No friends or foes in politics

Nepali Times issue #177 2-8 January 2004

 When the Deuba government declined to extend the terms of elected local councils at the height of the Maoist insurgency, the rebels thought to fill the vacuum by conducting elections of their own. Across the villages of Achham, Kalikot and Bajura in mid-western Nepal, locals were presented with candidates previously vetted. Irony is that former enemies Sher Bahadur Deuba and Pushpa Kamal Dahal are now besties and even contest elections as coalition partners.

Excerpts of the report published 20 years ago this week on issue #177 2-8 January 2004:

To counter the government move to nominate VDC members, the Maoists are conducting their own elections for village and district 'people's governments'. Sixty-two of the 75 VDCs in Achham have held elections, of which 23 polls were held with votes being cast, in 30 the Maoists won unanimously, and in eight villages, local representatives were appointed by the Maoist party.

These are not 'normal' elections. The Maoists have their own election commission which drafted guildelines for the polls. One of the rules bars 'capitalists, middlemen, civil servants, cheats, spies and anti-people elements', so that only 'anti-imperialist, nationalist, pro-people, pro-democratic, progressive and independent candidates' can stand for elections. And since it is the Maoists who decide who fulfill these criteria, it is clear that unless candidates have support of the party they cannot run.For some, this smacks of Panchayat election rules in which only candidates vetted by the Back to the Village National Campaign and who were members of various class organisations, and therefore conformed to the Panchayat ideology, could stand for elections. Few local political party leaders have ventured to their villages in the Midwest in the past four years. Interestingly, it was Maoist leader Prachanda who entreated political parties last month not to doubt his group's commitment to competitive democracy.

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