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 ***A HERO IS BORN IN NEPAL***

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sYaKuuRiolAKU_nchImb
Posted on 04-26-09 1:30 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Go man
kick all those terroriststs, dhotis, dahi chiures and corrupt leaders of Nepal

You can do it, you have the guts
i salute you


Last edited: 26-Apr-09 01:31 PM


 
Posted on 05-05-09 10:30 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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At this juncture Military coup is the only way out! Send Prachanda to meet Sadam Hussain of Iraq!!
 
sYaKuuRiolAKU_nchImb
Posted on 05-09-09 10:11 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Ram Baran Yadav vs His Detractors
 
 

KULCHANDRA GAUTAM

During the last
6-7 years I have had the opportunity to meet, observe and get to know many
Nepali leaders from different political parties, civil society and other walks
of life. I have found many smart, intelligent, articulate and committed leaders,
some of whom have made great sacrifice for the nation. I have also found many
cunning, calculating, and demagogic leaders, who excel in using their oratorical
skills to vilify others and glorify themselves or their party in a self-serving
and self-righteous manner.

It is in the nature of competitive politics
everywhere that sometimes even the most mature, responsible and enlightened
leaders take partisan positions, especially in the heat of electoral campaigns.
But truly great and decent leaders often rise to the occasion and overcome their
partisanship and become champions of broader national interest.

Of all
the contemporary political leaders of Nepal, I have found Ram Baran Yadav to be
one such exemplary leader.

I did not know much about Ram Baran Yadav
until he became Nepal’s first president. I have personally known him only for a
few months. But during this time I have found one admirable quality in him that
I have rarely found in any other contemporary leader of Nepal. He has been a
consistent champion of what he believes to be in the best interest of Nepal as a
nation.

President Ram Baran Yadav has been an exemplary leader. He
has been a consistent champion of what he believes to be in the best interest of
Nepal as a nation.

Scratch the surface, and you will find that most
other leaders are driven by either their party’s ideological interest or their
own self interest in terms of class, caste, ethnicity, region, etc. often
cloaked as representing the national interest. But as president, Ram Baran Yadav
has impressed me – and many other Nepalis - as one of those rare Nepali leaders
who have always stood for the unity, integrity, and prosperity of the nation as
a whole, rather than its sub-component parts.

It is, therefore, extremely
painful to see this decent man being vilified as acting unconstitutionally and
undemocratically by partisan politicians and activists whose own record of
following constitutional norms and democratic practices is deeply flawed and
suspect.

The Supreme Court will soon decide if the president’s actions
were constitutional. The case could also be taken to the sovereign Constituent
Assembly which after all symbolizes the supremacy of the people, and has the
power to even impeach the president. But his detractors have no patience or use
for such constitutional and democratic remedies. In the name of “civilian
supremacy” they are hell-bent to impose their views through street pressure and
intimidation – i.e. through any and all means – except the designated
constitutional means, as practiced in most civilized democratic
states.

It is ironic that the one political party that has not renounced
violence, that keeps a private army of its own, and that still subscribes to an
ideology of “power comes from the barrel of the gun”, claims to stand for
“civilian supremacy”. All other political parties with a much longer and
consistent record of following democratic norms are castigated as supporting
militarization, and being feudal, reactionary, anti-people, lackeys of
foreigners – as certified by self-proclaimed defenders of the people.
The
Maoists and their sympathizers being the only supporters of “civilian supremacy”
sounds curiously like the old Nepali saying “the cat is the watchdog of the
milk” – doodhko saakshi biraalo!

No political party in Nepal currently
matches the para-military youth organization and other fraternal groups aligned
with the Maoists in terms of their capacity to organize demonstrations,
agitation, intimidation and even what is known as “physical action” – i.e.
killing and maiming of their opponents. Currently such activism has been
unleashed to give the impression that the whole country is united against the
president’s “unconstitutional” act.

In this effort, the Maoist cause has
been greatly aided by a group of supposedly “neutral” civil society leaders –
some of whom had played an important role at the time of the 2006 People’s
Movement, but who seem to have aligned themselves, perhaps even inadvertently,
with the Maoists since then. The one-sided vitriol coming from some members of
this civil society leadership is breath-taking. Reminiscent of the hired
propagandists in the Stalin-era communist regimes, a well-known and thoroughly
partisan leftist writer known for his poison-pen activism characterizes Ram
Baran Yadav as “an evil president who is tempted by greed for power, and is
desperately seeking a crown and a throne”. No one with an iota of objectivity
would characterize Yadav, a humble son of a farmer and a life-long democrat, in
such hyperbolic terms.

It is understandable for the Maoists to charge
that the president violated the Constitution. But how about the
constitutionality of the decision taken by a coalition government during a
cabinet meeting boycotted by over half of its ministers and objected to by all
coalition partners of the prime minister’s party?

In a parliamentary
system, is it not the constitutional duty of the president to take account of
the views conveyed to him in writing by 18 political parties representing the
majority of the membership of the Constituent Assembly? And how about the
constitutionality of the unilateral actions of a prime minister who no longer
commanded the support of his coalition partners on this issue and whose
government had effectively ceased to enjoy the support of a majority of CA
members?

There is something deeply disturbing about supposedly “neutral”
civil society leaders not even granting the benefit of doubt to a president with
life-long record of commitment to norms of democracy, while granting carte
blanche credibility to unilateral decisions of a party which waged a violent
insurgency against parliamentary democracy. There is a cruel irony in a
political party and its leaders who maintain their own private army and who have
publicly and unapologetically vowed to destabilize and politicize a professional
national army claiming to stand for “civilian supremacy”.

This is not to
blindly defend the Nepal Army or its chief as paragons of virtue. There are many
documented cases of unprofessional behavior, human rights abuses and impunity
perpetrated by the army in the past. But the Maoist army is no less guilty of
its own brutalities, forced recruitment, including that of minors, and other
violations of human rights and impunity. Furthermore, in terms of “civilian
supremacy” a national army infiltrated by the ideologically indoctrinated
partisan army of one political party is infinitely less likely to follow such
supremacy, unless it is that of its own political party masters.

Whereas
one can speculate about the president’s intentions, the Maoists’ intentions to
infiltrate the army, destabilize other independent institutions and to capture
state power need no speculation – the official pronouncement of the recent
Maoist party convention in Kharipati, Prachanda’s video-taped message to his
party cadres in January 2008, and a consistent pattern of follow-up actions ever
since, are there in the public domain for all to see.

Yet, it is the
humble and decent Ram Baran Yadav, circumscribed by the decorum of his office;
and mindful of his constitutional duties, who is being portrayed as the villain.
Yadav possibly helped prevent a major national disaster by his difficult but
thoughtful decision not to lend constitutional legitimacy to a seemingly
unconstitutional and unilateral act of the ruling political party on May 3,
2009. The Supreme Court and history of Nepal will judge whether he was a hero or
a villain. But there is no question in my mind that his decency, his love of the
nation, his commitment to democracy and genuine “civilian supremacy” is
unmatched by his self-serving opponents and detractors.

(Writer is former Assistant Secretary-General of the
United Nations, and Deputy Executive Director of UNICEF.
)

 
sYaKuuRiolAKU_nchImb
Posted on 05-10-09 8:18 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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