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 What USA, India and Europe wants ....
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Posted on 04-22-06 1:13 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Internation community wants the politicals parties and the king work together. If they do not work together, the international community thinks that Maoist would take over the nation soon.

If the Maoists take over it will be a terrible instability in the reasons. If the SPA and King stay in power still the international can impose their interests in Nepal and provide arms to supress maoists.


Now the SPA knows that the storm of people would NOT accept them the offer given. They even know Maoists should not ignored so that they are in delima to make a right decision at the moment.

It will be possible the king restores the parliment houses and the SPA form a Interim government for the new constitution...

If not, the king can be come back again with a harsh decision ....
 
Posted on 04-22-06 1:51 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Anatomy of Royal Proclamation (Special to Nepalnews)
The king made a strategic blunder by not directly addressing the ongoing movement

By Anga R. Timilsina

Although incomplete and ambiguous, the Friday’s royal proclamation clearly shows that King Gynendra, known by many as embattled yet uncompromising, finally bowed under the pressure of Nepal’s popular uprising and proclaimed that the executive power of the kingdom of Nepal, which he said was in his “safekeeping”, returned to the people.

What is interesting is that the beleaguered monarch was visibly uncomfortable, nervous and tense while he was staring to the camera and reading his speech from a teleprompter on Friday. The king’s body language clearly indicated that he was yielding to those parties whom he had regarded as his political rivals since he seized power last year.

The royal proclamation is certainly a victory for the seven parties alliance (SPA) and hundreds of thousands of demonstrators because of two things. First, the king clearly mentioned that sovereignty rests with the people of Nepal. Second, he said that he returned the executive power to the people. Third, by asking the SPA to recommend a name for the post of prime minister, the king indirectly recognized that the SPA represents the majority of Nepalese people.

However, as one protestor reacted, “We have won the battle, but we still must win the war,” the Friday’s royal proclamation is not likely to calm the ongoing protests that have lost at least 14 lives and witnessed bullet injuries in thousands. Analysts argue that the king made a strategic blunder by not admitting his mistake and not directly addressing the ongoing movement. Instead of admitting that he made mistake when he assumed direct power by sacking the political parties’ government on February 1, 2005, the king in his Friday’s proclamation defended his take over of power as a necessary step to set in motion a meaningful exercise in multiparty democracy by activating all elected bodies, ensuring peace and security and a corruption-free good governance.

From the perspective of seven agitating parties, the proclamation doesn’t go far enough in terms of addressing the SPA’s demand. Observers argue that the king failed to take into account the aspirations of thousands of demonstrators, whom the restoration of status quo or the return to pre-February 1-like situation is going to be completely unacceptable. The majority of the demonstrators want a constituent assembly to decide on the fate of the monarchy. There are little signs that King Gyanendra's promises could mollify the political opposition. Narayan Man Bijukchhe, the chairman of Nepal Workers and Peasants' Party and one of the leaders of the SPA, said, “We did not conduct this movement [just] to recommend the name of the prime minister to the king.”

The Seven Party Alliance \ should welcome the king’s proclamation of handing over power to the people but at the same time, the SPA also have to clearly put forward its demands and ask the king that the agitating parties are ready to talk to the king if the king is ready to have a forward-looking discussion on the seven parties' roadmap.
In coming days, the international community is likely to put more pressure on the SPA to form a government in response to King Gyanendra’s vow to restore political power to the people.

Although the initial response of the king’s proclamation on the home front is negative, the international community, including the United States and India, has welcomed the king’s move as a positive step. Although it urged to the king that he would live up to his word, the United States was pleased by Nepal king’s message that cleared that sovereignty resides with the people. The US has also urged all sides to refrain from violence to allow the restoration of democracy to take place swiftly and peacefully. Likewise, India's Special Envoy Dr. Karan Singh has welcomed the king's offer to the SPA as a bold step. He further said, “Now the political parties have to shoulder the responsibility and take the process forward. The sooner that can happen the better it will be.”

It is believed that the Indian proposal which Dr. Singh delivered to the King on Thursday, (April 20) had three main components: an interim government with sufficient executive powers to hold instant elections, a constituent assembly to craft a new constitution, and King Gyanendra to be a ceremonial head. That said, the Indian prescription had both short-term and medium-term solutions. In the short-term, Indians wanted the king to hand over power to the main political parties to allow the parties to form an interim government and hold early elections to a new parliament. The Indian recommendation might include Former Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala to head the interim government. In the medium-term, India wanted the Maoists to be included in the solution but with a pre-condition that the king’s position should be preserved as a ceremonial head. The interim government and the elected government formed after the instant elections would talk to the Maoists and conduct the elections for a constituent assembly. Special envoy Dr. Singh’s magic, although partially, seems to have worked.

In coming days, the international community is likely to put more pressure on the SPA to form a government in response to King Gyanendra’s vow to restore political power to the people. The United States and India, two major players that can heavily influence Nepal’s political game, seem to be stuck on to their old mantra: “the reconciliation between Nepal’s monarch and the SPA as a remedy of the ongoing crisis.”

Now the question is: what is next? The good news is that the king seems to be finally cornered but the bad news is that returning to the “status quo” (a pre-February 1-like situation) doesn’t solve Nepal’s ongoing crisis. It is very clear that any political framework that falls short of addressing the Maoist insurgency may not produce a durable solution.

Nevertheless, the king kicked the ball back to the SPA’s court. On the one hand, the SPA has an upper hand because the agitating political parties are enjoying a popular support of tens of thousands of demonstrators and the defeated mentality of the king. On the other hand, the king seems to be all set for a final confrontation in case the SPA pushes him to the “dead-end” of constitutional monarchy. It means that Nepal may have to bear a lot of human and economic cost if the agitating parties stick on the “fight-to-finish Nepal’s Monarchy.”

To conclude, time is clearly on the SPA’s side but they also need to shoulder the burden of giving a safe path to the ongoing movement so that the unintended sacrifices could be minimized. In order to do so, the agitating parties have to carefully design their strategy. The SPA should welcome the king’s proclamation of handing over power to the people but at the same time, the SPA also have to clearly put forward its demands and ask the king that the agitating parties are ready to talk to the king if the king is ready to have a forward-looking discussion on the seven parties' roadmap that consists of the restoration of dissolved parliament as an entry point and the elections of constituent assembly as an exit point.

(The author is associated with a think tank based in California
 
Posted on 04-22-06 1:55 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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"It is very clear that any political framework that falls short of addressing the Maoist insurgency may not produce a durable solution."
when the hell will people understand thisss??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
 
Posted on 04-22-06 1:59 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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why are there so many adss around my posts...:(
 
Posted on 04-22-06 2:09 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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It is time to recreate Bastille Day. Imprison everybody who has enriched themselves through corruption since 2007 and maintain their ill-gotten wealth in foreign bank accounts. Place Nepal under UN governance till a new constitution is written and free and fair fully democratic election is held.
 
Posted on 04-22-06 2:17 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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One thing I liked about the King's takeover was the RCCC...which was making corruption cases against the Netas we all knew were involved in Corruption in one way or other....

What happened when the RCCC charged Girija?? The stupid Janatas (or Girija's paid Bharautes) started aandolan against such charges....Same thing with Deuba, Madhav Nepal and others.....We need a strong Anti-Corruption Department.....free from political agendas...and above the PM....and everyone else in the Government....
 
Posted on 04-22-06 2:19 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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yep and that anti-corruption agency should be above the king as well...and if it ever comes into existence, it should reveal to the public alllll of king's fundings, black money, exortion etc etc etc.
 
Posted on 04-22-06 2:35 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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United Nation World Organization - protest to Nepali 7 parties

 
Posted on 04-22-06 4:34 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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It seems that SPA are ready to make paralllel government.. that was the idea of Maoist. It is almost certain that King will not gonna strike an axe own his leg himslef giving everything he owns. And now SPA are urged not to deal with the King. So there is likely possible that Parallel governemt gonna be formed.

Army and police are requested to reject Royal Governemnt. As we know country side is already in controlled of Maoist. SPA can resist in the city so that gradually they gonna remove the king through more pressure .. ...

hmm this strike gonna take another mode from tomorrow i guess !
 
Posted on 04-22-06 8:00 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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King's offer of democracy fails to end demonstrations in Nepal
ED BLACK
IN KATHMANDU
KING Gyanendra of Nepal's bid to end violent demonstrations that have torn apart the Himalayan kingdom, left 14 dead and hundreds injured appeared to have failed last night after tens of thousands of protesters marched on the royal palace.

Police fired teargas and rubber bullets and launched baton charges to protect the monarch as the demonstrators defied a shoot to kill curfew the day after the king made a belated offer to restore democracy. Political parties said about 150 people were wounded after crowds burst through a security cordon in the centre of Kathmandu.


It was only the intervention of a heavy tropical thunderstorm in the middle of the afternoon that sent demonstrators seeking shelter. Army helicopters hovered overhead as mobile telephone networks were shut down to prevent crowds communicating.

Meanwhile, many Western tourists hurried to leave the country, heeding warnings from their own governments that it was not safe to stay.

The turmoil followed 16 days of unrest and came the day after the king addressed the nation in a televised speech offering a return to multi-party democracy and calling on an alliance of the seven main opposition political parties to name a prime minister.

His moves were dismissed by the opposition, Maoist guerrillas and the thousands of people who moved in enormous whistling, shouting waves through Katmandu's streets, defying a day-long curfew. "Down with Gyanendra! Gyanendra out, out!" many chanted as they moved toward the sprawling palace compound.

"The proclamation has no meaning," said the former prime minister, Girija Prasad Koirala, of the Nepali Congress, the largest party in the alliance.

The alliance of seven parties rejected the king's promise to return sovereignty to the people, and instead issued him with a 24-hour ultimatum to reinstate parliament. There is even speculation that the political parties might press ahead with forming a government without consulting him.

Yesterday's developments left the monarch increasingly isolated among his own people but appeared to be at odds with the generally warm welcome Friday's speech received from the international community.

The chaos has worried the international community, which fears the political crisis could spark renewed humanitarian troubles in Nepal, already one of the world's poorest countries. Many also worry that a political vacuum could give the Maoist rebels - who have seized control of much of the countryside in a bloody, 10-year insurgency - a route to power.

Yesterday began with an imposition of another curfew, but in Chabahil, on the eastern outskirts of the capital, protesters of all ages took to the streets, lighting fires and smashing up road signs. The atmosphere seemed celebratory, with security forces doing little to enforce the noon curfew.

"The king's speech means nothing," said Saroj Thapa, a 29-year-old computer specialist, as he waved a red flag.

"Today you will see history being made. People will march on the palace and tear it down. We will remove the king with our own hands if we have to. You should see for yourself."

Around him, protesters burned effigies of the once revered king, chanting for him to be hanged as they began to move towards the heavily guarded royal palace. The picture was even more menacing on the ringroad, which was blocked by chopped-down trees, concrete blocks and burning tyres that sent black smoke billowing into the sky.

In neighbourhood of Thapathali, soldiers and police fired rubber bullets and live ammunition as protesters tried to head toward the palace, injuring at least four people.

Thousands also marched from the tourist areas of Thamel, less than a kilometre from the palace, only to be repulsed by teargas.

At the Norvic Hospital, in Kathmandu, the hallways were jammed with injured people calling for care. Umesh Dhakal, of the Nepalese Red Cross Society, said 243 people were hurt in the clashes, with 39 requiring hospital treatment. Many had been hurt in stampedes as they tried to flee the fighting.

The protests and general strike called by the seven-party alliance and the Maoists have paralysed much of the country and spawned shortages of essentials. As a result, some Nepalis have had enough of the violence and are urging political parties to work with the king to restore peace and end the daily cycle of curfews and protests.

"We just want to be able to get on with our lives, to move about freely, get to work and buy the food we need," said Ram Shrestha, a 34-year-old tourism worker. "The people want peace. It does not matter if the king's gesture is too little too late. It is a start. I want to see the politicians forget about their own ambitions and work for the good of Nepal itself. They need to make sacrifices now or there will be more bloodshed."

On Friday, King Gyanendra was forced to cave into international pressure to promise elections after seizing power 14 months ago in an attempt to quell a Maoist insurrection that has seen over 13,000 deaths in the last decade.

In a joint statement, the alliance called the king's plan "meaningless and inappropriate" and urged the public to intensify the pressure for democracy. Alliance leaders say the king's offer fell short of a key opposition demand - the return of parliament and election of a special assembly to write a constitution. Most opposition leaders want a constitution that would make the king a ceremonial figure or eliminate the monarchy entirely.

The Maoist leader also dismissed the plan. "The sea of people on the streets proves that the Nepali people want to get rid of the feudal regime forever," said guerrilla leader Prachanda.

But European diplomats urged the opposition to consider the offer. "The parties don't think he [the king] has done enough, but we think it is a basis on which we can build and move forward," said British ambassador Keith George Bloomfield.

In Washington, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told reporters the United States welcomed Gyanendra's proposal to "now turn to the political parties to form a government, to select a prime minister, to hold elections. That's extremely important."

At home, though, King Gyanendra is becoming increasingly unpopular.

The crisis began when he seized power in February 2005, saying he had to crush the insurgency that had made holding elections impossible.

The chaos has increased since a general strike called by the parties and the Maoists began on April 6.

As the violence continued yesterday and the country descended into further bloody chaos, Britons were being advised not to travel there unless it was essential. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) described the political situation as "tense and unpredictable".

The British embassy in Kathmandu estimates that there are about 500 British nationals in Nepal who may need help if the situation deteriorates further.

Bur an FCO spokesman said that, at present, airlines were continuing to operate flights into and out of Nepal and there were no specific threats against foreigners.

As dusk descended on Kathmandu's rubbish-strewn streets last night, the army and police forces appeared to be back in control, with the curfew just about holding.

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