Preventing Peoples’ War II

That a just and fair Nepal is still only a dream makes all the violence during the Maoist conflict even more senseless

Issue #135 7-13 March 2003

There is no real justification to a war but the fact that a just and fair Nepal is still only a dream makes all the violence during the Maoist conflict even more senseless. Families of the victims continue to wait for transitional justice while perpetrators walk scot-free. This could be a recipe for another war we do not want.

20 years ago this week our former columnist Dhawal SJB Rana wrote about how Nepal can prevent another war by addressing the root causes behind political, social and economic inequities. Dhawal is now a RPP MP and wrote columns in this paper for federalism, but his party is against it.

Excerpts from the piece published on Nepali Times in issue #135 7-13 March 2003:

It has been said many times before, and there is no harm in repeating it: we will not resolve the insurgency just by stopping the violence. In the long term we have to address the root causes buried in political, social and economic inequities in society. Until we begin to take these problems more seriously, there is no surety that Peoples’ War II will not begin as soon as we resolve Peoples’ War I.

We may not be able to have socio-economic equality overnight, but it is the state’s responsibility to begin to create equal opportunities. The result of development efforts take time to manifest itself, and we have wasted too much time and money in ad hoc trial-and-error.

In the last 12 years we had hit upon one fundamental truth: it is grassroots democracy that will ensure development. Giving people the political opportunity at the local level is the surest way to ensure that the people are guaranteed basic services. True economic decentralisation, political devolution and self-governance are the answers, and the mechanism to get there is multiparty democracy all the way from the ward level to municipality to national parliament, where all communities, marginalised geographical and social gropings have their say. All it needs is a sense of integrity, accountability and good management skills among elected leaders.

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