Divide and Ruin

Nepali Times #174 12-18 December 2003

Nepal’s leaders have always failed to work together. That has been the hallmark of our history. The current coalition led by Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal is an unholy alliance of nine political parties with diametrically opposing ideologies. It is clear that the coalition is collusion for horse-trading. From fake refugees to real estate scams, to wholesale gold smuggling and now the Ncell sale. Divide and ruin is the motto. This editorial published in Nepali Times 20 years ago this week on issue #174 12-18 December 2003 might as well have been written today. Excerpts:

No nation has a monopoly on fractiousness and discord, but on a worldwide scale for the most ununited state, Nepal must come very near the top. Most of us can't bear to see a fellow Nepali get ahead, a compatriot honoured or a Nepali getting well-deserved international recognition.

Nepal's tragedy has been that our rulers have always believed in ruling by dividing. They derived short-term political gain by keeping those down the power ladder squabbling madly so they could climb on. This technique was perfected into an art form and the tradition carries to this day. Those who should be engaged in unifying the country, pulling together political forces to forge a common destiny, sewing back society's tattered fabric are busy keeping things apart.

The RPP is virtually split, the UML has a vertical split and the Nepali Congress was veritably split two years ago. Not over any major ideological disagreement, or over a matter of principle on deeply cherished beliefs, but for short-sighted, narrow-minded personal gain.

 

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