Friday, April 07, 2006

Constituent Assembly: 300 Seats Of Roughly Equal Population


"There is no logic to supporting the King," Richard Boucher, the United Statets undersecretary of state for south Asia told reporters in the Indian capital, New Delhi, this afternoon. "He has done a travesty to democracy."
There are people who claim the idea of a constituent assembly is too vague. It is not vague at all. This is what I propose.
  1. Divide the country into 300 constituencies of roughly equal population. The population of the largest may not be more than 5% of the smallest.
  2. Disregard all political boundaries when drawing the constituencies. It is okay to cross district boundaries, for example.
  3. Make the constituencies the shape of either a circle or a square, or close proximations. No rectangles, no funny figures.
  4. And then hold elections. Each participating party must present a program as to their vision of a future constitution.
  5. The whole process should not take more than six months, and then another six months to draft a new constitution and subject it to a referendum.
  6. Before the elections are held, the all party interim government will be in place.
  7. Then there will be an elected government.
  8. After a new constitution has been accepted by the people, that assembly will dissolve, and will be succeeded by yet another all party government which will hold elections for the parliament under the new constitution.
  9. Then we are back on track.
  10. Nothing complicated at all.
Heck. If we could end up with 300 such constituencies, we might not even need the federalism that I have proposed in my Proposed Republican Constitution 2006.

There would be only three layers: the federal, the district, and the town/village. The head of state would still be directly elected. But I kind of like the three state idea, though. Kosi, Gandaki, Karnali. Someone would probably have to prove themselves as Governor of one of the three states before they would run for President. With three states, the federal governemnt could become an extrovert. Nepal could finally end up having some foreign policy of the activist kind.

In short, a constituent assembly is not complicated at all. Autocracy is complicated. Dictatorship is complicated. Democracy is easy.

Tactical Republican

Immediately after 2/1 I reached out to Dr. Baburam Bhattarai suggesting a common minimum program of a democratic republic. Then three months later after the king let the emergency expire, I eased a little. Over the next few months I tried to chalk up a proposed constitution that had room also for the king. I handed a copy of that to Sharad Chandra Shaha in person in New York City.

After the king wasted the four month long ceasefire by the Maoists, I went back to being a republican. And that is where I stand today. Although there was this brief period where I toyed with the idea of a conditional constituent assembly.

A lot of my friends have been unhappy I have not been republican in, republican out. I am happy for those political purists. They are ideological republicans. I have been a tactical republican. At least I have been transparent, and all my footprints are here at this blog.

I think my way is more productive though. A tactical republican is more likely to tilt the balance towards the republican idea than an ideological one. You are in a better position to carry people along.

Now I am at a point where even after the seven party alliance secures a constituent assembly, I am going to campaign and work for the idea of a republic within that assembly idea. I expect to be very involved all the way.

Astronomers, Stars

The journalist Martina Butler who interviewed me for German Public Radio a few days back asked me where I got my information. I said I have many sources, but primarily I get it all online. I also get some through email, phone calls, personal contacts, in person meetings, events.
We have never been to Mars, but we have a pretty good idea of that planet. And Nepal is no Mars for me. I grew up there. I gave a few years of my life to a political party in Nepal before I came to the US for college. I have been reading Nepal news on a near daily basis my entire time in the US. Especially after 2/1 I have been totally sucked in. And especially after my move to New York City last summer, I have done little else besides Nepal.

I am not physically there, but I have a pretty good idea. I read a lot. I am in the know. I am also in the loop. This blog gets read by a lot of key people in the democracy movement. I know that.

If this blog gets 200 or 300 page hits, that does not look like much. But to me it feels like I get to address a small political crowd that big every day. Now that is remarkable. Especially if that is the crowd of movers and shakers.

This blog is not journalism. This is political work. This is a new kind of politics.

Revolution

The news from Nepal is good. People are out there. A few days back I wrote to some friends saying for the first time I was feeling a little nervous, a little jittery. I guess I was worried for the people who were going to brave the streets. Some would lose lives. Many would get beaten up. Many more will get jailed.

That sense of caution is still there, but by now I am much more optimistic as well.

The movement is on. That message is loud and clear.

Martial Law, Not An Option

Kamal Thapa and the king do not have that option. If they go for that, they are going to get deposed in a coup. The army is not the monolithic they imagine. The top brass mean only so much. This is no Pakistan.

For Kamal Thapa it is a choice between going to jail for a few years or going to jail for life. If I were him, I would watch my mouth.

Madhav Nepal, March 1

On March 1, Madhav Nepal showed up on my computer screen just like that. I was so totally not expecting that.

I posted the transcript of that chat at this blog a few days back. I felt it would help the cause.

He was under house arrest at that time. He had somehow managed to get internet access. I think he might have arranged to have it wireless.

What can I say? I was touched.

There is no way in hell I am going to forget that Madhav Nepal is in jail right now. It is more than jail. I think he has been sent off to some jungle, some kind of an army barrack.

This revolution does not need a king, does not need any dialogue. This revolution is sufficient unto itself.

BBC

BBC is more famous in Nepal and India than any other news service, especially true when I was growing up. I think I am about to go talk on BBC. And this is not BBC Nepali Service, this is the BBC World Service, so a much larger audience.

Anu Anand and Peter Van Dyk are at the other end of the line.

My youngest sister who lives in the city called me earlier excitedly. BBC is huge. My family is going to love this.

That and this will also help the movement. All air time on BBC is good. Anu, Peter, you have both my numbers!

India, US, Europe: Look The Devil In The Eye

The major democracies of the world have been playing a commendable role since 2/1. Lately even Japan has spoken right. Usually Japan tries hard to stay neutral. Even China opened its mouth supporting reconciliation. So, yes, thanks.

But these are not normal times. What is going on in Nepal is state terrorism. The April 6-9 protests are proof if any were ever needed that we have fascists in power in Nepal.

It is time for the global powers to speak up loud and clear. It is time for some action. It is time to kick ass.

Crime, Organized Crime, Terrorism, State Terrorism


When Bobby Kennedy became Attorney General, to his dismay he realized his department could go after people who committed specfic acts of crime like murder, or kidnapping, but the big mafia bosses who were the real powers behind those acts were not officially recognized to exist. My point being, there is crime and there is organized crime. Tackling organized crime is the bigger challenge. If you let organized crime run amok, and only go after specific acts of crime, you would be fighting a losing battle. But if you go after organized crime in a sophisticated way, individual acts of crime and petty crime are much less in volume.

My point being there is terrorism and there is state terrorism. What you have in Nepal right now is state terrorism. You have a gang of about 30-50 individuals at the most who stand to benefit greatly, mostly in terms of money, if the status quo is maintained. The top guy is literally above the law, and the rest of them also act like they are above the law. There is some mafia thinking going on over there.

How do you deal with this?

First you perform a diagnosis. You crunch the numbers. How many people have suffered from the human rights abuses? How many have been killed? Then you look at the state treasury. Follow the money. It stinks as to how irresponsible the mafia has been. Even since the king's direct rule, there has been no accounting of Rs. 50, 00,00,00,000. In four short years, the king has broken all records. Apparently he does not think of the state treasury as the people's money. We have gone back a few hundred years when the kings thought so. The coup of last year was a time machine invented by this king. He turned back the clock.

Let me tell you how big that number really is. If it takes Rs. 1,000,oooo to build a high school in Nepal, for Rs. 50, 00,00,00,000 you could get 50,000 high schools. But there are only 4,000 villages in Nepal. Say we gave two high school per village, and then gave a bunch to the towns, for a total of 10,000 high schools, and if a hospital cost as much to erect as a high school, then we could have had 10,000 high schools and 10,000 hospitals for that kind of money, and we would still have used up only 40% of the money.

I am looking at the sum and I am thinking, for Rs. 50, 00,00,00,000, every village in Nepal could get itself two high schools, two hospitals, a post office, a village council building, a drinking water system, a telephone network, decent roads.

Don't quote me on this too eagerly. I have not really crunched down the numbers. But you get the idea.

This king has turned back the clock in more ways than one. The Nepali people's money has been stolen. The Nepali people have literally been robbed en masse at gunpoint. Other than the direct physical abuse thousands have been subjected to, millions have been deprived of better lives that could have been possible with the money that they already had collectively.

This is not to speak of all the foreign aid that has been scared off. This is not to say of the malaise that has been inflicted on the economy.

So there is physical abuse, and there is money. And then the basic human rights.

Right to free speech is priceless and non-negotiable. Right to peaceful assembly is priceless and non-negotiable. The basic human rights are all non-negotiable. You don't get those rights from any king. You have them because you were born human.

There was a time when every little or big country on earth had a monarch. That is like saying there was a time when malaria was widespread, polio was widespread. There was once the bubonic plague. But most countries by now have got rid of the monarch. Now it is Nepal's time to do so. And Nepal is in the process of doing it.

The question is not if the monarchy will end or not. The question is how. That question can partly be answered by the monarch himself. He has the option to climb down. Or he could get kicked out through a revolutionary act.

A constituent assembly is his best option. If he will not take it, the country is going to have to become a democratic republic under an interim president before it goes for a constituent assembly.

The streets of Nepal have gone from warm to hot. The movement has become a revolution. There is no turning back. The Nepali people know what they want. They want freedom.

On The Web

Human Rights Watch - Defending Human Rights Worldwide
The Human Rights Web Home Page
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Human Rights
Human Rights Campaign - Working for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and ...
Amnesty International - Working To Protect Human Rights Worldwide
Human Rights First | Home Page
University of Minnesota Human Rights Library
HRI - Human Right Internet -
Derechos Human Rights
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Website
Human rights and wrongs online
Physicians for Human Rights
Human Rights in China (HRIC)
Department for Constitutional Affairs - Human Rights
United Nations - Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights
International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission -
Project MUSE - Human Rights Quarterly
Human Rights Commision Website
Job and Volunteer Opportunities
National Human Rights Commission, New Delhi, India.
Official UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights Home Page
European Court of Human Rights - Home page / Accueil - Cour ...
HREA - The Global Human Rights Education Network
Human Rights Act 1998
Human & Constitutional Rights
Human Rights
Women's Human Rights Resources
Asian Human Rights Commission - AHRC
Human Rights Brief - Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law ...
Palestinian Centre for Human Rights
US State Department Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
European Convention on Human Rights and its Five Protocols
New York State Division of Human Rights
B'Tselem - The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the ...
WHRnet - Women's Human Rights Net
Human Rights Resource Center
Business & Human Rights : Home
Department of Human Rights
Home - Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR)

Students for Global Democracy (SGD)
The World Parliament Experiment
Global Democracy Ottawa
Global Democracy 2005 Conference
A time of testing for global democracy | csmonitor.com
World Policy Institute - Building Global Democracy and Human Rights
ENGENDERING GLOBAL DEMOCRACY
Israel21c
Joi Ito's Web: A global democracy
Project for Global Democracy and Human Rights
Global Spread of Democracy Poses New Challenge for the US - Global ...
Global Democracy and NGOs - Global Policy Forum - NGOs
The Will of the World
Radio National Background Briefing - George Monbiot: Global Democracy
Teledemocracy Action News + Network--Homepage
[PDF] The feasibility of global democracy: understanding ICANN's at ...
Democracy in international politics - openDemocracy
Global Democracy Initiatives.html
kirktoons - permanent collection; global democracy
Global Democracy - Council on Foreign Relations
World Democracy Movement
The Observer | Special reports | The green shoots of global democracy?
US-India Global Democracy Initiative
Index of /students/orgs/GDP/
Theworldvotes.org - Participate in the 2004 US Presidential Election
Winds of Change.NET: OxDem Global Democracy Brief: 2004-03-12
NIGD Network Institute for Global Democratization
[PDF] September 2001 The Retreat of Global Democracy Kaushik Basu
global rising
BCTF Global Education > Global Education Teaching Resources
Global Democracy 2005 Conference
e-Parliament in Action - About e-Parliament
Taipei Times - archives
International Implications for Global Democratization
Democracy For Nepal (DFN): Blogalaxy For Global Democracy

The Police, The Army Need To Stop Following Illegitimate Orders




Isolating The Monarchy
The Army Rank And File Need To Be For The People And Democracy

February 1, 2005 was a coup. There is no provision anywhere in the 1990 constitution for a coup. And so it has been and it is illegitimate for anyone on the state's payroll, either in the bureaucracy, the police, or the army, to be following the orders of this king and his yes men.

The police needs to stop following Kamal Thapa's orders.

The army should not follow the king's orders.

Those orders are illegitimate.

February 1, 2005 was a fatal blow to the 1990 constitution.

The movement option would be to incite the police and the army to join the people in the bureaucracy who have flat out come in support of the democracy movement.

But there will be a few bad apples who will knowingly follow orders, either for perceived gain or because they are sadists. Such will be punished. They will stand to lose liberty and property. They could be deported out of the country. They could be pushed into exile.

Kamal Thapa is threatening martial law. The seven party alliance has to respond by pamphleteering among the rank and file of the police and the army. They have to be brought on our side. They should be targeted with our message like the rest of the Nepali people. They are part of the Nepali people. Not only that, they are also on the Nepali people's payroll. That is a double whammy.

Hopefully April 9 will be decisive.

The king has come out saying he will announce the dates for "elections" on April 14. That is not someone in tune with the movement. Dialogue does not look like an option.

Right now the common minimum program is a Constituent Assembly. That is good enough. But if push comes to shove, we should be willing to change it to a Democratic Republic.

The American Revolution
Liberty, Equality, Fraternity: Exploring the French Revolution
The Russian Revolution
French Revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


April Revolution: Document Every Atrocity
The Fascists In Kathmandu
Final Act: Disobey The Curfew
April 6,7,8,9, April 16,17,18,19, April 26,27,28,29
यो सडक ितम्र्ो हो
Kamal Thapa Is A Nazi
Kamal Thapa Going Jail, Kamal Thapa Chukkie Pissing
Dinesh Tripathi, Your Worst Nightmare
Needed: Dynamic Agreement, Concrete Eight Party Alliance
Sushil Pyakurel In Brussels
The King's Clowns And The Baathists Of Iraq
Kanak Mani Dixit, Rhoderick Chalmers
Up The Ante: Smart Sanctions
India, Europe, US For A Constituent Assembly
हृदयेश त्रिपाठी: मधेसी समस्या र राज्यको पुनर्संरचना
संघीय गणतन्त्र
"Robin Hood Im Internet"
Nepal: One Year Of Royal Anarchy
Conspiring Against Democracy Is Treason And Can Be Legally Punished
ICG: Electing Chaos
One King Is Six Blind Men
Bloody Hell
डा बाबुराम भट्टराई: आन्दोलनको उत्कर्ष र त्रस्त सत्ता
मधेशी अधिकारको कुरामा पहाडीहरुको सहभागीता
Republic Of Nepal Flag
भूपि शेरचन, गोपालप्रसाद रिमाल, प्रवर जिसी
Curfews Will Not Save The Crown
India, EU, US, Japan, UN Should Be Thinking Economic Sactions
प्रहार गरिहालौं
Freedom Of Assembly Under Attack In Nepal
लोकतान्त्रिक गणतन्त्र नै किन?
RPP Split Shows Monarchy Will End
Janakpur Rally, Biggest In Nepal Since 1990
What We Are Up Against


सहरहरू तनावग्रस्त
४ सय पक्राउ

उजिर मगर/राजेन्द्र फुयाल

काठमाडौं, चैत २४ - सात राजननीतिक दलले आह्वान गरेको आमहडतालको पहिलो दिन बिहीबार व्यापक सरकारी दमनबीच देशभरका जनता स्वस्फूर्त सडकमा उत्रेका

छन् । बुधबार बिहानैदेखि प्रहरीले शान्तिपूर्ण प्रदर्शनकारीमाथि लाठीचार्ज र धरपकड सुरु गरेपछि अधिकांश सहरी क्ष्ाेत्र साँझसम्म तनावग्रस्त रहे । हडतालका क्रममा देशभरबाट ४ सय भन्दाबढी नेता-कार्यकर्तार् पक्राउ परेका छन् । लाठीचार्जबाट दर्जनौं प्रदर्शनकारी घाइते भएका छन् । प्रहरीले जथाभावी कुटपिट गर्दा सर्वसाधारणसमेत मारमा परेका छन् । दोहोरो झडपमा छ सुरक्ष्ााकर्मी पनि घाइते भएका छन् ।

आमहडतालको आह्वानमा निस्केका बेला सप्तरीमा प्रहरीको कुटाइबाट बुधबार गम्भीर घाइते एमाले कार्यकर्ता दर्शनलाल यादवको बिहीबार मृत्यु भएको छ । आन्दोलनकारीले बुटवल महेन्द्र पार्कस्थित राजा महेन्द्रको सालिक तोडफोड गरेका छन् । सरकारी निषेधाज्ञा अवज्ञा गर्दै राजधानीमा बिहानैदेखि चोकचोकबाट स्वस्फूर्त रूपमा जुलुस निस्किएका थिए । साँझसम्म जारी जुलुसमा हजारौंको सहभागिता थियो । काठमाडौं, भक्तपुर, ललितपुर र कीर्तिपुरका मुख्य चोक र सडक पूरै आन्दोलनमय भए ।

ठाउँठाउँमा प्रहरी र प्रदर्शनकारीबीच झडप भएपछि तीनवटै सहरका मुख्य सडक र बजार क्षेत्र साँझसम्म तनावग्रस्त भए । प्रहरीले आन्दोलनलाई नियन्त्रण गर्न ठाउँठाउँमा अश्रुग्यास प्रहार गरे पनि प्रदर्शनकारी झन् उत्तेजित भएका थिए । यसअघिका आन्दोलनमा भन्दा बिहीबार सडकमा जनसहभागिता बढी थियो ।

आमहडतालले राजधानीको जनजीवन पूरै प्रभावित भयो । सडकमा निजी तथा भाडाका सवारी साधन चलेनन् । मुख्य बजार क्षेत्र पूरै ठप्प भएको थियो । सहरका भित्री बजार र पसलसमेत बन्द भएका थिए । उद्योग, कलकारखानासमेत बन्द रहे ।

आमहडताल सफल पार्न उत्रेका नेता कार्यकर्तालाई सादा पोसाकका सुरक्ष्ााकर्मीले कुटपिट गरेका थिए । सुरक्ष्ााफौजको निर्मम कुटपिट, अभद्र व्यवहारबाट स्थानीय जनता आक्रोशित बनेर आन्दोलनमा सहभागी बनेका थिए । प्रहरीले अश्रुग्यास हान्दा झ्यालबाट पानी फालेर टोलवासीले सहयोग गरेका थिए । सहिदगेट, वीर अस्पताल, भोटाहिटी, क्ष्ाेत्रपाटी, मैतीदेवी, कालिमाटी, कलंकी, बानेश्वर, कोटेश्वर, बालाजु, गोंगबु, चाबहिल, कीर्तिपुर, मंगलबजार, सातदोबाटो, भक्तपुरमा सुरक्ष्ााफौजले पटकपटक धरपकड गरे पनि साँझसम्म प्रदर्शनकारीहरू सडकमै बसेर विरोध प्रदर्शन जारी राखेका थिए ।

पाटनको सुन्धारामा निस्केको जुलुसमाथि प्रहरीले ज्यादती गर्न थालेपछि पूरै जनता सडकमा उर्लेर प्रहरीलाई लखेटेका थिए ।

त्यहाँ प्रहरीले दर्जनौं अश्रुग्यास प्रहार गर्‍यो । स्थानीयवासीले ०४६ साल चैत २४ मा पनि यसरी नै प्रहरी लखेटेर प्रजातन्त्र लिएको भन्दै सुरक्ष्ााफौजको प्रतिकार गरे ।

पाटनलाई स्थानीयवासीले मुक्त क्ष्ाेत्र घोषणा गर्नुपर्छ भनेर व्यापक आवाज उठाएका थिए । मुक्त क्षेत्र घोषणाको तयारीका लागि केन्द्रीय नेतृत्व आवश्यक पर्ने र त्यो गणतन्त्रको भ्रूण भएको उनीहरूले बताए ।

विश्वविद्यालयका विद्यार्थी र स्थानीयवासीको संयुक्त जुलुसले कीर्तिपुर बजार नियन्त्रणमा लियो । प्रहरीले पटकपटक प्रयास गर्दासमेत नियन्त्रण गर्नसकेन । प्रदर्शनकारीलाई नियन्त्रण गर्न त्यहाँ थप तीन ट्रक सुरक्ष्ााफौज आए पनि असफल भई फक्र्यो । कलंकीमा सुरक्ष्ााकर्मीले एक सर्वसाधारणको घरको ढोका फोडेर निर्घात कुटपिट गर्न थालेपछि टोलवासी प्रतिकारमा उत्रे ।

प्रहरी कार्यालयका अनुसार काठमाडौंमा २ सय १६ र पाटनमा ६ जना पक्राउ परेका छन् । प्रहरी झडपमा तीन दर्जनभन्दा बढी प्रदर्शनकारी र प्रदर्शनकारीको ढुंगा प्रहारबाट १ प्रहरी अधिकृत र ५ जवान घाइते भए । बन्द क्रममा चलाइएका ८ सवारी साधनलाई प्रदर्शनकारीले तोडफोड गरे । प्रहरी ज्यादतीमा परी एमाले कार्यकर्ता कुमार थापाको औंला भाँचिएको छ भने मीनभवन क्याम्पसका स्ववियु सहसचिव भीम रावल घाइते भए । मीनभवनको बाटो हिँडिरहेका सुविधानगर सामुदायिक विकास समितिका अध्यक्ष प्रकाश पन्तको प्रहरी लाठी प्रहारबाट टाउका फुटेको छ । उनलाई सडकमा लडाएपछि पनि निर्घात कुटियो । पन्तको शरीरभरि चोटैचोट छन् ।

प्रहरीको लाठी प्रहारबाट घाइते भएकामा एमालेका जगन्नाथ खतिवडा, रमेशत्रिभक्त श्रेष्ठ, अनिल उप्रेतीलगायत छन् । कांग्रेस केन्द्रीय सदस्य डा. शशांक कोइराला, जगदीशनरसिंह केसी, दीपक गिरीलगायत पनि घाइते भए । कीर्तिपुरको झडपमा घाइते भएका नेवि संघका विष्णु दौलियाल र अम्बिका पन्तको वीर अस्पतालमा उपचार गरिएको छ । त्यहाँको झडपमा सुरेश शर्मा, कमल जोशी, गणेश बिष्ट, प्रदीप तिमल्सिना, आशिष कार्की, भीम बडुवाल, लीला सुनुवार, रमेश पाण्डे, एमालेका चन्द्र पन्त, डिल्लीप्रसाद भट्ट, नारायण पाण्डे, मधुसूधन पाण्डेलगायत घाइते

छन् । अधिकांश घाइतेलाई उपचारबिनै हिरासतमा राखिएको छ । मानव अधिकार आयोगले उपचारका लागि सरकारसँग आग्रह गरेको छ ।

रातो पुलको जुलुसमा नेतृत्व गरेका ट्याक्सी चालक संघका महासचिव रामचन्द्र कार्की, कमल न्यौपाने, जगन्नाथ गाैतमलगायतलाई सरकार समर्थित सशस्त्र जत्थाले खुकुरी र भाला प्रहार गरी घाइते बनाएको छ ।

सरकारले प्रदर्शन नियन्त्रण गर्न काठमाडौंमा सडक विभाजन गरेर झन्डै दस जना एसपी परिचालन गरेको थियो ।

Posted on: 2006-04-06 17:53:57


April 8: New Year




Movement Time.
April 9

From: Dr. TN Niraula
Date: Apr 7, 2006 9:29 AM
Subject: reminder--re saturday event

Dear friend,

Good morning!

This is just to remind you that we have about a day and a half before we come together to celebrate Nepali New Year 2063 organized by the America-Nepal Friendship Society.

We have made every effort to reach out to community members, but because of the lack of contact information I am sure we have missed many.

Please make sure that people in your network know about this Nepali social and cultural event on Saturday, April 8, 2006. Space is limited and therefore we encourage you to make reservations in advance.

The doors will open for check-in at 7PM so please make every effort to arrive on time.

Again the event is on coming Saturday (April 8, 2006) at the Dhaka Club located at 59-15, 37 th Avenue (between 59th and 60th Street) Woodside.

For traveling by public transportation, you may take # 7 subway line either to 74th Street and Broadway or 61 street & Woodside Station—(Woodside station is closer to the venue) or F, E, G and R subway lines (which ever is convenient for you) to Roosevelt Avenue and Jackson Heights) or R and G to 65 th Street station (65th Station is closer to the Venue).

If you are driving, you may get your driving direction for Yahoo Maps or MapQuest.

Please see the attachment for other details.

Look forward to welcoming you at the event

Tara Niraula, President

On behalf of the ANFS family


BBC Calls
NYC Rally Photos: Arnico Panday
April 9
April Revolution: Document Every Atrocity
Protests
The Fascists In Kathmandu
Final Act: Disobey The Curfew
Himal Survey
April 6,7,8,9, April 16,17,18,19, April 26,27,28,29
Even If The Worst Fears About The Maoists Are True
Write To Bush, Condi Before Possible Clampdown
Leahy Amendment Says No Arms To Nepal
यो सडक ितम्र्ो हो
Kamal Thapa Is A Nazi
Why The Maoists Should Cease Violence
Hamro Nepal All Set To Be Launched
Loktantra, Issue 5
Protests
Deuba Off To DC
Kamal Thapa Going Jail, Kamal Thapa Chukkie Pissing
Deuba In Jackson Heights
Deuba At Hotel Pennsylvania
Hridayesh Tripathy Released
Dinesh Tripathi, Your Worst Nightmare
Deuba At Columbia
Plan B
Way To Go
Deuba, Abused
This Movement Is About The Nepali People, Not Foreign Powers
Fundraising Mechanism
No Time Pressure, Only Principle
Democracy Spreading Mechanism
Sushil Pyakurel
Needed: Dynamic Agreement, Concrete Eight Party Alliance
Pin Plan
Sushil Pyakurel In Brussels
Pumping Money Into The Movement
Surya Subedi, Not A Democrat
Chiran Thapa: Snafu
March 22 Event, Deuba In New York

BBC Calls



Global Voices Online
, Harvard Law School: Khatmandu’s tense political moves
BBC News, World Have Your Say: On The Streets In Nepal

Got Interviewed By German Public Radio: Final Act: Disobey The Curfew
"Robin Hood Im Internet"

Norway Public Television: Justin Krebs


Old Media, New Media

I got all worked up. Wow, so I will get heard on BBC World Service. This would be the global audience, not the much more localized Nepali audience served by the BBC Nepali Service.

BBC has an aura about it. For all the talk of new media and old media, old media still has this aura about it. Most bloggers link to articles by "old" brand names like the BBC, or the New York Times or the Washington Post.

The brand names will incorporate new technology as it will become available. New media does not get rid of old media, except in cases where old media refuses to grow.

This right here is a good example. I wrote a piece for Global Voices linking to many Nepali blogs, Anu read it, her team linked to it, and the next thing you know she wants me talking on BBC.

Thank you Mary Joyce, Neha Viswanathan. They are the people who got me on to Global Voices. This particular piece that got BBC's attention has a story of its own. Neha had been nudging me for days to produce something. Finally I did. And it got BBC's attention.

But, you know what, I missed it! I overslept. Anu did not have my number. It was a rather short notice. But perhaps she will get me on air next time. I think I sent her three different emails to the effect.

April 8, April 9, New York City

April 8 is the New Year celebration. April 9 is the event at the Nepali Mandir. Both is Queens. These were not planned as political protests. But there is no doubt that is what these will end up being.

Nepalis are getting fed up in Nepal, Nepalis are getting fed up in New York City, Nepalis are getting fed up all across the world.

April 9
April 8 Event

In The News

Security forces, Maoists clash in Butwal NepalNews
His Majesty calls all to work for permanent peace
Maoists leading and controlling anti-govt. protests: Minister Thapa
Demonstration continues across the country; protestors set fire to Lalitpur post office .... reports of clashes between police and demonstrators and arrest of dozens of party activists across the country...... The Patan area remains tense following the incident with a large number of people still continuing demonstrations in the area. The demonstrators burnt the district post office of Lalitpur and also torched two government motorcycles. Police fired many rounds of tear gas shells and baton-charged protesters who were demonstrating defying prohibitory orders........ Police also arrested dozens of protestors from New Road area at around 2:30 p.m...... According to the CPN-UML, party activists demonstrated at various parts of the capital and major cities outside the Valley...... Demonstrations were carried out by the SPA activists in Bhaktapur, Kirtipur and various other parts of Kathmandu including Ason, Tyaud, Balaju, Maitidevi, Gongabu, Thamel, Kalanki, Thahiti and Basundhara........ Police arrested at least 60 activists from Kalanki. At Chahabil, demonstrators vandalised four taxis. A private vehicle was vandalized at Sorhakhutte. At Baneshwor, demonstrators vandalised a trolley bus........ In Kirtipur, student protestors vandalised the office of the vice-chancellor of the Tribhuvan University. Nearly two-dozen protestors were injured in a clash between students and police following the incident...... party activists demonstrated in Pokhara, Biratnagar, Butwal, Janakpur and Hetauda.....
Doctors, Bank, Corporation employees join pro-democracy movement Employees working at government banks, telecommunication and electricity offices and Teaching Hospital have joined the pro-democracy movement launched by the Seven Party Alliance (SPA)...... chanted anti-government slogans in many offices ...... Premal Khanal, General Secretary of Nepal Bank Employees’ Association said have brought all the works of the bank to a halt expressing solidarity to the pro-democracy movement....... Professional Alliance, an umbrella organization of over 4.8 million employees, said that all employees will come to the street on Saturday...... Employees Union, Doctors’ Association, Nursing Association and Nepal Professors Association....... also demanded early release of all protestors arrested from pro-democracy rallies
Sarlahi attack minor incident: Govt. Spokesman
Amnesty condemns arrest of political activists
International communities express concern over government crackdown

Over 750 held in Nepal Hindu, India
Nepal parties claim hundreds arrested day 2 of strike Monsters and Critics.com
750 pro-democracy protesters arrested in Nepal, government says Canada.com
Hundreds arrested in Nepal protest Guardian Unlimited
Pitched battles in Nepal, 750 held
Times of India, India Police fired tear gas and fought frenzied street battles with protesters on Friday on the second day of a strike ..... Of the 751 people arrested, 115 were sent to prison under a tough public safety law that allows authorities to jail people without charge for 90 days, home minister Kamal Thapa said...... we are doing what we can to foil the protest......
Nepal's Opposition Defends Rebel Alliance ABC News
Protests continue in Nepal as foreign allies condemn Govt. Hindu
India's Nepal dilemma
Rediff, India
CPI(M) flays crackdown on Nepal's leaders Hindu
CPI-M seeks New Delhi's intervention in Nepal NewKerala.com
Fresh Protests Erupt in Nepal
New York Times, United States
Nepal King prays for peace; rebels run amok Deccan Herald
Nepal King to announce poll dates on April 14 Hindustan Times
Nepal Maoists warn Manisha Koirala Daily News & Analysis, India
UN Asks for Ceasefire in Nepal Prensa Latina
Hundreds flee Nepal, enter bordering Bihar areas NewKerala.com, India
Protests in Nepal turn violent on second day International Herald Tribune, France
Students, cops clash on Day II of Nepal strike Hindustan Times
Day Two: Violence continues in Nepal
Daily News & Analysis, India
Fighting Caste-Discrimination in the Context of Conflict in Nepal Mero Sansar, NY
Nepal Makes Mass Arrests of Pro-Democracy Protesters New York Times
US' comment on Nepal's new political development Mero Sansar
Nepal losing control, strike taking serious turn against Royal ... International Reporter, India chasing protesters down narrow lanes and beating them with batons...... Japan requests that no more arrests be made and those arrested be released as promptly as possible. ..... India said the arrests were counterproductive. ``We are concerned over the arrests and detention, once again, of several political leaders, professionals and students which we strongly deplore'' .....
Curfew, Emergency May be Imposed in Nepal: Home Minister CRI, China Kamal Thapa said that the government could impose a curfew or declare a state of emergency
Democracy Brings Nepal to Knees Prensa Latina, Cuba For the second consecutive day, a general strike against King Gyanendra´s authoritarianism has brought Friday normal life in Nepal to a standstill, with over a thousand political leaders and activists arrested.
Violence mars Nepal general strike on 2nd day+ TMCnet
Hundreds detained in Nepal ISN, Switzerland
Nepal‘s Opposition Defends Rebel Alliance The Westfall Weekly News, Canada With no letup in street protests or a rebel insurgency, opposition politicians argued Thursday that their unlikely alliance with guerrillas was the best way to force the king to restore democracy and end the violence.... "Our liberation army has been able to shoot down the sophisticated night vision helicopter. This ... has taken our fighting to a new level," a rebel statement said..... Working with the Maoists "is a gamble," said Ram Sharan Mahat of the Nepali Congress...... If the king fell, "the Maoists would be armed; the parties would be unarmed," U.S. Ambassador James Moriarty said in a speech earlier this year. "This stark scenario leaves the parties, and the people, defenseless against ideological ‘partners‘ long used to settling arguments with a gun."

Kirtipur And Patan Through Lesns United We Blog
Royal Madness
General Strike Day II Updates
General Strike Day I Diary
On Photos: April Uprising I

Patan: 1990 Revisited INSN
Reports On Arrests
Protestors Declare Kirtipur Independent
Day I: One Killed, Hundreds Arrested Nationwide
Two Hurt In Police Firing
Protestors Police Clash All Over The Valley

Curfew, Emergency could be imposed: Home Minister Kantipur Publications
King Gyanendra inaugurates WHF silver jubilee celebrations
Over two dozen injured, three dozen arrested in Pokhara, Chitwan
Over 200 arrested, dozens injured; police open fire in Patan, Dang
Bank, Corporation employees join protests
EU, Japan criticize crackdown
Doctors join protests
250 held, 2 dozen injured in districts
Day1 of general strike: 500 arrested nationwide
Annan troubled by arrest of political leaders
सहरहरू तनावग्रस्त
एमाले नेताको मृत्यु
मुलुकभर प्रदर्शन
अन्तर्राष्ट्रिय समुदायद्वारा गिरफ्तारीको निन्दा
चिकित्सक पनि आन्दोलित
पहिरो रोके गाउँलेले
राष्ट्रसेवकहरूको अवमूल्यन
कानुन जिताउने आन्दोलन

Phalano.com: Day 1 Photos, Day 2 Photos

Visitors

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Mary Joyce, Demologue