On February 1, 2005 King Gyanendra in Nepal
declared a state of emergency, dissolved the parliament,
sacked the prime minister and suspended many constitutional
rights, including freedom of the press, speech and expression,
peaceful assembly, the right to privacy, and the right against
preventive detention. All international flights to and from
Kathmandu were halted and telephone lines and internet services
were blocked.
With the king’s televised declaration,
armored military vehicles began patrolling the streets of
the capital city of Kathmandu and soldiers immediately started
arresting people and instituting a sweeping clampdown. Soldiers
surrounded the houses of Prime Minister Deuba, putting him
under house arrest. Other leaders of two of the main parliamentary
parties, the Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of
Nepal (United Marxist-Leninist), were detained in their
homes or arrested—and security forces were stationed in
front of government buildings, post offices, telecommunications
centers and the state bank. To prevent organized protests,
trade union and student leaders were also arrested. Reliable
news is hard to get from Nepal because of intense censorship,
but there are reports that in the days after the king’s
announcement, as many as 1,000 people were arrested.
This is a desperate move by the king, who
has been unable to crush the Maoist People’s War led by
the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). February 13, 2005
marks the ninth anniversary of the start of the insurgency
and the Maoist guerrillas now control 80% of the countryside.
The World to Win News Service pointed out:
"With his attack on parliament, Gyanendra is trying to win
a certain populist appeal by pointing to the corruption
among those parties—as if he himself were not involved in
all sorts of corrupt activities and killing. It has become
apparent to one and all that society has become polarized
between the Maoists and a monarchy based on little more
than the Royal Army. With the king’s ‘self coup,’ the country
has entered what Prachanda [head of the CPN (Maoist)] called
‘a turning point, a decisive battle between autocracy and
republic.’ "
The day after his declaration Gyanendra
announced a new 10-member Cabinet made up of his supporters.
The king’s new foreign minister said there would be no new
elections until the Maoist rebellion was ended and predicted
it could take three years before multi-party democracy could
be reintroduced.
The current king, Gyanendra, people may
remember, came to power in June 2001 after a palace massacre
in which his brother king Birendra, the queen and eight
other members of the royal family were murdered. Many people
think Gyanendra was behind this massacre and upon coming
to power he sent the Royal Nepal Army against the guerrillas
for the first time.
By the end of that year Gyanendra had declared
a state of emergency, suspended constitutional rights, and
unleashed a bloody campaign against the guerrillas in which
thousands of people were killed. He has been backed by India,
the United States and the UK which have all provided political,
financial and military support. The U.S. Congress gave the
king $22 million, thousands of M16s, and has sent U.S. military
personnel to train the Nepalese Army. Nepal has been without
a working parliament for over two years. At the end of 2002
Gyanendra grabbed complete power, disbanded the parliament,
and appointed his own prime minister. Later, in 2004 he
was forced to give some power back to the parliamentary
forces. But he has now grabbed complete power once again.
It was reported that only hours after the
King’s speech, in the western town of Pokhara, stone-throwing
students clashed with the police, driving them away from
the campus twice over the course of several hours. At least
15 people were injured when the police fired on the protest,
and many were also beaten when the police dispersed the
crowd. Nepal’s national human rights commission also reported
that the same night the army raided a student hostel and
at least 250 students were detained.
The paramilitary police immediately began
enforcing the king’s ban on public gatherings. A few days
after the king’s declaration they raided a meeting of about
50 members of the Nepali Congress Party, arresting all those
who couldn’t escape. Nepalese and international reporters
and photographers — including a team from The Associated
Press and Associated Press Television News — who were covering
the meeting were briefly detained and had their digital
camera disks and videotapes confiscated.
Government security teams launched sudden
inspections of the Passport Department, Land Revenue Department,
Kathmandu District Administration Office and Transport Management
Office. And the king issued an order prohibiting government
employees from setting up any kind of organizations having
political affiliation. Any such organizations that already
existed have been ordered to stop all activities "that affect
the sovereignty, integrity or peace and security of the
Kingdom of Nepal." The order also authorized the seizure
of private property.
Sweeping Censorship
In 2001, the last time a state of emergency
was imposed, censorship of the media was brutally imposed—
newspaper offices were raided, editors and journalists of
the mainstream press were detained and questioned for even
writing about the Maoist insurgency. Krishna Sen, the editor
of the pro-Maoist newspaper Janadesh was arrested
and later killed in custody.
Now, once again, the king has clamped down
hard on the media. Nothing is to be published that has not
been authorized by the government, and any criticism of
the king’s action has been banned for six months. Soldiers
were sent to literally sit in newsrooms to scrutinize stories
before they were published and soldiers and armored cars
were stationed outside some offices.
The government ordered all private radio
stations in Nepal to stop broadcasting news and opinions
and to air only entertainment programs. The Federation of
Nepalese Journalists says four weekly papers were raided
to prevent their publication. The BBC reported that the
general-secretary of the Federation of Nepalese Journalists
was detained.
The king’s decree bans any public comments
"made directly or indirectly" about the security forces
"that is likely to have negative impact on their morale."
Violators can now be arrested and security forces can monitor
telephones, radio, fax and e-mail and other forms of electronic
communication and block them when necessary.
In the days after the king’s declaration,
with the crisis intensifying and swirling around them, newspapers
ended up running editorials on things like archery, the
merits of sunbathing, ballet and the importance of socks
in society. As many as 1,000 radio journalists are now jobless
because their stations can only broadcast entertainment
programs.
Soldiers were deployed at some private
internet service providers to make sure they remained disconnected.
By February 10, some internet services were restored and
soldiers had been pulled back from newspaper offices. But
General Dipak K. Gurung, spokesman for the Royal Nepal Army,
said this was only because editors had "assured us there
would be self-censorship." According to one newspaper, this
self-censorship came about with "some encouragement"—one
editor who spoke on conditions of anonymity said the king’s
press secretary told some editors that he would not be able
to help if the military decided to "disappear" them for
a few hours. Gurung said all this was necessary to stop
the publication and broadcasting of Maoist announcements
and propaganda, as well as any reports that sap the army’s
morale. Referring to editors, he said, "in the name of democracy,
in the name of freedom, they really got out of control.
If they are cooperating, there’s no reason they should be
afraid."
As a statement issued jointly by Amnesty
International, Human Rights Watch and the International
Commission of Jurists pointed out, measures like suspending
freedom of the press "put the Nepalese people at even greater
risk of human rights abuses." And many others are pointing
out that with this kind of clampdown, the army, already
known for widespread abuses of human rights, will be free
to carry out a reign of terror in the countryside. Even
Keith Bloomfield, the ambassador to Nepal from the UK—which
has been backing the king with financial and military support—said,
"There’s a danger that anybody who’s anti-king will be called
a Maoist and treated like a Maoist." The fact is, the RNA
has already been carrying out brutal and widespread human
rights abuses, targetting Maoists and anyone even suspected
of being a "Maoist sympathizer," killing thousands, and
torturing, raping, and imprisoning many more. The new state
of emergency and widespread censorship will now give the
RNA even more freedom to carry out their reign of terror
in the countryside.
Revolutionary Response
The Maoists have called for an indefinite
blockade and traffic strike throughout the country starting
on February 13, the ninth anniversary of the start of the
People’s War and a spokesman for the Communist Party of
Nepal (Maoist) ruled out any possibility of talks with the
king. As we go to press, the news on February 13 has reported
that the Maoists have begun a successful blockade of traffic
across the country.
According to sources from inside Nepal,
even though the phone lines and internet were cut off, the
revolutionary forces were able to keep in contact with each
other. Five radio stations, from the People’s Republic of
Nepal Radio— have continued to transmit daily programs.
The pro-Maoist newspapers have managed to keep publishing
regularly through many different means. And there are reports
of successful attacks by PLA fighters against RNA soldiers.
TV stations in Nepal reported that on February
9, the Maoists attacked a district jail in Kailali, near
Kathmandu, killing five security personnel and freeing 166
prisoners, including many imprisoned Maoists. It was reported
that the guerrillas, armed with crude bombs, broke open
the prison gates after a 90-minute firefight with the security
personnel.
Responding to the king’s actions, the CPN
(Maoist) issued a statement saying, "The feudal aristocracy
is responsible for the grievous situation of the country
and the people, and the time has come to throw it into the
dustbin of history. Through the class struggle of 1990 and
nine years of People’s War the Nepalese masses have shown
beyond a doubt that they can fulfill their historic task
of establishing a republic... Our Party forcefully appeals
to all the country’s political parties, the intellectual
masses, civil society and the masses of all levels and beliefs
to create a storm of united countrywide rebellion, under
the minimum common slogan of a people’s democratic republic
and a constituent assembly, against this last lunacy of
the feudal clique."
Prachanda, the head of the CPN (Maoist)
has urged "pro-people forces of the world" to oppose Gyanendra’s
power grab and called for "the political forces, civil society,
the intellectual community, journalists and all levels and
sections of the people to store supplies necessary for daily
consumption and support our movement by all means to make
it successful." The regime then announced that anyone buying
extra food and fuel would be arrested.
The CPN (Maoist) has warned that the advance
of the people’s power toward the seizure of political power
countrywide heightens the danger of Indian expansionist
and imperialist intervention. And Prachanda’s February 1
statement appealed to "the entire pro-people forces of the
world to raise their voices against this autocratic step
and in favor of the Nepalese people’s democratic movement."
Military Offensive Against the Maoists
The moves by the king in Kathmandu are
targeting the parliamentary parties and any others who oppose
the monarchy. But these drastic measures are first and foremost
aimed at the Maoist guerrillas who are increasingly in a
position to seize power. This became immediately clear when
the king announced that with the state of emergency, his
army is launching a new and increased offensive against
the Maoists. On February 8, Reuters news agency reported
that RNA troops backed by helicopters launched attacks on
Maoist camps in the west and that dozens of Maoists had
been killed near the western city of Nepalgunj.
For years now — even with the U.S., UK
and India providing millions of dollars, helicopters, automatic
weapons, advice and training—the RNA has been unable to
defeat the Maoists. Until 2001, Royal Nepal Army soldiers
numbered only 45,000. This number has since almost doubled
to around 85,000, but has still not been able to militarily
beat back the People’s Liberation Army in any real significant
way. Most analysts following developments in Nepal, including
U.S. bourgeois think tanks, say "there can be no military
solution to the crisis in Nepal"— conceding that the RNA
by itself (without any kind of outside intervention) cannot
militarily defeat the Maoists.
The strife and intractable divisions within
the Nepalese ruling class have been centered on this problem,
including over whether and how to negotiate with the Maoists.
There have already been two ceasefire periods of negotiations
between the government and the CPN (Maoist). But the Maoists’
strategy is not one of achieving military gains aimed at
getting a seat at the parliamentary table. They are carrying
out a protracted People’s War aimed at seizing power and
establishing a new socialist government. And a new revolutionary
government has already been established in vast areas of
the countryside where the Maoists have control.
The RNA basically acknowledges that at
this point it cannot win on the battleground and are now
saying they expect a long and bloody warfare against the
Maoists, aimed at forcing them to the negotiating table.
Gyanendra says the first priority of his
new government is "peace with the Maoists." But what does
he mean by this? Speaking to Reuters, a member of the king’s
new cabinet, referring to the Maoists, said, "Will they
come to talks or not? If they do, we can move forward in
a certain way. And if they don’t, we have to make another
choice."
The king may hope that by unleashing an
even more brutal military campaign against the Maoists,
he can perhaps "divide and conquer" the insurgency. Army
spokesman Gurung stated, "We have to force the Maoists to
come to the negotiating table, we are looking for them.
Wherever they are we are going to launch offensive operations.
We have to make them weak. Once their military capabilities
go down, their political faction will gain the upper hand
and hopefully they’ll come to the negotiating table."
But this is a big gamble by the king that
could backfire.
The Indian Express newspaper commented,
"Clearly, King Gyanendra has calculated when it comes to
a choice between the monarchy and Maoists, India and the
international community would have no option but to side
with him." But the U.S., UK and India have been very concerned
about the deep splits within the Nepalese ruling class and
have been trying to get the king and the parliamentary parties
to work together in order to form a stronger more united
front against the Maoists. Now the king is only deepening
the deep chasm that has existed within Nepal’s ruling class.
One worried analyst from New Delhi said
of Gyanendra’s move, "This is a fairly disastrous decision,
the worst possible option" that will alienate the king from
all of the nation’s major political forces even as it does
nothing to strengthen his hand against the rebels.
The parliamentary forces in Nepal are also
worried that the king’s seizure of total power will only
end up strengthening the Maoists. A leader of the Nepali
Congress said, "If the king fails, it will strengthen the
Maoists, which are already a dangerous force. If he fails,
it could cost his crown because the real power will go to
them. If he succeeds, this will enhance the role of the
king in favor of a stronger monarchy. With that, multiparty
democracy will be weakened."
Imperialist Response and Concern
The U.S.and India have been providing the
Nepalese government with political, financial and military
support to fight the Maoists. Neither of them, as of this
writing, have retracted any of this support or in the past
really condemned the fact that Nepal has basically been
a monarchy—without elections or any semblance of a democratic
parliament since the end of 2002. It is unclear what role
the U.S., UK, or India may have had in the king’s decision
to make such a drastic move. The U.S. and India have been
very involved in arming, training, and advising the RNA,
and some argue it is unlikely the king would and could have
made a move like this without the knowledge and/or support
of the U.S. and India. But now the U.S., UK and India are
all publicly condemning the king’s "undemocratic" moves—reflecting
real concern that the escalating crisis could lead to further
and perhaps decisive gains by the Maoists.
Britain summoned the Nepali ambassador
in London to convey its concern. And Nepal’s ambassador
to India, who said he was in regular contact with New Delhi
to explain the new government’s views, said, "The government
of India is very concerned about the growing nexus between
the (Nepalese) Maoists and the Maoists in India" and that
New Delhi has a vital stake in helping quell the revolt
as it is worried Maoist violence could spill into parts
of India where radical leftist groups are powerful.
A statement from India’s Ministry of External
Affairs said, "The latest developments in Nepal bring the
monarchy and the mainstream political parties in direct
confrontation with each other. This can only benefit the
forces that not only wish to undermine democracy but the
institution of monarchy as well."
The New York Times quoted C. Raja
Mohan, professor of South Asian studies at Jawaharlal Nehru
University in New Delhi, who pointed out that Nepal shares
a border with China and borders three of India’s largest
states, all of which are battling Marxist Naxalite insurgents,
who have links to the Maoists. "Strategically," Mohan said,
"you can’t get any bigger than this."
U.S. State Department spokesman Richard
A. Boucher said the Bush administration was "deeply troubled
by the apparent step back from democracy" and demanded an
"immediate move toward the restoration of multiparty democratic
institutions." He said Gyanendra’s actions "undermine the
Nepalis’ struggle with the Maoist insurgency, which is a
very serious challenge to a peaceful and prosperous future
for Nepal."
U.S. officials have acknowledged that RNA
soldiers are carrying out human rights abuses but have justified
U.S. aid on the grounds that without it, the Maoists might
win and Nepal could join the roster of "failed states hospitable
to terrorists." The CPN (Maoist) has been put on the U.S.’s
official "terrorist list"—even though it is clear the Maoists
in Nepal have nothing whatsoever in common with "terrorist"
politics, tactics and strategy. And the U.S. has made it
clear that the Maoists cannot be allowed to come to power
in Nepal—that this kind of "regime change" is against the
interests of U.S. imperialism.
The situation continues to intensify in
Nepal, with two futures posing themselves very sharply—on
the one side, the brutal monarchy and a whole oppressive
and corrupt system; and on the other side, the People’s
War which is struggling to liberate Nepal from the grip
of foreign domination and establish a new revolutionary
government. This situation places a great demand on all
progressive people of the world—to oppose the murderous
moves by the King, expose the role of the U.S. in backing
the efforts of the Nepalese ruling class to crush the insurgency,
and protest any further intervention by the U.S., UK, India,
or any other power, aimed against the People’s War.