Ceasefire no more

Nepali Times issue #160 29 August- 4 September 2003.

20 years ago this week, Maoist supremo Prachanda, now Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, broke a seven-month ceasefire. A Nepali Times editorial at the time interpreted it as the Maoists embarking on a campaign of top-level assassinations possibly leading to urban guerrilla warfare.

Today, the end of war has not brought peace. There are now anti-secular, anti-federal forces that want to turn the clock back. Excerpt of the editorial published on issue #160 29 August- 4 September 2003:

An overwhelming sense of national despair greeted Prachanda's statement. Even though the comrade left a small opening for talks to restart, it is clear that the Nepali people now have to be prepared for the worst while hoping for the best. 

No war is civil. It is by definition a nasty affair, but we must be able to control the brutality and prevent the suffering of innocents. This time, we have to get both sides to agree to a human rights covenant not just a statement of good intentions, but with a mechanism in place to directly monitor violations on the ground.

The parliamentary parties, whatever their past misconduct, are the one entity that needs peace to exist. Because their very survival is tied up with an end to conflict, they have to be a party to its restoration.

For archived material of Nepali Times of the past 20 years, site search: www.nepalitimes.com