Nepali Times
DAMAKANT JAYSHI
My Take
The goose strikes back


DAMAKANT JAYSHI


MIN RATNA BAJRACHARYA

The latest twist in Nepali politics reminds one of the fable of the goose and the golden egg. A farmer has a goose that lays a golden egg every day. But greed overtakes the farmer, who wants all the gold at once. So he kills the source of his greatest fortune and we all know what he found.

The only change to that famous tale in Nepal's context is that the goose has hit back, and in what style. Instead of gold, rotten eggs are on the faces of all those within and outside the country who thought they had cornered the goose–Maoist Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal– to extract more concessions from him. They had the one-point agenda of doing everything they could to prevent Dahal from becoming prime minister.

Dahal, the goose, had finally started delivering on his promises after refusing for over two years. This, despite being under tremendous pressure from within his party, with the Mohan Baidya faction forcing the official party goal towards revolt and Baburam Bhattarai beginning a series of notes of dissent.

Of course Dahal's track record on honouring even written commitments is not impressive. He has the proven reputation of saying three different things to three different people on the same topic, all within a span of six hours.
But in politics you cannot have permanent enemies (or friends). So even when he started delivering (official handover of his party-controlled army to the government) and agreed to the integration/rehabilitation package suggested by caretaker Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal at Gokarna Resort on 26 January, NC and UML reverted to their old stance of 'everything now and here'. We lost a very good opportunity to resolve the thorny issue of combatant integration and power-sharing.

Something happened between the 26 January Gokarna meeting and the follow-up at Hotel Radisson on 28 January. Those in the know say it was NC's Krishna Sitaula, one of the members of the taskforce formed to work on the modality of integration/rehabilitation, who spoiled the atmosphere. He insisted that the Maoists first agree on all of NC/UML's conditions before they could claim leadership of the consensus government. The Maoists hardened their position, saying they wouldn't accept any pre-conditions to leading a consensus government. Ram Chandra Poudel and Sher Bahadur Deuba of NC and UML chief Jhala Nath Khanal were more than happy for the chance they got to stake their own claims to the prime ministership.

So what did the modern goose do? It effected one of the most outrageous deals in Nepali politics. So outrageous that it has just one destination: the dustbin. The two communist chiefs have agreed to something that is clearly beyond their mandate and authority.

But the question we need to ask is not to do with the contents of the secret seven-point agreement between Dahal and Khanal. The question is how and why the agreement of Gokarna was torpedoed and in whose interest.

There's a lesson here for the Indian political leadership as well. Nepal's case is a classic example of how you can screw it all up. If you leave everything to the babus in the Ministry of External Affairs and intelligence officials, this is what you get. The one-point agenda of 'No Dahal' is silly. There needs to be a review of this approach.

In the meantime, NC needs to reach out to Dahal and his party. This is in the best interest of the peace process and constitution-writing. Only those who have a personal axe to grind (or vested interests) will find fault in this approach.
damakant@gmail.com

READ ALSO:
Slap-happy: (ADJ.)dazed, silly, or incoherent from or as if from blows to the head, EDITORIAL
Trial by fire, PRASHANT JHA
Khanal the Trojan, KANAK MANI DIXIT



1. Fked Up
Hey, Just stop writing such nonsense views. 

2. P. B. Basnet

The Babus don�t care about the suffering of the Nepali people. All these unfeeling mandarins want is �controlled instability� in Nepal and a marionette at the helm to serve their �security interests� (this is what they inherited from their British masters) and promote Indian investment in Nepal�s hydropower.  



3. hange
And why, pray do tell, is this commentary nonsense views?  Could you elaborate - or are you just like your name: Fked Up?


4. Ramji

I am 100 % agreed with the writer view. Dahal has played a dynamic role in forming up new government but the process has now stuck on the throat it is all because of Indian puppets raising nonsense questions. The country should get a reliable approach for peace and new constitution; for this Dahal had sacrificed��.. Whether it is an overt or covert deal it does not matter for us. We Nepalese need peace and new constitution in time.



5. kosnitalia
Nepali Times is a piece of crap without CK Lal kinda columnists.......Hare Shiv!!


6. Kale
Egyptian revolution reminds one of the  April Uprising of 1962.
The whole of the Arab world includin Iran is getting imbrioiled in the struggle against the dictatorial regimes of the Kings and Authoritarian rulers. . China also has felt tjhe heat and has started tightening her belt in the trouser.
 
Tyhe era of corruption,misgovernment, or military or even communists  is ebbing. We can take lessons from it.   Gandhian  non- violence has been effective this time too in Egypt.  Violence or muscle  or sudo-democracy in the name of proggesive/ aggragami slogans too should be discarded. People have to ask about the means and themethods of the process and the ultimate goals.
 Whether Democracy /Loktantra? 
Quo Vadis.  Can we walk freely holding  our head high  in the sun in the new system to come or we will be subjected to communist dictatorship is the main question ;even with high rate of poverty and thepoors.


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