Three-day Maoist strike paralyses Nepal
December 20th, 2009 - 11:44 am ICT by IANS ( 1 comment )Kathmandu, Dec 20 (IANS) As talks with the government failed, Nepal’s former Maoist guerrillas Sunday enforced a three-day general strike nationwide, shutting down transport, industries and educational institutions and cutting off road links with India.
Defying the morning chill, hundreds of former rebels began holding protest marches in the capital and major towns outside, blocking highways by burning tyres and shouting slogans against President Ram Baran Yadav, the target of the protests.
Though Maoist chief and former prime minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda said the three-day closure would be peaceful, the protesters were reported to have vandalised at least two vehicles by early morning, resulting in police arresting eight attackers.
A taxi in the popular tourist city of Pokhara was vandalised by the former insurgents while a passenger bus, which had run into mechanical trouble last night and was speeding towards its destination in southern Nepal in the morning, was also attacked by the protesters who, however, first made the passengers alight.
In the border town of Dhulikhel, marchers made four oil tankers from India headed for the capital turn back. The three-day blockade will worsen the present fuel crisis in Nepal that depends on oil supplies from India.
Roads remained deserted in the capital and the highways connecting the troubled country with India in the south and China in the north were empty of traffic on the first day of the closure.
Condemning the disruption, the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry said they were forced to observe the closure since the government had failed to provide any assurance of safety.
However, the umbrella organisation of Nepal’s industrial and business houses warned that it would be compelled to implement a no work-no pay measure for employees for the three days.
Nepal’s Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal will run into the protests as he arrives in Kathmandu in the afternoon from Copenhagen where he had been participating in the UN conference on climate change.
Nepal is scheduled to visit China from Dec 26 though the Maoists have warned they would call an indefinite strike if the present protests failed to meet their demands.
The former rebels, who are now the largest party in parliament after winning last year’s election, are asking the government to rescind the decision taken by the president in May to reinstate the chief of the army, Gen Rookmangud Katawal, whom the then Maoist-led government had sacked for insubordination.
“The midnight reinstatement was a coup that heralds military rule in Nepal in future,” Maoist deputy chief and coordinator of the protests, Baburam Bhattarai, said Sunday.
The former rebels, who fought a 10-year war to overthrow monarchy and turn Nepal into a federal republic, are accusing the ruling parties of trying to scuttle the agreement and abet the comeback of deposed king Gyanendra.
They are also prophesying that the government would fail to implement a new constitution, to be written with people’s direct participation, by May 2010 and would instead seek to declare emergency and President’s Rule backed by the army.
The government, on the other hand, says it is committed to unveiling the new constitution next year and is counter-accusing the former rebels of violating the peace pact by enforcing general strikes and other protests.
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Tags: business houses, chambers of commerce, chambers of commerce and industry, dahal, educational institutions, former prime minister, fuel crisis, madhav, maoist guerrillas, mechanical trouble, nepalese chambers, oil tankers, passenger bus, prachanda, protest marches, s industrial, southern nepal, tourist city, transport industries, umbrella organisation
December 20th, 2009 at 12:17 pm
Dear editor,
From the very beginning, I am writing about Nepalese Nationality, Democracy, Hinduism and Buddhaism. I have been writing many suggestions to the Nepalese Maoists also. But, the Maoists leader could not understand my opinion. You know- The Maoist model of federalism which is based on ethnicity can disintegrate the country. Racial federalism can never develop the norms of democracy. Now, they are openning the ethnic-based state in the name of ‘Civilian Suprimecy’. Ethnic marginalization has been exacerbated by the Maoist to weaken the canter and get support especially from Janajaties. They have pressed our every social fault line without any regard to the negative effects on the nation. However, they do not have any solutions to it.
The irresponsible party leaders want to make this country another Kashmir and Afghanistan. I think you have heard the situation of Sri Lanka. Since 1800 AD, Tamils were sent to Sri Lanka by East-India-Company as workers in the rubber & wood farms from Tamilnadu of India. The King Ashoka had followed Buddhism in Sri Lanka since 2600 years ago. Sri Lanka became independent in 1948. In the meantime, there were 70 percent Buddhists there and Hindu-Tamils were minorities. After1971, religious and language discrimination between Singhalese and Tamils led to a confrontation. Then in 1979, the Tamil based terrorist organization LTTE declared war for an independent state under the leadership of the young Pravakaran. Now, the 30 years’ long LTTE’s armed struggle is over. The separatists in Sri Lanka have been defeated by the nationalist army though the war claimed 75 thousands live, including that of Pravakaran. Meanwhile several foreign-initiated ‘peace talks,’ peace force’ and ‘mediation’ failed in bringing about peace. But the determination of the Sri Lankan people, president, government and army enjoyed victory. So, we must learn from the lessons of Sri Lanka.
It is our unfortunate that during 1990 to 2008, parliamentary democracy was inhered in Nepal but the politicians have learnt no lessons. The King’s rule was much better than the rule of the present leaders. Monarchy is still popular in Nepal. The country has been facing a series of problems due to the mistake of abolishing the royal institution. So, the uncertainty in the country will end only after the reinstatement of monarchy and Hindu & Buddha Kingdom. The Maoist should be able to understand the game plan of India and America to destroy China by using Nepal and for that they first want to weaken Nepal. In such a situation, we nationalists including Maoists should request the King Gyanendra to reinstate the throne with Crown. The attempt to establish a republican state in Nepal is a Herculean task.
Thank you.
Dirgha Raj Prasai
Kathmandu,
Nepal