




All it did was to unilaterally produce a 50-point priority agenda. The CPN-M asserted that either it should head a consensus government, failing which it would not only sit in the opposition, but would also spearhead a ‘revolt’ against ‘international conspirators and their local puppets’. The Maoists have perhaps realised that they can not muster enough support from outside to form and run their government without compromising their radical programmes. The y stated the 50-point programme, a message to their cadre as well as the masses, two days before the president’s deadline.
Besides radical land reform policy guaranteeing land to the tillers, it sets a 6-month deadline for integrating the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) in the Nepal army. The party wants to amend international treaties -- including the 1950 treaty of peace and friendship with India -- though it stresses the need for special neighbourly relationships.
Clearly neither the Nepali Congress nor the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) will be supporting these policies without which forming the government is impossible for the Maoists. The president’s office has indicated that he is not going to invite Prachanda to form the government without some proof of ‘majority support’.
Withdrawing the policy within two days of its announcement will mean loss of face for the Maoists and Prachanda....


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