A LESSON FOR NAXALS FROM THE REVOLUTION IN NEIGHBOURING NEPAL
NEW DELHI Right across Naxalbari is Nepal’s eastern-most district, Jhapa. As the revolution began in India, it inspired a similar radical-Left revolt against landlords — and an autocratic monarchy — in Nepal.
They adopted similar methods of annihilation of class enemies. This came to be popularly known as the Jhapali revolt. It was led by leaders like Jhalanath Khanal, KP Oli and Madhav Nepal. The revolt did not last long. The king locked most communist leaders in prison. And, like in India, the movement fragmented. However, almost 25 years after the Naxalbari and Jhapa revolt— following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the obituary of communism had been written — Nepal saw another revolt.
This was the Maoist ‘People’s War’. Within a decade, it brought the king to his knees and an internationally backed royal army to a military stalemate. Led by Prachanda and Baburam Bhattarai, the Maoists decided to enter open politics and participate in polls. They eventually ushered in a republican order to Nepal. The Nepali and Indian experiences are totally different. But the most striking contrast is this: Naxal leaders in India have committed suicide, died disillusioned with the cause, murdered, held, or have kept fighting with little to show. In Nepal, all five leaders - Khanal, Nepal and Oli from the Jhapali Andolan and Prachanda and Bhattarai of the more recent Maoist movement - have become PMs and remain politically active . Perhaps there is a lesson for the original comrades.