerated.

Article 127 does not allow for 2/1, and if it does, the 1990 constitution is not a democratic constitution. And if the 1990 constitution is not democratic, it is illegitimate, and if it is illegitimate, the Supreme Court is also illegitimate along with the monarchy. So it is either that or the Supreme Court act to restore the sovereignty where it belongs to prove the 1990 constitution is democratic.

Global Voices

Money Needed For Movement

Photos

Delhi Mass Meeting: A Photo Report INSN
DC Rally

In The News

Supreme Court orders dissolution of RCCC; Deuba to be released NepalNews A five-member special bench of SC justices Kedar Prasad Giri, Min Bahadur Rayamajhi, Ram Nagina Singh, Anup Raj Sharma and Ram Prasad Shrestha decided to dissolve the RCCC formed after last year’s February 1 royal move........ the formation of the anti-graft body was unconstitutional as it contradicted with Articles 83 (3), 84, 85, 88 (3), 89, 105 (7) and 127 of the Constitution of the Kingdom (1990)....... also ordered to annul all the actions and decisions taken by the Royal Commission ........ Advocate Santosh Kumar Mahato had on 10th August 2005 filed a writ petition at the SC challenging the constitutionality of the commission. ......... has nixed the constitutionality of the February 1 royal move as such....... “The Supreme Court has given its verdict in favour of the constitution. Now the royal move itself has lost all constitutional excuses” ........ “Today’s verdict has proved that the Supreme Court is a responsible interpreter of the constitution. The verdict is in favour of the constitution and the rule of law.” .......
Election to Constituent Assembly could end conflict: leaders
We are ready to accept any result of the constituent assembly: Prachanda
15 student leaders freed
NT workers demand pre-paid phone resumption
Government release 55 people including 23 professionals
IMF asks government to restore peace
FNJ calls Maoists to honour press freedom
Meeting Prachanda The BBC's Charles Haviland finds Maoist leader more humorous than intimidating. BBC
The 52-year-old man I met, with his speckled beard, was mild-mannered, shy, joking, laughing nervously - more humorous than intimidating and without the overt charisma of some revolutionary leaders....... looked more like a popular uncle than a communist who has been underground since 1981 ...... His number two, Baburam Bhattarai, with a cloth cap and eagle eyes, and flanking Prachanda, looked much more revolutionary........ It was as if the words were inside him, waiting to be forcefully expelled...... Much of the Maoists' behaviour nowadays is pragmatic rather than ideological ...... his statements that the Maoists now accept multi-party democracy; that they are unlikely to try to take Kathmandu by force; that a future government involving them could work with America, and that if there can be elections to a constituent assembly, the Maoists are ready to "call off the war"....... Prachanda said the king might face a future of exile or even trial at what he called a People's Court, leading to possible execution...... Nepal has in any case abolished capital punishment. ....... Before the king seized political power a year ago, the Maoists used to say they would only talk to the palace, as the centre of real power....... any permanent unilateral ceasefire, building on their recently expired temporary one, would under present conditions amount to surrender...... his party is a long way from abandoning its violent practices.......the Maoists were "investigating" the shooting of a municipal election candidate and the killing of a taxi driver during a Maoist general shutdown......... Prachanda said that although there were ideological ties, his party did not believe in exporting revolution, despite its affiliation with the Revolutionary International Movement - an umbrella body dedicated to spreading communism......... "Ideologically we want to move the global revolution forward but in practical terms we do not believe one country's army should go to another country and fight for it." ....... Prachanda's vision of a future Nepal is one he says is already being built, eroding class, caste and gender barriers...... Prachanda, like Baburam Bhattarai, is a revolutionary to the core. At one point he said to Dr Bhattarai that he wished we would ask some ideological questions......... his rhetoric is still fiery.
Prachanda interview: Transcript
It is not like the American vision where there would be a river of blood. We want to conquer Kathmandu with the people's rebellion..... we like the political solution better. And we are working towards it....... we are ready to have a political competition with the parties ...... And since we have said that we'd go for a peaceful election of the constituent assembly, we're ready to follow whatever the verdict of the people is........ We have stated this over and over again. We'll accept the people's verdict....... But we believe that the people's version will be for a democratic republic...... And we have committed to accept multi-party competition....... Gyanendra-ism and his feudalistic clique will certainly be destroyed. ....... an army loyal to a medieval royalty ..... the royal army, who have been oppressing Nepali people for 237 years, and are loyal to a small clique, who have no loyalty to respect for democratic ideology - that army has to be dismantled. ...... We are not standing in the way of a peaceful solution. It is the King and his royal army. Even within the royal army, we do not believe that the lower cadres and officials of the army want the war to go on. It is a small clique of generals who belong to the feudalistic privileged class, the Rana and Shah clans of Nepal; they want this war to go on........ But what we feel till now, and what experience has shown us, is that America does not work for the improvement of people anywhere. It works only for itself. It works for the benefit of the ruling class, the capitalists within America....... If the so-called current government sitting in Kathmandu, the clique of feudal, privileged class - as long as they exist, there is no question of us working with America or any other country. After this clique is dismantled, once there is people's government - a democratic and progressive government - that government will be ready to work with any country around the world......... We do not have a working relationship with the Maoists [in India]. ......... Ideologically we do want there to be a revolution in the USA and even in your UK, and that the working classes should rule......... It's been well established that no government anywhere has financially supported our revolution and nor have they supported us in material or military ways....... This revolution has been supported purely by Nepali people......... We certainly have said that dirty and vulgar materials and literature from America or cheap and dirty literature from India should be banned....... You won't find exploitation and injustice in villages, such as discrimination against dalits [the lowest castes]. And the practice of "untouchability" has ended........once the war is over, we believe that we can move forward and develop economically or otherwise at a very fast pace........ the right to rebellion by the oppressed is a human right. There are no greater human rights than the people's right to fight for their rights.......... We do not even train children below 16 years old as militia....... when there is a cessation of war, our People's Liberation Army works in the fields of people, they work as labourers to build roads for people........ I think you probably don't know this, but after that incident at Madi when there was an explosion on the bus, we were shocked beyond words....... Our party workers who were involved in it, they were expelled from the party and the army, and the report on how this expulsion was carried out was given to the UN.......... we did not have a policy of physically harming any candidate.... - in Janakpur - where a local worker of the party took responsibility for the killing. We are investigating this......... We are investigating on the incident of Janakpur and this has been informed to the United Nations Human Rights office. That is why there is no difference between what we say and what we do...... As soon as the people are given the right to decide of their own fate and of their own future, we will be ready to lay down our arms. But if the people are not given their rights, we are committed to and are ready to fight till the end...... as soon as there is a possibility of preparing a new constitution through a constituent assembly, and form a new army, we are ready to call off the war........ Three years ago, at a Central Committee meeting of our party, analyzing the experiences from 20th century communist states, we put forward a proposal for the development of democracy... In the 21st century we cannot have a state like those of the 20th century..... there should be peaceful competition between all political parties against feudalism and foreign imperialist forces...... multi-party competition [should exist] as long as it's against feudalism, against foreign imperialistic interference and all political parties can compete against each other........ Our opponents have understood us in a dogmatic way. We are not dogmatic but our opponents are. They are looking at us with 20th Century glasses. But we are already moving into the 21st Century......... we have taken the experience of an entire century, discussed it, analyzed it in our party, and we've come to a conclusion that the development of democracy is necessary in the 21st Century........ Our movement is not for me to be the head of state....... the development of ideology which would globally uplift and give rights to the working class - our focus is on developing that ideology....... I have not been underground from the people. I am only underground from the feudalistic elements and its royal army. In villages where people are free, I stay freely too. I meet my family, my children and my wife......... I believe that in a short while, Nepal will be a democratic republic....... The king I think will either be executed by the people's court or he might be exiled. ..... The king might be finished or he might flee...... there should be free and fair elections for the new constitution, and the compromise would happen when everyone is ready to follow the verdict of this election...... But time has moved forward... The king doesn't have that space now....... the drama of the so-called municipal elections - the whole world saw it as the eighth wonder of the world.........now the path the king has taken, there is no space for compromise with him........ after the steps he has taken between 1 February and now, we don't see any space for compromise....... the path that he has taken is the road to hell.......the agenda that the king is moving with, he is negating the possibility of compromise.......

Viewpoints: 'What I want for Nepal' BBC News, UK
King to go, Nepal rebel says International Herald Tribune
Nepal's king faces exile or execution: Maoist chief Reuters
Maoists explode bomb in front of police office in Nepal capital
Monsters and Critics.com, UK
Victory in Nepal is within our grasp, say Maoist rebels Independent
In Nepal a human life is worth Rs 1.5 lac, but King’s loo comes ... NewKerala.com
Nepal SC orders dissolution of anti-graft body
Xinhua, China
IMF asks Nepal to restore peace
Xinhua, China
Amnesty Calls for Urgent Action in Nepal
OhmyNews International, South Korea
Review Nepal's participation in UN peace keeping: Amnesty Intl Webindia123
Human rights situation in Nepal worst in the world: Amnesty Press Trust of India
Foreign Lady’s Body Found in Nagarjun Forest NewsLine Nepal
Death toll reaches 18 in western Nepal clash
Xinhua, China
Guerrillas kidnap 151 civilians in mid-western Nepal Xinhua
Make peace the sole agenda of Nepal's foreign policy: Dr Thapa
Nepaleyes, Nepal
Foreign criticism welcome in modern diplomacy: Dr Thapa Kantipur Online
Visitors

13 February04:13Wanadoo Nederland BV, Netherlands, The
13 February04:55Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd, Mumbai Bombay, India
13 February05:08Hokkaido University, Japan
13 February05:13Blueyonder, Edinburgh, United Kingdom


13 February05:26ONPT, Morocco
13 February05:32Leibniz-Rechenzentrum der Bayerischen Akademie, München, Germany
13 February06:11ONPT, Morocco
13 February06:26Ireland (rtc-cork.ie)
13 February06:33Software Technology Parks of India, Bangalore, India
13 February06:54NextGenTel AS, Norway
13 February07:25Linkserve, Nigeria
13 February07:30DrukNet System, Bhutan
13 February08:16Pacific Century Matrix, Hong Kong S.A.R.
13 February08:27D. E. Shaw & Co., New York, United States
13 February09:23Chello, Sweden
13 February09:39University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa
13 February10:17Telenet, Belgium
13 February10:20Univ. of Science Technology, Trondheim, Norway