We the people of Nepal have lived in peace and harmony for centuries. 
  After the people’s movement of April 2006 sidelined the monarchy and  
 the political parties along with the former insurgents (Maoists) seized  
 the power, there have been numerous incidents of racial and ethnic group 
  uprising thereby creating tension and conflicts among the various  
 groups. Some groups are demanding outright cessation from Nepal to  
 establish a separate independent country. Almost all political parties  
 have agreed to at least divide the country into Federal Republic.  
 However, not a single party has any clue as to how to go about dividing  
 the country into different units. Various groups within Nepal have  
 demanded for Self Governing Units based on ethnic, linguistic or  
 geographical grounds. This is not going to work due to the heterogeneous 
  nature of the country’s population. Moreover, Nepal has always been a  
 unitary government. No single part of the country has ever been a part  
 of self governing unit for the last 240 years. Therefore, when the  
 political parties promised Federal Structure to ethnic groups and  
 Madhesi people, they did not realized that they are treading into  
 uncharted territories.
At the time when many nations are working  
 together and uniting their efforts for a common goal (such as the  
 European Union), it is impractical and stupid to divide an existing  
 nation to appease a handful of selfish politicians, thugs, and armed  
 terrorists. The division of Nepal will bring about untold amount of  
 misery and suffering to the people. It will benefit no one. We should  
 learn from what happened when the British left India and the former  
 colony of Britain was divided into India and Pakistan. We need to have a 
  logical approach to solving problems so that the demands of Madhesi  
 people as well as the demands of the other ethnic groups are met without 
  destroying the basic structure of the society. The foolish and selfish  
 politicians and administrators living in luxury of Kathmandu do not  
 understand the problems faced by the people in the villages of the  
 Terai, hills and the mountains. Are these fools aware of the fact that a 
  pregnant mother has to carry drinking water for the family two miles up 
  the mountain? Men do not fetch drinking water in Nepal. When I was out  
 in Salyan to survey for water supply, I was both saddened and surprised  
 to note how difficult a life a Magar village had because of lack of  
 drinking water in the vicinity. They had to travel two miles down the  
 steep mountain to just fetch a bucket of water.
We need Unity not Division
It 
  seems that the political leaders do not have the interest of the people 
  or the nation in their minds. They are just busy taking care of  
 themselves, their relatives and their cadres. There is not a single  
 political party that has come up with a plan on how they are going to  
 solve the problems facing the people including that of poverty and  
 illiteracy. They have not come up with programs for economic  
 development, train workforce to develop the country, improve health  
 care, educational institutions, transportation, and above all protect  
 our sovereignty and territorial integrity. If these leaders are serious  
 about the country and the people they would not be talking about  
 division of the country and the people. A true leader would try to unite 
  the country and the people and lead the nation towards peace and  
 prosperity.
A true leader should have the interest of the whole  
 nation and her people above any thing else. However, the current leaders 
  are all for their personal glory and well being. They are not  
 interested in helping people. They have placed personal interest above  
 party interest; and interest and well being of their party above the  
 national interest.
What do Nepalese People Want?
Having 
  faced the turbulent times in the last sixteen years due to the  
 insurgency and even more turmoil under the current Ganatantra, Nepalese  
 people want to live in peace and to be left alone so that they can carve 
  out a living for themselves. Like people of any other nation, the  
 Nepalis people want to have good governance which embraces transparency, 
  accountability, fairness, and which is devoid of corruption,  
 communalism, racism, regionalism, and nepotism. The Nepalis people also  
 aspire to have their country developed economically in all sectors  
 including agriculture, transportation, communication, energy generation, 
  horticulture, manufacturing and tourism. For our economy to progress,  
 the people of Nepal are aware that they need to have peace and security  
 in the country. Political thugs and criminals cannot roam around  
 bullying, cheating, and threatening the common people. Nepalese people  
 cannot wait to see political stability no matter how it is brought  
 about. It is also satisfying to note that the Nepalis people want  
 environmental conservation and protection of our resources. Among their  
 other aspirations, the Nepalis people desire to preserve their vibrant  
 culture, establish high standard of education and provide adequate  
 health care services for all the people.
The people of this  
 country are sick and tired of the political bickering. It is a shame for 
  the whole nation how childish these political leaders are. They have  
 created the jumbo Constituent Assembly comprising of 601 members while  
 the United States has only 435 members in the House of Representatives  
 and India has 552 members in Loksabha.  Why does a small country like  
 Nepal need such a large assembly of lawmakers? This body has done or  
 achieved absolutely nothing in the last two and half years and yet spent 
  billions of rupees in salaries and benefits. If they are not doing  
 anything, why should they be paid? 
Incompetent Leaders
The 
  fact that the political leaders of Nepal have been out of step with the 
  people and the country is well illustrated by the following quotes  
 published in Nepal’s newspapers particularly in the Kathmandu Post. The  
 actions (or rather the inactions) of these incompetent leaders have  
 caused a lot of misery and suffering among the people.
Khagendra  
 N. Sharma in an Oped article published in the Kathmandu Post on Jul 15,  
 2010 stated “.. big parties have been exposed to their barest animal  
 elements. They can disregard any and every element of moral  
 responsibility to safeguard the national interest when faced with the  
 question of power. I pity myself and the gamut of well meaning people  
 for having to live under such lustful and incompetent leaders. I had  
 never imagined that the country had such a naked poverty of responsible  
 leaders. All the so-called leaders have turned out to be shamelessly  
 irresponsible towards the nation. Nepal is really a cursed country.”
Khagendra 
  N. Sharma in another Oped article published in Kathmandu Post on April  
 22, 2010 wrote “.. immediate aspiration of all the parties was to be  
 part of government by grabbing as many ministries as possible to keep  
 their so-called senior leaders happily established as prime minister,  
 deputy prime ministers, ministers, ministers of state and assistant  
 ministers. Those who were not accommodated started to destabilize their  
 own parties leading them to the brink of a breakdown. This was the  
 result of the political culture developed after the dawn of multiparty  
 democracy in 1990. In particular, the leaders of the major parties have  
 developed no vision beyond getting the ministerial chair.”
Aditya 
  Baral in an Oped article wrote (Published in the Kathmandu Post October 
  20, 2010) “.. our leaders fail in even the most basic service delivery, 
  democracy no longer seems to be ‘of the people, by the people, and for  
 the people’. Instead, Nepalis have started to come up with their own  
 formulations to describe the unique state of affairs: some are calling  
 it demo-crazy while some believe it would be more apt to describe the  
 Nepali version of democracy is as ‘far (from) the people, fool the  
 people and bye the people.’ Which, mind you, is not far fetched in light  
 of the continuing farce in the CA.”
Siddarth Thapa in an Oped  
 article wrote (Published in Kathmandu Post October 20, 2010)  
 “..according to government officers posted in hilly districts 60 percent 
  of the budget slated for development is used by the Maoist party while  
 the remaining 40 percent is divided amongst other political parties—no  
 one really knows what the parties do with this money. Furthermore, even  
 offices such as the District Health Office and the District Agriculture  
 Development Office have to donate for political causes despite the fact  
 that the parties earmark a certain portion of the development budget for 
  their own use. To make matters worse, when ministers or influential  
 politicians visit the district, local offices have to pay for the  
 former’s luxuries such as their lodging, food, and entertainment during  
 the visit.”
The writer can be reached at  
  Khagendra_Thapa@ferris.edu . Nepalnews.com Nov 1, 2010.
Posted by: timi_mero_sathi November 7, 2010
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