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Disquiet coloured red

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  • Yubaraj Ghimire

    A security council without anyone from the non-Maoist parties will give absolute power to the government to settle the issue even if that means further humiliating and demoralising the Nepal Army. The revolt in two units of the Armed Police Force (APF) — the only para-military force in the country — has further injected fear in the minds of the non-Maoist parties and the army that the Maoists have already been able to penetrate the security outfit. They fear that handing over the army to the Maoists may trigger such revolts, and engineering them will be much easier especially after the Maoist combatants get entry there.

    G.P. Koirala’s over confidence that the Nepali Congress would emerge as the largest party in the CA poll and that he would automatically continue as prime minister is at the root of the situation. The reality is the Maoists have emerged as the single largest party, although without a simple majority. However, with major parties like the Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) considering not joining the government, the Maoists might enjoy total control. It will be easier for the Maoists to bypass or ignore the constituent assembly, as in the past two years.

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    In the name of the politics of consensus, the executive under Koirala’s leadership has been able to treat the legislature as a rubber stamp. The Maoists, as the government, will have that convenient precedent to follow. The monarchy and the Nepal Army, no doubt, were feared as the most powerful institutions that could offer resistance to the Maoists’ march to absolute power. But with the king gone and the army demoralised, the next targets obviously will be the media and judiciary. The Maoists’ key ideologue, Mohan Baidya, has already stated that his party, once in government, will define a new model of media freedom. And the apex court is visibly demoralised already.

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