India-Pakistan |
Maoists routed in Nepal election: results |
2013-11-29 |
[Pak Daily Times] Nepal's Maoist party, which swept the country's first post-war polls in 2008, was routed in a second election earlier this month and the Nepali Congress is emerging as winner, partial results showed Thursday. The Maoists, who swapped guns for politics after a 10-year "People's War" against the state, won just 26 seats out of 240 up for grabs in the first round of counting. The Nepali Congress, one of the oldest parties which led pro-democracy protests in the 1950s, won 105 seats while the Unified Marxist-Leninist party secured 91 seats, according to a final first-round toll. Before the vote, many analysts said voters were disillusioned with the Maoists after years of political drift that also saw their former revolutionary leaders develop a taste for luxury once in power. A second round of counting, in which another 335 seats will be decided, also places the Nepali Congress as the largest party, according to an incomplete tally published on Thursday. "It will take a couple more days to calculate the exact seats won by the parties. But Nepali Congress has won the largest," Bir Bahadur Rai, the election commission's front man, told AFP. Senior Maoist leaders Pushpa Kamal Dahal, known as Prachanda, and Hisila Yami, wife of former premier Baburam Bhattarai, both finished a distant third in their Kathmandu constituencies. Reacting to their expected poor showing, the Maoists last week alleged ballot-rigging and threatened to boycott the vote-counting. |
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India-Pakistan | |||
Maoist chief rebel elected new Nepal PM | |||
2011-08-29 | |||
Baburam Bhattarai of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) received 340 votes in the 601-seat parliament with the backing of several smaller parties. That was more than the simple majority needed to be elected. Bhattarais only opponent, Ram Chandra Poudel of the Nepali Congress party, received 235 votes. The political crisis was triggered by former Prime Minister Jhalnath Khanals resignation on Aug. 14 after he failed to make process in drafting a long-delayed constitution. It had taken Khanal 17 rounds of votes in parliament over seven months to be elected in February, while Bhattarai was selected in the first attempt. Bhattarai, 57, is the second-highest leader of the Maoist group which fought government troops until 2006 demanding political reforms and an end to the centuries-old monarchy. Bhattarai remained in hiding during the 10 years of fighting.
The Maoists were able to win the largest number of the seats in 2008 parliamentary elections and now are the largest political party in the country. Bhattarai must now form a coalition government including members of the smaller parties that supported him in Sundays vote. The two other major parties, Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist Leninist), have opted to stay out of the Maoist-led government. Bhattarais major challenge will be to complete the peace process that began with the Maoists giving up their armed revolt. Thousands of former Maoist fighters are still confined to camps and are waiting for their future to be decided. There is disagreement among the major political parties on whether they should be integrated into the national army.
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India-Pakistan |
Maoists for name change |
2008-10-18 |
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India-Pakistan |
Maoist leader becomes Nepalese PM |
2008-08-16 |
![]() Maoists won a surprise victory in April elections, and two other key parties supported Prachanda in the vote. Last month, Nepal swore in a mainly ceremonial president, Ram Baran Yadav, after the monarchy was scrapped in May. 'Lenin or Napoleon' It is only two years since Prachanda emerged from more than two decades underground as a militant communist leader. "I am very happy and very emotional," he said as he left the constituent assembly after the vote, reported AFP news agency. What the Maoists called their "people's war" had left 13,000 people dead, tens of thousands displaced and much of the country's infrastructure destroyed. The BBC's Charles Haviland in Kathmandu says that now the former guerrilla will be the most powerful politician in the Himalayan country, after 464 lawmakers gave him their vote and only 113 rejected him. The Maoists' deputy leader, Baburam Bhattarai, said: "Today is a day of pride and it will be written with golden letters in the history of the nation." |
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India-Pakistan | |||
Maoist leader becomes Nepalese PM | |||
2008-08-15 | |||
Members of Nepal's parliament have overwhelmingly elected the Maoist leader Prachanda as the country's new prime minister Maoists won a surprise victory in April elections, and two other key parties supported Prachanda in the vote.
It is only two years since Prachanda emerged from more than two decades underground as a militant communist leader. "I am very happy and very emotional," he said as he left the constituent assembly after the vote, reported AFP news agency. What the Maoists called their "people's war" had left 13,000 people dead, tens of thousands displaced and much of the country's infrastructure destroyed. The BBC's Charles Haviland in Kathmandu says that now the former guerrilla will be the most powerful politician in the Himalayan country, after 464 lawmakers gave him their vote and only 113 rejected him. The Maoists' deputy leader, Baburam Bhattarai, said: "Today is a day of pride and it will be written with golden letters in the history of the nation." He predicted earlier that Prachanda would be a leader "for a new era", comparable to Lenin or Napoleon.
Our correspondent says that Prachanda's elevation had long seemed inevitable after his party scored its convincing win in April. Prachanda was almost guaranteed victory because he had the support of three parties - his own, the Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist-Leninist) and the MJF (Madheshi Janadhikar Forum). The Maoists' Congress Party rivals accused them before the vote of plotting to set up a totalitarian communist regime, a suggestion they strongly denied.
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India-Pakistan |
Gurkhas at moral crossroads |
2008-04-26 |
Kathmandu: For nearly two centuries, Nepal's valiant Gurkha soldiers have battled their foes with guns and their lethal kukri knives, which tradition demands must draw blood every time it is unsheathed. But in a narrow lane off Nepal's parliament complex, they prepare for a battle of a different kind - not with weapons but printing machines and fliers. Their enemy: a life-altering new diktat from Nepal's rulers-elect, the Maoists. The Maoists, who won a surprise election this month after a decade of civil war, want to stop a 200-year-old tradition of Gurkhas enrolling in the British and Indian armies, calling the practice humiliating and mercenary. It is a charge the Gurkhas do not deny, but Nepal's crushing poverty and unemployment have pushed the valiant warrior tribe into a moral dilemma of choosing between dignity and livelihood. "Nothing stirs a Gurkha more than his honour dared, but here we are in a fix," said Mahendra Lal Rai, the general secretary of the largest former Gurkha soldiers group. "We do feel like mercenaries fighting for foreign armies, but who can deny our economic reality, our compulsions? We are caught between pride and practicality." The Maoist threat is not yet set in stone. Chances are, if not the Gurkhas, the economic reality of Nepal will deter them. Here is why: in Nepal's impoverished Himalayan foothills, Gurkha service is hugely popular. Last year some 17,500 applicants competed for 230 British army jobs. Gurkha privates in the British army begin their service on $28,000 (Dh102,760) a year, on the same pay scale and with the same pension as any British soldier. After they retire, the longer-serving will also receive a British old-age pension, payable in Britain, where they may settle, or in Nepal. An average Nepali, by contrast, earns less than $300 a year. Remittances from Gurkhas and some two million Nepalis working abroad, many as maids in the Middle East and security guards in Iraq, amount to more than $1.1 billion every year. "What is there in Nepal? Even if we get a job, will it pay as much as an overseas one?" said Manender Limboo, a Gurkha youngster who aspires to go abroad, even if as a British soldier. Another reason for Gurkhas looking for jobs in foreign armies is caste-based discrimination in jobs in Hindu-majority Nepal, including in the army where soldiers from the Gurkha tribe rarely make it to a senior rank. The Maoists, however, say opportunities will be given at home so that the recruitment centres of the British army in Nepal can be closed down and also hiring by the Indian army can be stopped. "Such obnoxious practice of your citizens joining foreign armies as mercenaries, this will be stopped," said Baburam Bhattarai, a top Maoist leader. A tribe of about 3 million people living mostly in the Himalayan foothills of western and eastern Nepal, the Gurkhas' fierce combat skills, loyalty and courage made a strong impression on the British army during its unsuccessful invasion of Nepal in early 1800s. The British actively recruited Gurkhas into their colonial army from 1815 and soon set up Gurkha regiments. About 3,400 Gurkhas serve in the British army today and another 40,000 serve in the Indian army. - The Gurkhas are legendary fighters who have served in the British army since 1815 when a peace agreement was clinched by the British East India Company after it suffered heavy casualties during an invasion of Nepal. |
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India-Pakistan | ||||
Nepal Maoists revive 'parallel govt' | ||||
2008-02-07 | ||||
KATHMANDU: Courting fresh controversy, Nepal's Maoist guerrillas on Wednesday announced they were reviving the self-styled "revolutionary people's councils" they had formed during their decade-old "people's war" to take on the government of Nepal. The move is likely to trigger strong opposition by the ruling parties as well as the international community.
The move comes after mounting allegations that the Maoists were still continuing with their "people's courts" and collecting "people's tax".
The resurrection of parallel governments would also be a fresh cause of fear for multinationals and the Indian companies planning to enter Nepal's hydropower sector. | ||||
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India-Pakistan |
Nepal Maoists quit government |
2007-09-19 |
![]() The move is a major setback to last years peace deal in which the rebels ended a decade-old insurgency and agreed on elections for a special assembly to decide the fate of the monarchy. We will not accept the code of conduct announced by the election commission and we will disrupt all ongoing election plans, Maoist deputy leader Baburam Bhattarai told a rally in Kathmandu. |
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India-Pakistan |
Gorkhas wont fight for India, says Maoist leader |
2007-06-19 |
The elite Gorkhas of the Indian Army, renowned for their bravery, may soon disappear if Nepal's Maoists have their way. The Maoists are strongly opposed to Nepali youth fighting on behalf of foreign countries. "It is totally wrong for our (Nepali) young men to be sacrificing their lives to protect the sovereignty of other countries," Baburam Bhattarai, Nepal's senior Maoist leader, told HT on Tuesday. Bhattarai said that the Maoists have been opposing the recruitment of Nepali youth into the Indian and British armies since 1996. With Maoists now part of the ruling eight party alliance, they intend to press harder to stop the practice. There are over 35,000 Gorkha soldiers in the Indian army, 80 to 85 per cent of whom are Nepali nationals. A senior Army officer told HT in Delhi that despite the provocative statements made by Maoist leaders now and in the past, the rules for recruitment of Gorkhas in the Indian Army remain unchanged. As for the British Army, Gorkhas have been joining it for the last 191 years, ever since the Anglo-Nepal war ended. They have been awarded 13 Victoria Crosses. General VP Malik, army chief during the Kargil war, lauded the courage shown by the 1/11 Gorkha Rifles in his book Kargil: From Surprise to Victory: "After climbing up a mountainside for seven hours, the Gorkhas reached their objective on the ridge. Some of the most heroic deeds of valour were witnessed in this part of the battle " The unit earned bravery 29 awards and was conferred with the title "bravest of the brave". |
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India-Pakistan | ||||
Nepal peace talks close to collapse, rebel chief warns | ||||
2006-08-08 | ||||
![]() The comments, by deputy rebel chief Baburam Bhattarai, were the first signs of a split in the alliance between the seven political parties and the Maoists that effectively removed the king from power in April. "The talks are very close to collapse," Mr Bhattarai told business leaders in Kathmandu. "The dialogue process is stuck at a very sensitive stage. The government is trying to force us to war again."
The negotiations appear to have stalled because the Maoists are unwilling to give up their guns unless the Nepalese army is disarmed. The UN had proposed that armouries could be built in barracks for the rebels where weapons could be kept under two sets of locks. One set of keys would be held by the Maoists, the other by the UN. However, the Maoists would not accept the plan unless the country's military was similarly constrained. "What was being proposed was dissolving the [Maoist] People's Liberation army. It is not acceptable to us," Maoist chief negotiator, Krishna Bahadur Mahara told the Guardian. "We are not for the status quo. How can we accept demilitarisation only for us, and not for them?"
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India-Pakistan | |
Maoists, dupes in Nepal fail to meet | |
2006-07-21 | |
![]() The already-delayed meeting - between Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala, top leaders of the seven-party ruling alliance and Maoist rebel leaders Baburam Bhattarai and Prachanda - had been scheduled for Friday. However, the meeting was likely to be postponed again because the government side has not been able to complete preparations it, said government Minister Ramesh Lekhak, a member of the government peace negotiating team. The first such meeting was held on June 16, when the leaders decided that within a month an interim constitution would be written and put in place, along with an interim government that would include the rebels. However, there has been little progress in drafting the interim constitution, and no development in the rebels joining an interim government. Instead, differences are widening between the two sides, who have been blaming each other for the delay in the peace process aimed at ending more than a decade of deadly communist insurgency in the impoverished Himalayan country.
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India-Pakistan |
Maoists rule out surrendering arms |
2006-07-11 |
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