Monday, February 26, 2007

Arato: Well Meaning But Away From Ground Realities



Arato: Well Meaning But Away From Ground Realities

Professor Arato is a leading expert in his field, that of interim constitutions. I have heard it said that he is of global renown, a widely respected academic. I have had the honor to meet him a few times in person. He is a man of modest demeanor, approachable. He surely has a keen interest in Nepal. Above is the photo of him I took at the event.

The last time I met him was at The New School Event where I spoke.

He asked the first question during the Question Answer Session, my favorite part of the whole program, and he asked it to me. This article reads like an elaboration of that same question. I hope to offer an elaborate answer here myself.

The New School Event: Madhesi Question: Photos 2
The New School Event: Madhesi Question: Photos
The New School Event: My Speech To Be Delivered

It worries me that someone of his stature is missing the picture. He seems to offer the same explanations as the ruling elites in Nepal today. The people are asked to be patient, to wait. Social justice takes time. You can not have it all right away. Progress will be incremental, might take generations.

I am all for a constituent assembly. Heck, I have been arguing for it right after the king's coup.

As to where to go from where we stand right now, I think there are two basic steps that have to be taken. The first has to be the Home Minister's resignation. Professor Arato does not even touch upon that issue. That shows how far removed from Nepal's ground realities he is. His writing has been gleaned more from reading journal articles in his field than the daily news on Nepal.

Without the Home Minister's resignation, the ball is not moving at all.

The next thing to do would be to adopt the Madhesi, Janajati, UML demand for proportional elections to the constituent assembly. That is the best bet to make sure the constituent assembly's composition ends up looking like that of Nepal.

Two Things To Do To Prevent April Kranti III

The Madhesi and Janajati Movements have not been waged against the constituent assembly, quite the contrary.

Constituent Assembly: 300 Seats Of Roughly Equal Population

What has been launched in Nepal today has to be seen as the third part of the April Revolution. Let's face it, the April Revolution surprised the world. Noone had a clue as to how exactly the king would relent. People in circles like that of Arato were hoping someone would talk sense into the king, perhaps some visiting dignitary, some foreign ambassador, perhaps some UN official. He would somehow see the light.

The problem with that view all along was that it did not see clearly as the magnitude of force that would be required to get the king off his pedestal. That force had to be street action.

The eight parties did not incorporate federalism in the interim constitution. That rang alarm bells. Not even the Maoists are offering federalism. They talk of autonomous regions. They have Tibet in mind, not Bihar. Parties like the UML are thinking in terms of a federalism that is but a codeword for decentralization, with maps that look not that different from that of King Mahendra. In other words, clever ways will be sought to marginalize the Madhesi Janajati sentiments for ethnic federalism, just like Wales and Scotland and Tamilnadu and Maharashtra and Quebec.

The Madhesi and Janajati are worried that once the elections already take place, and the constituent assembly ends up looking no different from the current interim parliament - mostly Bahun Chhetri men - then all doors will be shut. There will be even less room to complain. To revolt against a "popularly elected" constituent assembly would make even less sense.

The struggle is not to disrupt the elections to the constituent assembly. The struggle is to make sure the ground rules are fair. The constituent assembly has to end up looking like Nepal in its ethnic and gender composition.

Andrew made a valid point at the program. He was alarmed that in trying to make the constituent assembly "look" like Nepal, we might veer from the basic of democracy, which is one person, one vote. His valid fear that I share is we might end up with the kind of social engineering that the Soviet state experimented with not long after its formation. The Maoist parliamentary team today has a better Janajati representation than that of the other parties, but those Janajatis have been herded around like cattle by Prachanda. So "looking like Nepal" will not be enough. The members of the constituent assembly will have to be elected through the one person one vote mechanism. They have to answer to the people first, to their party supremos second.

My original proposal was to have all members to the constituent assembly be elected directly by the people. And to have reserved constituencies. So if you have a Dalit constituency, you still hold elections, but all candidates in that particular constituency have to be Dalit.

I think Andrew Arato might go for something like that. But then that's the point. The eight parties will not. And Andrew is in no position to influence them otherwise. There is social injustice in Nepal. People in power sustain that. Andrew can not remedy the social injustice. So he should be glad the oppressed are seeking nonviolent remedies to redress.

If the ground rules were fair, the Madhesi and the Janajati would head to the polls and seek votes for themselves. But the ground rules are not fair. The few Bahuns at the top are slated to give tickets. They will get to decide who will even contest the elections.

We who watch the developments from afar have to hope that protests stay nonviolent. More importantly, we have to take sides. Andrew's position reminds me of the MLK line about how the quiet of the good people hurts more than the active malice of the bad people.

The most tenable position now would be for the likes of Andrew to rally support for the two common sense positions in the current scenario.
  1. The Home Minister's resignation.
  2. Proportional elections to the constituent assembly.
The three weeks of the Madhesi Movement concluded by the Prime Minister saying the Terai will get 49% of all seats in the constituent assembly. But the recent amendment tabled in the interim parliament on the topic sticks to the original 205 constituencies. There is this basic dishonesty. There is this basic disrespect towards the Madhesh. And Andrew is not aware of that.

The Home Minister not resigning should tell the world how disrespectful the Pahadi Bahun men in power in Nepal are towards the Madhesis of Nepal. That right there is the most obvious litmus test.

Andrew's call should not be for elections, but free, fair and representative elections. Andrew's call should not be that the Madhesis and the Janajatis should shut up and sit down. It should be that the Madhesi and Janajati grievances should be identified and addressed.

Let Professor Arato pass the same litmus test. Will he or will he not call for the Home Minister's resignation?

Andrew is suggesting federalism has to be secured through the constituent assembly. That is not the issue the Madhesi and the Janajati are struggling with. The issue we are struggling with is that the Bahun Chhetri men in power have been equating federalism with disintegration.

I suggest Andrew offer more empathy to the Madhesi Janajati movement. I suggest he get more specific. Otherwise he comes across as parroting those in power in Nepal right now.

And I would welcome further conversation on this topic. I can accuse Andrew of not being in tune with the ground realities of the Madhesi Janajati movement, but I can not accuse him of holding the prejudices of the Bahun Chhetri men. So further dialogue between Andrew and me might help the conversation in Nepal itself.

"The task for now was only making sure that the Constituent assembly would be constituted in a free, fair and truly inclusive way, so that its decisions on all the relevant questions will be democratic, fair and inclusive in turn."

This is what I agree with. Will Andrew agree that the interim constitution has failed in that task?

Andrew claims ignorance on the citizenship issue raised by the Madhesis. How could he? That issue is fundamental to the Madhesi Movement. That is further proof he is not in tune with the basic thrust of the Madhesi Movement.

Andrew paints the picture of a dictator Prime Minister, one that can die away, but otherwise can not be removed. To him it reads like an oversight. To the Madhesi and the Janajati that reads like entrenched Bahun power.

"
I would have chosen a single country PR with rules for ethnic and gender fairness"

Andrew and I agree after all. That is precisely what the Madhesi and the Janajati are asking for right now. That is why they have shut the country down.

"
The creation of all woman candidate districts (1/3 of them) would be possible but absurd."

Why would that be absurd?

"
It is equally important now that the Interim Constitution be accepted, even with its glaring faults. Renegotiating it would put off elections indefinitely.."

This is where we fundamentally disagree.

Interim Crisis or Interim Learning?

By Prof. Andrew Arato

The new Interim Constitution of Nepal is an important achievement of a democratic process. It is however a document with serious problems of drafting and formulation, which could lead to political difficulties, even constitutional crisis. Fortunately it is relatively open to constitutional amendments that are constitutional learning. With a few necessary amendments, this constitution should be strongly supported by democrats because there is no alternative regulation for the transition period.

The interim constitution places Nepal in the forefront of the best recent experiments in non-revolutionary democratic transformations, starting in Spain and culminating in South Africa. These experiments all involved two stage models of change, negotiated for most of them through round table or multi-party agreements, and in the most advanced form relying on interim constitutions. Nepal unlike many of the cases had a legal break initiating the changes, but like the most developed form had a series of multi-party agreements and now completed an interim constitution. And that, under difficult historical circumstances is a great achievement, especially if it works.

With this said the Interim Constitution recently enacted has serious faults, some of which became clear during the recent popular movement in the Terai region that is already forcing probable amendments. Let me note the main problems. First, the Interim Constitution makes a great mistake in its Preamble to speak in the name of “We, the people of Nepal”. The American original could do so because it was submitted to ratification by popularly elected bodies. Other constitutions that follow this example are drafted by popular bodies, or are submitted to popular ratification, or both. Neither is the case for the Interim Constitution of Nepal; it was drafted by an 8 party bargain, and ratified by a chamber elected in 1999, and illegally (though perhaps legitimately) recalled. These two instances do not add up to the authority of the “people” in any sense. Moreover, an interim constitution does not need such an authority, because its function is to enable the people, or those legitimately speaking in its name to draft a new constitution. While greater legitimacy in negotiating the Interim Constitution through a more public, consultative and open process would have been important, taking on the mantle of the people is especially paradoxical in the absence of such proceedings. It has finally a very dangerous consequence: it is assumed that the makers of the interim constitution had the authority in principle to decide questions that only a democratically elected body could decide, in particular to transform the state from a centralistic to a federal one. Now under pressure the government seems to be getting ready to make an amendment on this question, pre-empting the work of the constituent assembly. But to some extent it invited the raising of this problem, and who knows what others, with the possible absurd end result that the constituent assembly would have nothing left to decide.

In fact, a careful examination of the document shows (rightly in my view) a conservative rather than innovative spirit at work, belying the supposed popular mandate. Most of the interim constitution tracks the structure and sometimes the very paragraphs of the 1990 Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal, eliminating most references to royal powers and prerogatives of course, or worse substituting Prime Minister for King in some crucial instances. Such tracking and repetition is unfortunate when it invites repetition of the authoritarian practices of the old regime. In particular the presence of the Constitution of 1990 is obviously visible in many of the provisions concerning civil rights for example that are full of the old loopholes and in the provisions concerning judicial structure. The latter justifiably raised questions, in Nepal and outside, concerning judicial independence. Granted, the Interim Constitution adds whole sections on The Right to Equality and Rights against Untouchability and Racial Discrimination (articles 13 and 14). But these new rights are in no better shape than the old if the judges needed to enforce them are picked exactly in the old way, with Prime Minister substituting for the King in the exact formula of the 1990 Constitution.

Moreover, astonishingly enough, this Prime Minister will be for the next two and half years under less parliamentary control than the old one was supposed to be, though of course that control was shared with the King in a highly undesirable fashion. In the Interim Constitution, the PM is supposedly picked by consensus among the 8 parties, and failing that by 2/3 of the new parliament (Legislature-Parliament in the new terminology). There is however no possibility of removal through loss of or votes of no confidence as there was in Article 36(5b) of the Constitution of 1990. Astonishingly, with the election of the Constitutional Assembly (rightly defined as also a new Legislature-Parliament) there is no requirement of new government formation. So appointed under one majority, a PM may choose to govern when he is in a weak minority position. Of course he could resign, but he does not need to, and the Constitutional Assembly has no powers to force him. Even more astonishingly Article 160 of the Interim Constitution states that the Council of Ministers in office at the time of the promulgation of that constitution stays in office making Article 38 (1 and 2) basically irrelevant, except in cases of death or resignation of a Prime Minister. The road is open for the current government to stay in office for 2 and ½ years, if it wishes, and if it is favored by natural factors. If the idea was to produce a power sharing formula among the major parties, this was not the way to do it, especially because it is hard to know what will be the major parties after the elections for the Constituent Assembly.

Preparation for those elections and the rules for the Constituent Assembly were in fact the major tasks to be solved by the Interim Constitution, and I strongly disagree with those who argue that it was their makers’ task to come to agreements about all kinds of substantive issues confronting the country, like federalism and material social justice. Those issues are the legitimate province of the democratically elected Constituent Assembly, and even subsequent legislatures to the extent that social and economic policies are involved. The task for now was only making sure that the Constituent assembly would be constituted in a free, fair and truly inclusive way, so that its decisions on all the relevant questions will be democratic, fair and inclusive in turn. It was also important to restrain the Constituent Assembly by rules so that minorities could not be simply outvoted by majorities, producing an imposed, majoritarian constitution, and the Interim Constitution accomplishes this last task reasonably well. The way the Constitutional Assembly is supposed to deal with the issue of kingship through simple majority is not too reassuring, but there is the option still of calling a referendum on this question according to the Interim Constitution (Articles 157, 159(3)). The really difficult issue remains that of the Constituent Assembly’s membership. While I do not sympathise with those raising the issue of federalism now, others questioning the Interim Constitution’s decisions on the electoral rule and citizenship have a much stronger point because these two domains have to do with the very composition of the Constituent Assembly and the possibility that it will not be genuinely representative of both the unity and the diversity of the people of Nepal. As to citizenship, I am no expert, but the kind of additions I detect vis-à-vis the Constitution of 1990, though important, do not seem to go very far. So (I cannot judge) if the grievances of the Madhesi community are serious, more adjustments and changes in this area would be called for. Perhaps independent international experts need to give their opinion on this question. If the lists of citizens can be expanded in the Terai, I must admit I think this would be a better solution than adding more first past the post districts in that region. The mixed system in the Interim constitution is not a bad one (though I would have chosen a single country PR with rules for ethnic and gender fairness) reflecting the fact that some minorities are geographically concentrated and would benefit from more districts in their area, while others like the Dalits (and women who are not a minority) are dispersed and need PR with legal restrictions to get seats. The present regulation is however a muddle (Article 63 (3 and 4) as far as I can see, though I admit that my judgment can be based only on the provision regarding women where it is required that their 1/3 parliamentary representation be assured. There is simply no way to do this with almost half the members running in First-Past-the –Post single district races, because even if parties were required to nominate 1/3 women, all these could lose. The creation of all woman candidate districts (1/3 of them) would be possible but absurd. What I am arguing is that only in the proportional representation part of the competition could the law mandate fair representation of women and other groups, and adding more first First-Past-the –Post races to help one underprivileged group winds up hurting the others. If both types of seats are added as currently proposed, the size of parliament grows and no group is helped. Thus, it would be better to handle the citizenship issue head on, rather than further tinkering with the electoral rule.

In my view then two issues still require adjustment: judicial independence, and (possibly) the question of citizenship. The Interim Constitution allows its own amendment by 2/3 of (in English it is unclear) all or attending members. That rule should be used, though sparingly so that the Constitution is not converted into a simple statute. It is equally important now that the Interim Constitution be accepted, even with its glaring faults. Renegotiating it would put off elections indefinitely, and who knows what conflicts a new Interim constitution would unleash. The current document seems to provide internationally accepted criteria for moving toward free elections, and the most important thing is that it be enforced and upheld during the two and ½ years of its likely existence. Since the government created by it is a power sharing one composed of many forces one would imagine that their internal relations would play some role in constitutional enforcement. Political forces that feel excluded are right to charge an elite agreement to some extent over their heads, and the absence of really open, public and consultative negotiating process, but their best hope in a more democratic outcome is a speedy movement toward a freely elected constituent assembly.

(The author is a Professor at the NewSchool for Social Research, New York . He has visited Nepal and delivered talk programs as an expert on constitution-making and can be reached at Aarato1944@aol.com )


In The News

Royal properties to be nationalised; King to face ‘action’ for his statement
Govt-NFIN talks inconclusive
Prachanda says republic must be declared ahead of CA
Interim Crisis or Interim Learning?
Injured MJF activist dies; Strikes hit normal life in various districts Sunsari, Sarlahi, Mahotttari, Janakpur, Siraha, Bara, Parsa, Rautahat, Nawalparasi, Rupandehi, Kapilvastu, Banke and Bardiya districts were affected by the MJF transport strike.
Eight parties discuss PLA camp management
Prachanda defends weapons count; says he is against foreign investment in media
Bandhs hit the nation, Home Ministry appeals for restraint
NA starts storing its weapons

Govt set to take action against king for Democracy day message Kantipur
King's Feb 1 step no way justifiable: Rana
NFIN sits for talks with govt, turns down request to call off banda
Gularia tense after Maoist attack victim dies
Civil society members urge govt to tidy up road to dialogue Civil society members on Monday demanded the government make talks with all the agitating parties including the Janjatis and Madhesis obstacle free and create an environment conducive for dialogue as soon as possible. .... the civil society members also said that if the problems of the Madhesi people put forward by the Madhesi People's Rights Forum can be resolved through the home minister's resignation, the home minister must be ready to step down. ..... The society members also urged the government to form a high level committee to investigate the loss incurred during the Terai movement. ...... Padma Ratna Tuladhar, a member of civil society, said, "Following the loss of so many lives, it is but obvious that anybody will demand the resignation of the home minister. This is not only the demand put forward by the MPRF, it is everyone's demand right now, including us human rights activists and civil society members."
Terai in grip of strikes once again
Robbers on the pretext of MPRF, JTMM members wreak havoc in Terai
Nepal Army okay with number of Maoists arms registered at UN
Nepal Police going hi-tech
Rampant deforestation around Maoist camp
Lack of coordination worsens HIV infection
Mainstream the marginalized: NFIWN
Interim govt to form probe panel to look into cases of the disappeared
Morang's Pathari Bazar grows tense as local dies
फोरम वार्तामा आएन
चुरे-भावर बन्द फिर्ता

UN envoy to Nepal calls into question June polls unless political ... UN News Centre
Nepal to seize Gyanendra’s property
Calcutta Telegraph, India Koirala also urged the government to immediately start talks with the agitating Madhesi groups and the Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities which have begun a blockade in the Terai region. .... Traffic on highways in Nepal’s southern plains ground to a halt today ..... Thousands of bus passengers were stranded after Madhesi activists urged all drivers to stay off the roads.
Strikes Resume In Southern And Southeastern Nepal All Headline News markets and educational institutions in the southern and southeastern districts remained shut down .... The protesters have toppled trees and blocked the highways.
NEPAL:Strike call halts traffic PeaceJournalism.com
New wave of strikes hits southern and eastern Nepal Monsters and Critics.com
Protests resume in south Nepal, shutting down roads and stall ... International Herald Tribune No traffic crossed the busiest trading point between Nepal and neighboring India, the border town of Birgunj, because of the strike ..... Landlocked Nepal has to import all oil products and much of its consumer goods from India, and an earlier blockade by the group caused shortages and shut down most traffic in the capital.
Nepal's Constitutional Process Reuters AlertNet, UK Nepal’s political leaders must make the constitutional process more inclusive or risk a return to violent conflict. ...... So far, the concentration has been on building elite consensus at the expense of intense political debate and extensive public consultation. ....... broader public participation can only help ...... Wide public involvement and transparent decision-making will legitimise the process and increase the chances of a durable and popularly accepted outcome. ....... Mainstream political parties will remain key actors, especially if they seize this opportunity to increase their inclusiveness, promote internal democracy and tackle the worst excesses of corruption and patronage. ...... reshape the state and encourage reform of the political parties ..... Recent unrest in the Tarai plains illustrates the dangers of ignoring popular discontent. ....... tackle long-standing ethnic, regional and caste fissures. ..... violent conflict may emerge once more. ........ the major party leaderships and India. If their judgement is out of step with the national mood – as it often has been in the past ....... a complex equilibrium among elites. ...... The consolidation of a competitive multiparty system naturally bolsters the mainstream political parties but in the short term will heighten their differences with each other and may encourage a return to the less than edifying tactics of earlier parliamentary politics. ....... political leaders have skillfully stripped royal powers comprehensively but gradually, with no single step sufficient to prompt a backlash. ........ a decisive alteration of traditional power structures will still encounter resistance from conservative institutions – not just the palace but also elements of the army, judiciary and bureaucracy. ...... A handful of SPA and Maoist leaders have controlled closed-door negotiations; limited parliamentary scrutiny has not even extended to recognising the concept of an opposition. The interim constitution has granted the prime minister and cabinet sweeping authority, subject to minimal checks and balances; the compromised independence of institutions such as the judiciary has weakened the principle of separation of powers. The inclusion of provisions such as the unrestricted authority to grant pardons suggests that interim arrangements may enable the political elite to sweep past misdeeds under the carpet. ........ the peace process has so far delivered an oligarchy of party leaders rather than a popular democracy. ..... Party leaders have shown little appetite for pluralism: the interim legislature will have no official opposition, royalist parties may be excluded from the CA, new parties will find it very hard to register for elections, and in any case, “consensus” decisions will leave most power in the hands of party leaders. ........ no institutional structures to channel, process and consider the results of consultation. The Interim Constitution Drafting Commission invited public input but lacked a clear mandate or adequate mechanisms to deal with submissions. ....... Mainstream parties have devoted scant consideration to the difficult questions of procedure involved in constitutional reform. Few have embarked on internal changes to tackle their own problems of corruption, patronage and exclusion that fuelled support for the Maoists. ...... their tried and tested tactics of intimidation and coercion. ...... transparent agenda-setting procedures for the constituent assembly in both plenary and committee sessions. ...... communicate effectively to the public the progress and next steps of the process throughout the lead-up to, and life of, the constituent assembly. ..... maximise the transparency of the constituent assembly’s deliberations by, for example, providing for press coverage of, and public access to, all plenary sessions and limiting the number of closed committee sessions. ........... the setting of minimum quotas, to improve the representation and participation of women and minorities such as dalits and ethnic groups in party bodies such as central committees. ....... Establish internal rules to promote transparency and increased debate so as to diminish the importance of patronage as a factor in intra-party decision-making. ...... maintaining pressure on the Maoists to refrain from politically-motivated violence
King of Nepal to be punished by the state Telegraph.co.uk
Nepal's Constitutional Process ReliefWeb (press release)
Woman linked to Nepal royal massacre weds
The Brunei Times, Brunei Darussalam
Nepal's Terai plains brace for fresh turmoil
Indian Muslims, CA
Nepal's Terai plains affected by fresh protests Hindustan Times
Fresh turmoil racks Nepal’s Terai plains Gulf Times
Nepal plans to grab king’s palaces, land The News - International, Pakistan
Madheshi blockade starts in southern Nepal Radio Australia, Australia The group says it wants to block all 22 trading points along the border with India, which supplies the bulk of Nepal's essential goods and fuel.
Nepali Madheshi blockade starts in south PeaceJournalism.com



Sunday, February 25, 2007

माअोवादी तानाशाही मुर्दाबाद


नहीं चलेगी, नहीं चलेगी
माअोवादी तानाशाही नहीं चलेगी

बन्दुकके भर पर कोइ शासन नहीं करेगा
शासन करनी है तो जनताका मत ले ले
माङके
धम्काके लेनेकी प्रयास करनेवालेका
पत्ता साफ होगा
मधेशसे
पुरे देशसे

माअोवादीने पहले राजपाका अाम सभा िबथोला
कोइ कुछ नहीं बोला
अाज माअोवादीने काँग्रेस, एमाले
सब पर धाबा बोल िदया
मधेशी जनािधकार फोरमका अाम सभा
भैरहवा, नेपालगंजमें िबथोला
एमालेका अाम सभा िबथोला रोल्पामें

ये तो तानाशाही प्रवृित है
नहीं चलेगी, नहीं चलेगी
माअोवादी तानाशाही नहीं चलेगी

माअोवादीकी दादािगरी है देशमें
पहले अाम जनता पर डकैती था
जबरजस्ती चन्दा असुलते थे
अाज सरकारसे जबरजस्ती चन्दा असुल रहे हैं

कंस िसटौला शान्ितवाहक कहाँ
वो तो माअोवादीका िखलौना है
माअोवादी जो कहता है वो करता है

िगिरजा तो सोए हुए हैं
उन्हे बस कुर्सीकी गर्मी चािहए
अौर िकसी बातकी गम नहीं
देश रोता है, िगिरजा सोता है
मधेश जलती है, िगिरजा सोता है
त्रािहमाम है

माअोवादी कहता है जनजाितको अिधकार िदलाएंगे
लेिकन जनजाित महासंघके कार्यकर्ताअोंको िपटता है
कहता है मधेश राज्यका स्थापना करेंगे
लेिकन उनका मधेश भारतके िबहार जैसा नहीं
चीनके ितब्बत जैसी होगी
सब पावर बेइिजङमें रहेगी

माअोवादी कहते हैं
चुनाव लडेंगे
लेिकन बात करते हैं
बुथ क्याप्चिरङका


कहते हैं हितयार तो बुझा िदया
लेिकन गुण्डागर्दी करते हैं
िवराटनगरमें जब अाम सभा िकया
पुरे शहर पर माअोवादीने जैसे कब्जा कर िलया
खुद ट्रािफक पुिलस बन गए
माअोवादीको एक राजनीितक पार्टी बननी होगी
सटेट िविदन अ स्टेट बनने नहीं िदया जा सकता

मधेशी अान्दोलन अिहंसात्मक है
वो माअोवादीसे राजनीितक लोहा लेगी
जनजाित अान्दोलन अिहंसात्मक है
वो माअोवादीसे राजनीितक लोहा लेगी

नहीं चलेगी, नहीं चलेगी
माअोवादी तानाशाही नहीं चलेगी

माअोवादी सुधर जाए
एक राजनीितक पार्टी बन जाए
नहीं तो
माअोवादीका पत्ता साफ होगा
मधेशसे
पुरे देशसे



The Maoists Are Acting Scary


First They Came for the Jews

First they came for the Jews
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left
to speak out for me.

Pastor Martin Niemöller

First they came... - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Two senior Cabinet members opine differently on Maoist weapon stats Kantipur
Maoists, MPRF cadres clash in Rupandehi; police personnel critically injured in accidental fire
Maoists assault NC, UML-affiliate workers
Military expert raises eyebrows at Maoist weapon stats
Maoists disrupt MPRF programme
Narayanghat goes tense as NFIN activists clash with Maoists
Maoists release 94 MPRF cadres from custody
हतियार कम देखाइयो ः सरकार
शिविर र्फकन प्रचण्डको आग्रह
छापामार ३० हजार, हतियार ३ हजार
माओवादी- फोरम झडप, ९ घाइते
एमाले जनसभामा माओवादी हस्तक्षेप
माओवादीद्वारा कान्तिपुर जफत
Four injured as Maoists, locals clash in Kanchanpur
Maoists to receive additional Rs 50m for camp mgmt; Rs 60 daily per head for combatants
Maoist activities example of terrorism and militant philosophy: Yadav
Maoists' behaviour undemocratic: KC
Prachanda defends Maoist fighters-weapons disparity
Maoists capture king’s land
Two senior Cabinet members opine differently on Maoist weapon stats
फोरम र जनजातिका कार्यक्रममा माओवादी हस्तक्षेप
८० माओवादी पीडित गिरफ्तार
माओवादी बलमिच्याइ“
वादी र माओवादी

In The News

MJF rebuffs govt's call for dialogue NepalNews
Govt to provide Rs 50m to Maoists; each combatant to get Rs 60 daily allowance
Bill on Constituent Assembly Court tabled in parliament
FNJ urges agitators to respect rights of press
Badu dissatisfied with weapons disclosure; Pasang says they are politically honest
Muslims want their representation ensured
MPRF strike continues in Nawalparasi
MPRF snubs govt talks offer
मधेसीलाई एकजुट हुन आग्रह
चुरे भावर बन्दले यात्रु अलपत्र
मधेसको सवालः गम्भीर विषय
सहमति भए गणतन्त्र घोषणा गर्न संसद् तयार ः सभामुख
नेपालबारे अमेरिकी दृष्टिकोण

मधेसीलाई एकजुट हुन आग्रह

कास

काठमाडौं, फागुन १२ - मधेसीको पहिचानका लागि आत्मनिर्ण्र्ााहितको संघीय शासनका लागि त्यस क्षेत्रका वुद्धिजीवी, वकिल, राजनीतिज्ञ, पत्रकारलगायत पेसाकर्मीले सबैलाई एक जुट हुन आग्रह गरेका छन् । उनीहरूले मधेसीको सांस्कृति परिचयको लडाइ“ सबैका लागि भएकाले वर्षौंदेखि थिचोमिचो र उत्पीडन सह“दै आएकाहरूको पनि यसमा र्समर्थन रहेको बताए ।

अमेरिकास्थित नेपाल तराइयन संस्था -एन्टा) ले शनिबार गरेको 'मधेसी जनव्रि्रोह ः चुनौती र अवसर' विषयक अन्तर्विमर्शका वक्ताले एकतामा जोड दिएका हुन् ।

एन्टाका अध्यक्ष रतन झाले मधेसीका सबै जायज मागलाई सबै मधेसी एकजुट भई पार्टर्ीीदा माथि उठेर र्समर्थन गर्नुपर्ने बताए । 'मधेसीहरूमा राष्ट्रियताको भावना सबैभन्दा उचो भएकाले उनीहरूमाथि शंका गर्नु दर्ुभाग्य हो,' उनले भने । अर्का वक्ता मोहम्मद अहमदले मधेसीहरू आत्मपहिचानका लागि जागरुक भई अघि बढिसकेकाले त्यसलाई कुनै पनि शक्तिले रोक्न नसक्ने बताए । त्यस्तै सीके लालले राज्यको सबै क्षेत्रमा एउटै सम्प्रदायको पहु“च भएकाले राज्य सञ्चालकहरू नै सम्प्रदायिक भएको जनाउ“दै भने- 'मधेसी जनव्रि्रोहमा त मानव अधिकारवादी र सञ्चारमाध्यमसमेत सम्प्रदायिक बने ।'

Saturday, February 24, 2007

A Nepali Diaspora Milestone


NAC concerned over terai unrest

The Nepalese American Council (NAC) has expressed serious concern over the Nepal government's handling of Nepalgunj riots and recent unrest in the Terai.

A press release issued by the NAC said, "We are concerned about the role of security forces, particularly in Nepalgunj and Janakpur incidents. NAC is troubled by the disproportionate use of force against protestors in eastern Terai resulting in 28 deaths."

Many Nepalis have the perception that the non-intervention of police in Nepalgunj may have been driven by ethnic differences between the police force and the victims of the riot, the statement added.

NAC believes that a fair and equitable treatment of everyone is critical in establishing durable peace and harmony in the country, the statement added.

NAC has called on the government to undertake a prompt investigation of Nepalgunj incident and other recent Terai events in a fair and impartial manner and that the outcome of such investigation be made public.

NAC also called upon the government to take appropriate action against the responsible individuals who may be found guilty.

NAC has also appealed to everyone in the affected areas to refrain from vandalising private and public properties, and to exercise tolerance, appreciate the diversity and to help maintain the long-held communal harmony in Nepal. nepalnews.com pb Feb 22 07

This is a milestone. Otherwise for the longest time I have thought rather low of this crowd. This statement is belated, but better late than never.

Notice that NAC's call for an investigation into the state terror unleashed upon the Madhesi Movement mirrors that of the leader of that movement, the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF).

I think the NAC now has to go one step further and firmly ally itself with the concept of a federal republic in Nepal. The entire diaspora has to come around to it. NAC has paved the way for others to follow.

The NAC also needs to come out lashing against the forcible Maoists disruptions of the political programs by other parties and organizations. Royal dictatorship was not okay. Maoist dictatorship is not going to be okay either.

And I hope the NRNA follows suit with a clear stand of its own. Vague commitments to peace and democracy will no longer work, if it ever did. The NRNA has to get much more specific than that.

This is the time to take sides. A social justice movement is on. We should be thankful of its basic nonviolent character. Regardless of our ethnic backgrounds, we have to stand by people's right to free speech, peaceful assembly, and peaceful protests.

NAC needs to go one step further and demand the Home Minister's resignation. That is basic to building a democratic culture in the country. 38 deaths are too much weight for the Home Minister to get by with.

So, yes, the effort is great, but still not good enough. NAC still has a long way to go. The Pahadi diaspora has its homework cut out for it.

Also stop calling it the Terai unrest. Start calling it the Madhesi Movement. Calling it the Terai unrest is not exactly demonizing it like calling it the work of the royalists and the BJP, but it is half way there.

Paramendra Mention In Nepali Times By Kashish
Nepal Sarkar Needs To Set Up A Tribunal
Press Release: Canada Forum For Nepal
Sucheta Pyakurel's False Claim To Women's Rights
Alok Bohara: On Regional Autonomy And New Nepal
Kiran Sitoula Is A Short, Fat Idiot
Ram Sah: Concern Over State Excesses, And Diaspora Politics
Anand Jha At SEBS: Loha Lohe Ko Katta Hai
B. K. Rana And The Madhesi Janajati Question
NYC Gremlins
The Ghost Called ND Forum
NYC Nepali Are Madhesi, Powerless
Preeti Koirala And Mainstream Pahadi Prejudice
Open Letter To Surendra Devkota, Shiva Gautam
What Is Wrong With NDYCUSA?
Sukhdev Shah: Terai’s Fate—Looking Within!
Hamro Nepal Press Release: Only A Political Outlet To The Madhesi Movement
ANTA Press Release: Stop The State Terror
Feedback, NSU, USA Canada Chapter Press Release
Ram Sah, Ratan Jha, Lalit Jha, Pramod Kantha: Madhesi Diaspora, Pahadi Diaspora
Why Are The Pahadis Quiet?

NAC Goes Proactive

In The News

Fresh turmoil racks Nepal's Terai plains Earthtimes.org
New Confrontations, Old Coercion Outlook (subscription)
Home Ministry asked to withdraw cases, warrants Gorkhapatra
Thakur committee again invites MJF, NEFIN for talks Nepalnews.com
Shutdown paralyses life in Nepal's eastern, central Terai region
Malaysia Sun, Malaysia
Nepal: Will govt-Maoist unity remain intact?
The Daily Star, Bangladesh
Nepal's King Retains Substantial Support NewsBlaze
Nepal govt to discipline king Daily Times
Monarchy in Existential Crisis Nepal Monitor
Several injured in clashes in south Nepal
PeaceJournalism.com, Nepal
Envoy Says UN Completes First Stage Of Maoist Registration In Nepal
All Headline News
NAC concerned over terai unrest
Nepalnews.com, Nepal

Two senior Cabinet members opine differently on Maoist weapon stats Kantipur
Maoists, MPRF cadres clash in Rupandehi; police personnel critically injured in accidental fire
Maoists assault NC, UML-affiliate workers At least 12 workers affiliated to the workers' unions of the Nepali Congress (NC) and the CPN-UML were injured when Maoist cadres beat them up Saturday in Jorpati. ..... combat-dressed Maoist cadres
Military expert raises eyebrows at Maoist weapon stats "one man, one weapon" principle was not adopted while registering the PLA fighters. .... "There could have been 10-12,000 weapons and I had thought half of those would be registered. Even that figure did not come," said Rai.
Indian SSB personnel arrest two Nepali youths from Janakpur the duo had been arrested for the investigation of recent robberies that took place in the Indian territory.
Provisions in statue soon to oust king: Dev Gurung
Maoists disrupt MPRF programme Defying the police order, the Maoist cadres intervened the mass gathering. MPRF chairman Upendra Mahato was present at the programme as chief guest. ... Protesting the incident, the forum activists torched a vehicle (Bhe 1 Cha 611) that was used by the Maoists. The forum activists did not allow the fire brigade team that had reached there to douse the fire. ..... MPRF is preparing to hold the mass gathering again .... leaders of the Nepali Congress, CPN-UML and Jana Morcha Nepal said the Maoist intervention in forum's programme was wrong.
Parliament ready to declare republic: Nemwang the present laws were sufficient to initiate actions against the king.
Narayanghat goes tense as NFIN activists clash with Maoists Maoist cadres were actively urging people to defy the strike in a bid to render the strike announcement ineffective in the face of their mass-meeting at Butwal today. .... the police have also taken 14 NFIN cadres including the federation chairman Padam Gurung under control ..... NFIN is an umbrella organization of more than fifty nationalities. .... The agitating federation has been demanding the government address their various demands including recognition of mother languages of indigenous community in government works and guarantee of federal structure based on ethnic, regional and lingual identities, among others and make the necessary amendments in the interim constitution. ..... forum activists took two Maoist cadres under their control in Nawalparasi.
Maoists release 94 MPRF cadres from custody 94 activists of the agitating Madheshi People's Rights Forum (MPRF) who had been taken into Maoist custody from Bhairahawa ..... forum's Nawalparasi chairman Kailash Mahato ..... the Maoist were yet to release 20 additional cadres and 24 vehicles. ...... 41 of the detained were released Friday itself following the Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)'s intervention. ..... those released had told OHCHR that they had not been ill-treated but were interrogated about their activities and funding sources...... forum members today halted traffic at various places in Parasi by burning tyres at thoroughfares protesting against the abduction of the MPRF cadres. ...... a large number of Maoist cadres heading for Butwal to attend a mass meeting to be addressed by Maoist chairman Prachanda were left in a lurch after forum cadres obstructed traffic at the Parasi-Sunwal road.
NA detains eight armed Maoists at Bardiya reserve
‘Prepare for republic declaration through House’
सुरक्षा बैठक अझै दरबारमै सडक अत्यधिक व्यस्त रहने समय अपराह्न पा“च बजे सवारी चलाउने निर्ण्र्ाागरिएको छ । पा“च बजे सवारी चलाउ“दा र्सवसाधारणलाई कठिनाइ हुने गुनासो पटकपटक आउने गरेको छ । 'सबै निकायको काम कर्तव्य पहिले नै लिखित रूपमा तयार गरेर राखिएको हुन्छ, पढेर सुनाउ“छन् र हस्ताक्षर गराउ“छन्,' बैठकका एक सहभागीले भने- 'कसैले परिवर्तन गर्नसम्म भन्दैन ।' निर्ण्र्ाापुस्तिकामा 'विद्यमान परिस्थितिमा खतराको मूल्यांकन हेरी गरिएको सुरक्षा व्यवस्थामा हामी हस्ताक्षर गरेका सबैले त्रुटिरहित ढंगले कार्य गर्नेछौंं,' भन्ने लेखिने गरेको ..... त्यसरी हस्ताक्षर गरेपछि कुनै त्रुटि भए सोही आधारमा विभागीय कारबाहीदेखि बर्खास्तसम्म हुन्छ ।
छापामार ३० हजार, हतियार ३ हजार
माओवादी- फोरम झडप, ९ घाइते
भारतबाट बिजुली आयात गरिने
चोरी र लुटपाट बढ्दो
एमाले जनसभामा माओवादी हस्तक्षेप
फोरमले वार्ता नगर्ने
माओवादीद्वारा कान्तिपुर जफत
राष्ट्रले पाल्न नसक्ने रङ्गी-विरङ्गी हात्ती
चरित्रहीन चेलीहरूको नया“ अवतार


Prachanda steps up tempo against monarchy NepalNews He claimed central leaders of his party would not keep personal properties for next 20 years to concentrate in the development of the country.
Controversy over registration of arms unnecessary: Leaders Maoist leader duo Dina Nath Sharma and Nanda Kishor Pun said they have already cantoned all the weapons they possessed. ..... Besides some homemade weapons, the Maoists have had been using the arms seized from the army and police forces during the raids, they added.
Maoists, MJF activists clash in Rupandehi, Nepalgunj growing head-on conflict between the Maoists and the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF) ...... In Nepalgunj, Maoist activists have vandalised the venue where a program was being organised by MJF. ..... Earlier on Saturday morning, the Maoist cadres clashed with activists of Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities (NFIN) in Chitwan. The NFIN activists have also vandalised a jeep carrying central leaders of UML in Dolakha this morning. .... In parts of eastern terai, activists of hitherto unknown Chure-Bhawar Unity Society have imposed indefinite strike demanding declaration of separate Chure-Bhawar autonomous region.
NFIN Bandh affects life in central and eastern Terai In Narayangarh, over 25 people were injured when NFIN activists and Maoist cadres clashed with each other. The clash occurred when the Maoist cadres tried to foil the strike called by the NFIN. The security forces have been mobilised in large number to bring the situation under control. Police have arrested a few activists of the NFIN. ...... Dolakha .... Hundreds of NFIN activists took out rally demanding proportional representation of the indigenous communities in the constituent assembly and establishment of republic. ..... Eastern Terai has remained thoroughly affcted since last three days due to bandh called by JTMM-Goit faction.
No legal basis to take action against the King: Law Minister Narendra Bikram Nemwang, Minister for Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs ...... the minister also advised Home Minister Krishna Sitaula to step down if that would resolve the crisis in Terai.
MJF refuses government's talks invitation Home Minister Krishna Sitaula resign from his position and an independent panel formed to probe incidents of repression during Madhesi agitation. ..... there will be chakkajam (traffic blockade) and blockade against custom points between February 26 and March 5. From March 6, the MJF has announced it will impose indefinite Terai bandh.
Eight parties will decide action against the King: Home Minister The commission led by Chief Judge of the Appellate Court, Butwal, Purushottam Parajuli, has recommended action against those responsible for the Nepalgunj riots. .... speaking at a press meet in Pokhara on Friday, Sitaula said that problems in the Terai would be resolved soon. .... all lawsuits and warrants issued against them would be withdrawn when they come for talks.
Government surprised over fewer number of weapons The Maoists have said that they only had socket bombs in large number.
Prachanda wants to pre-empt regression by declaring republic Referring to recent unrest in Madhes and upsurge of demands on ethnic rights, Prachanda said the country was witnessing the last-ditch effort by the counter-revolutionaries who he said had stolen the slogans belonging to the revolutionaries.
Prachanda instructs combatants to return
Maoists intervene UML's mass meeting in Rolpa A dozen Maoist cadres led by Maoist district committee member Lok Bahadur Budha intervened in the mass meeting and took into control some UML leaders including UML district secretary Shant Kumar Oli, secretariat member Manoj Singh Dangi and member of area number seven Khim Bahadur Gharti .... Maoists surrounded the venue of the mass meeting immediately after the meeting started and snatched the mike from them. ...... As the mass meeting continued despite the Maoist's initial obstruction, Maoists took into control three leaders of the party after the meeting concluded. ...... Maoists have been continuing obstruction in the political programmes of various political parties in different parts of the country.
Maoists have 30852 combatants and 3428 weapons: UNMIN
Nepal, India agree to renew trade treaty with some improvements
Maoists, MJF activists clash in Bhairahawa

िगिरजाको कुर्सी से हटा दो, सेरेमोिनयल बना दो


िगिरजा सोया हुअा है
सोया ही रहने दो
कुर्सी से उठा के
िवस्तर पे िलटा दो
सोया ही छोड दो

कहता है राजाको सेरेमोिनयल बनाएंगे
राजाके साथ इसकी भी िवदाइ कर दो
िगिरजाको कुर्सी से हटा दो
सेरेमोिनयल बना दो

िगिरजा कान नहीं सुनता
बुड्ढा हो गया है
सडककी अावाज नहीं सुनता
क्रान्ितने इसको कुर्सी दी
क्रान्ितकी अावाज नहीं सुनता ये

िगिरजा बाहुन बाजे बेन्चो
३८ शहीद तो पैदा कर ही िदया
२१ िदनमें
अब अौर पैदा करने की
तयारी कर रहा है
बेन्चो

गद्दी पर बैठके
हेल्थ हेल्थ बोल्ता रहता है
खुद राजाका नाम जपता है
मधेशी अान्दोलनको गाली देता है
कहता है प्रितगामीका खेल है

वार्ताका समय खत्म होने जा रहा है
बिलदानकी घडी िफर से अा गइ है
कंस िसटौला अौर कुम्भकर्ण िगिरजा
दोनोंकी छुट्टी बस होने ही वाली है

राजा खुद गया क्या
कालर पकडके िनकाला गया
िसटौला अौर िगिरजाकी वही हाल होगी

गंगा जमुनाके तरह
मधेशी अान्दोलन
अौर जनजाित अान्दोलन
एक होंगे

अप्िरल क्रान्ितसे बडी बाढ
माघे क्रान्ितकी थी
उससे बडी बाढ अब अाएगी
सिदयों पुरानी सामन्ती सोंच शोषण
सब उस बाढमें बह जाएगी

महाभारतको भी टालनेकी प्रयास हुइ थी
नहीं टली
सुलह नहीं हुअा
युद्ध तो होनी ही थी

अिहंसाके सेनानी अब सडक पर उतरेंगे
मधेशके प्रत्येक सरकारी कार्यालयके
साइनबोर्ड पर मधेश सरकार िलख दी जाएगी
िदनको, रातको, सुबह अौर शामको
मधेश राज्यकी स्थापना मधेशी अभी करेंगे
खुद करेंगे

राजाने भी तीन साल माँगी थी
िगिरजाको भी तीन साल चािहए
क्यूँ चािहए

िगिरजा बाहुन बाजे
दुसरोंको कहे
िहन्दु कट्टरपन्थी
ये क्या मजाक है

अब वार्ता नहीं िवजय चािहए
देशका प्रधानमन्त्री मधेशी चािहए
जनजाितको रखो उपप्रधानमन्त्री पद पर
खस लोंगोसे राज्य नहीं चलती
वो हमनें देख िलया

िगिरजाको जाना होगा
मधेशी गठबन्धन अौर जनजाित गठबन्धन
अन्तिरम संसदको जाएगी
अन्तिरम सरकार चलाएगी
देशको संिवधान सभाकी अोर ले जाएगी

अब बस करो
बहुत हो चुकी
िगिरजाकी नौटंकी



अगर सडक पर िफर से उतडनी पडी तो
चुनावी जंग
िवजयकी सुगन्ध अा रही है
समानता अौर अिधकार पर्याप्त नहीं हैं, हमें तो शक्ित चािहए
माघे क्रान्ित
सत्ताधारी सात पहाडी पार्टीको घैंटोमा अझै घाम लागेको छैन
सरिता गिरी: अशान्त मधेस, नया नेपाल
माघे क्रान्ित, राजावादी र िहन्दु कट्टरपन्थीबारे
डटे रहो
शान्ित वार्ता क्या, िवजय घोषणा करो
बराबर जनसंख्याबाला २०५ सीट
मधेश जल रही है
िफर से कह दो एक बार इन्िकलाब
पहाडी मधेशी दंगा, मधेशी जनजाित गठबंधन, र िनर्णायक, अिहंसात्मक अन्ितम अान्दोलनको खाँचो
सद्भावना रोडम्याप
नेपालमा दमजम अान्दोलनको अावश्यकता
नेपालमा संसारको नम्बर एक लोकतन्त्रको स्थापना हुन सक्छ
राजतन्त्र, बाहुनवाद र भर्ष्टाचार समाप्त पारौं
राजतन्त्र, बाहुनवाद र भर्ष्टाचार समाप्त पारौं


Gang of Four - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The Gang of Four was a group of Communist Party of China leaders in the People's Republic of China who were arrested and removed from their positions in 1976, following the death of Mao Zedong, and were primarily blamed for the events of the Cultural Revolution.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Federalism As A Formula




  1. The central government keeps 50% of the federal budget, and passes on the other 50% to all the states in direct proportion to their population.
  2. The state government keeps 50% of the state budget, and passes on the other 50% to all the districts in direct proportion to their population.
  3. The district government keeps 50% of the district budget, and passes on the other 50% to all the towns/villages in direct proportion to their population.
  4. The state government is the only that gets to collect the sales tax. This will make sure all states compete to create the best possible environment for business.
  5. For the national lower house, states get seats in direct proportion to their population. 300 seats total.
  6. For the national upper house, there are 100 seats through proportional representation. Any party that gets at least 1% of the votes qualifies. A political party may not be armed. Other than that there will not be any disqualifiers. It is called the basic human right to peaceful assembly.
Proposed Constitution

In this formula, it does not matter how you draw the federal map, as in it is okay to do it along ethnic, linguistic lines. Makes no material difference.

At this point my knowledge base is such that I am sure only about three states: Madhesh, Tharuwan, and Newa. That does not mean I am opposed to the other demarcations. It is just that I want the Janajatis to come forward on their own to suggest what they want.

Let's have a little thought experiment here.

Hypothetical Table.

States Population GDP MPs LH MPs UH
Madhesh 9 million $22 billion 84 28
Newa 4 million $10 billion 36 12
Tharuwan 5 million $10 billion 45 15
Kirat 3 million $ 6 billion 27 9
Tamang 2 million $ 4 billion 18 6
Tamuwan 3 million $ 6 billion 27 9
Magarant 3 million $ 6 billion 27 9
Karnali 2 million $ 3 billion 18 6
Mahakali 2 million $ 3 billion 18 6
Total 33 million $70 billion 300 100


Satya Narayan Shah: Concept Of A Regional Party

People - read Pahadi Bahuns - who think in terms of a zero-sum game, in terms of a limited pie, are opposed to federalism. But we have to think in terms of a growing pie. Take one example of Dolpa. People feel sorry for Dolpa because it is in Karnali. But if Dolpa were to be allowed to keep half of all the tourist revenue it generates, it would be one of the richest districts in the country. What is going on now? The bureaucrats in Kathmandu end up keeping all that money. Federalism would be great for Dolpa.

It might look like Madhesh will be the largest state and hence will dominate. Not so. All the other states will have a major incentive to gang up against Madhesh if need be. Half of the Madhesh revenue goes to the central government where all states are represented. All states will be forced to work together to decide on what to do with all the shared revenue.

And if we were to put a major focus on transforming Nepal from an agricultural economy to a knowledge economy, then it is no longer true Madhesh will have the natural advantage. Then you are looking at a level playing field. Some of the hill station destinations might be best suited for the knowledge economy. It might not be Madhesh.

Let's use FM technology to that effect. 10 years of schooling through FM. Every evening for five hours nationwide, you should be able to tune in to any of the 10 class years. This way we are saying, we can't wait until we have enough teachers and school buildings. The future is now.

Bottomline, we have to think in terms of a growing pie. It is amazing to me how populated the Nepali diaspora is with prejudiced Pahadis who have been cooking up all sorts of unscientific arguments against federalism and the same has been consumed by the Kathmandu media like there were no tomorrow.

We have to move beyond those false arguments, and get busy with actually shaping the federalism in the most democratic way possible. It is so obvious to me we are going to have the ethnic states. Madhesh is going to be a state. That is for sure.

If you are not for ethnic federalism, you are in good company with me. I was not for it either before the Madhesi Movement. Joine me. Let go of your old prejudices. Grow your horizons. Federalism is okay, it is more than okay, it is great.


Janakpur Madhesis Demand Federal Republic Nepal
Bahun Federalism Is No Federalism At All
Madhesi Alliance: Panch Pandav: Federal Republic, Madhesh State, Nonviolence
Federalism: Four Layers Or Three Layers
Interim Federalism
Global Federation Of Indigenous People Of Nepal
Federal Republic Guaranteed
Critiquing Pitambar Sharma's Federalism
Pitambar Sharma's Federalism
Nepal: Maps
Federalism: Competing Maps
RPP For Federalism Ahead of UML, NC And NC(D)
My Federalism Is Economic, Scientific, Not Ethnic
Why It Is Important To Me The Congress Takes Up A Federal Republic
UML Inching Towards Federalism
Monarchy, Army, Federalism

On The Web

Federalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Federalism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Constitutional Topic: Federalism - The U.S. Constitution Online ...
Close Up Foundation Civics Education | Federalism
federalism: Definition and Much More from Answers.com
federalism: See what people are saying right now on Technorati
ThisNation.com--Federalism
Democracy For Nepal (DFN): Federalism: Competing Maps
The Federalism Project
American Federalism, 1776 to 1997: Significant Events
Cases & Materials on American Federalism
The Urban Institute | Assessing the New Federalism
Crime & Federalism: Daily commentary about what's wrong with the ...
Federalist - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Center for the Study of Federalism
Centre for Research and Information on Canada: Federalism
Oxford Journals | Social Sciences | Publius
U.S. Federalism Web Site
Federalism - National Constitution Center
Ben's Guide (3-5): National versus State Government -- Federalism

Janakpur Madhesis Demand Federal Republic Nepal










Madheshis demanded federal republic Nepal

Janakpurdham, Thursday, February 22, 2007. Thousands of Madheshis chanted slogans demanding abolition of monarchy, constituency based on equal and average population. They appealed interim parliament to announce Nepal as a federal republic. Madheshis also demanded immediate resignation of home minister Krishna Prasad Sitaula, responsible for brutal suppression and killing of 38 Madheshis during Madheshi Adhikar Andolan.

Thousands of Madheshis today picketed in the square of Janaki Temple of Janakpur. The picketing was organized by Democratic Madheshi Society, Janakpur. The gathering also resolved seven following resolutions.

Resolution 1

Madheshi Adhikar Andolan (Madheshi People's Movement) is for equality and equal rights among Nepalese citizen. We need equality nothing less or more than it. The government is trying to denigrate this peaceful and just movement. Delaying the fulfillment of well justified and established demands of Madheshi people, the regime is trying to play fouls. Recent Bill proposed by the cabinet for the amendment of the interim constitution is ambiguous, which shows its discriminatory mentality among the rulers. This meeting condemns such mentality and strongly demands reconstruction of constituencies based on equal and average population for CA elections.

This meeting also appeals all the Madheshis MPs to act jointly in the advocacy of equal rights and be attentive and conscious in amendment proceedings in the Interim Parliament.

( Proposed by : Ex-Mayor of Janakpur Municipality and NC leader, Brikhesh Chandra Lal.)

Resolution 2

During the peaceful Madheshi Adhikar Andolan (Madheshi People's Movement), the government brutally and nastily tried to suppress Madheshi non-violent protesters. Unnecessary and unjustified arms were used on unarmed protestors by the Government's police. Peace loving Protestors form Dhanusha, Morang and Sarlahi were brutally killed by the communal agents backed by the Government. These irresponsible acts of the government have been closely watched by the UNCHR, Civil Society, and Other Neutral viewers and such animalistic activities have been condemned.

This meeting strongly demands the dismissal of the irresponsible Home Minister and right punishment to other concerned officials of the Government.

( Proposed by : Ex-Chairman of DDC Dhanusha and NCD President, Dhanusha, Ram Saroj Yadava)

Resolution 3

During the Madheshi People's Movement, the protestors were brutally handled. The police were forcibly entered in the houses and mercilessly beat women and children. But so called Human Right Activists were nowhere. Rather they tried to cover misdeeds of Police and security forces. They also tried to blame baselessly such peaceful mass movement as communal riots.

This meeting condemns such prejudice and communal mentality as well as appeals the National and International genuine Human Right Activists to identify and be aware of such people and organizations.

( Proposed by : Ratneshwar Goit, Alternate Central Committee Member, CPN UML)

Resolution 4

Monarchy in Nepal has always been the centre of feudalistic activities and has exploited the Nepalese people. Killings, sabotaging, conspiracy, and power-lust have been its characteristics. Nepalese have always been compelled to fight against the monarchy for their civic rights and democracy. Monarchy is still sabotaging and working against democracy and the achievement of popular movement–II. Kings unauthorized and unconstitutional message on the Falgun 7th (19, Feb 2007) is the proof.

We hereby demand immediate abolition of Monarchy and establishment of FEDERAL DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF NEPAL.

( Proposed by : Mrs. Minakhsi Jha, DEMAS, Janakpur.)

Resolution 5

We the participants of this mass meeting, appeal all individuals as well as organizations working for the Madheshi Rights to act jointly with mutual coordination and cooperation.
A joint front for this noble cause is essential, this meeting appeals all the concerned to move forward for the formation of the needful association.

( Proposed by : Nirmal Kumar Chaudhary, Chairman Chamber of Commerce, Janakpur.)

Resolution 6

Bomb blast in the historic, religious and traditional festival of Mithila Bihari Parikrama in Marai VDC of Mahottary District is an attack on Madheshi religious belief and traditional culture. We condemn this barbaric act.

Due to lack of responsibility and accountability, proper security arrangements could not been made during such an important and religious event. This shows the ill attitude of the present rulers and administrators. This is a conspiracy against Madheshi Culture. We warn, those who are responsible, to stop such activities instantly.

( Proposed by : Amar Chandra Anil, Convener Joint Youth Action Committee, Janakpur.)

Resolution 7

We Madheshi are proud of our Great Martyrs who sacrificed their lives for the cause of Madheshi Rights during the peaceful Movement against Khas Hegemony.
We honor them and promise to perform all efforts for the achievements they wished. Wishing peace for the great SOULS, we collectively express our cordial condolences to their families.

( Proposed by : Er. Satya Narayan Shah, Civic Society Janakpur.)