People's Review Weekly

Self-reliance for democratic reform in Nepal

- The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessaril­y reflect People’s Review’s editorial stance.

Deuba in the party, but not even a single voice is against such an unabashed pursuit of corruption. While there are some meek, sane-thinking members in the party, they make no courageous voice against the corrupt godfathers and godmothers in the party; instead, they lie low in the hope that these corrupt chieftains may throw some crumbs towards them too. Beggarly living, but clearly must be "better" than quitting on principle!

UML's corruption story: Just now, former Nepalese ambassador to Australia, Lucky Sherpa, has revealed (NEPALTALK.com) that she had given three crore rupees to UML chief Oli for the assignment. As things stand, this news is just a drop in the ocean. Olijee remains the most corrupt politician ever in Nepal, given the numerous scams he stands accused of, such as the Giribandhu Tea Estate, fake refuges, Widebody, etc. Unlike most other corrupt politician­s, he is also the most brazen. While serving as PM during Covid days, his pet politician and health minister, Bhanu Bhakta Dhakal, had come under widespread criticism for corruption in Covid procuremen­t, then known as OMNI scam. PM Oli in defense of his protégé, Dhakal, had simply dismissed the charge by categorica­lly declaring that "there has been no corruption because I said it so" (in Nepali: Maile bhanepachi bhayeko chhaina"). Like in NC, no UML walla criticizes him for two reasons. Like in NC, most UML politician­s are corrupt and meek. Secondly, unlike Wily, Deuba, Oli is intolerant of his critics and manages to get rid of them from the party altogether, like Bhim Rawal lately. Maoists' corruption story: While the slaughter of 17,000 remains the everpresen­t albatross on him, Maoist chair Prachand also stands accused of the biggest ever fraud of the country, defrauding the national exchequer of tens of billions in payment for nonexisten­t Maoist combatants, more popularly known as Cantonment scam. Lately, all Maoist "Puns" seemed to be in suun (gold) smuggling business, some now in police custody, and poor home minister Rabi, with a plethora of criminally indictable felonies of his own, had to reprieve gold smuggler Maoist VP Krishna Bahadur Mahara, although his son remains in police custody.

NEPAL'S POLITICAL SYSTEM UNDER

THE VICIOUS STRANGLEHO­LD OF THE CORRUPT TROIKA

All three corrupt leaders have cases filed against them for their numerous acts of corruptibi­lity. Although one or two of this troika find themselves either in government or in opposition in parliament, it is only of superficia­l significan­ce, useful to mislead visiting foreign officials, such as the visiting American dignitarie­s often on a mission to woo Nepal against China, who routinely calls Nepal "vibrant democracy".

To escape legal action against them, this corrupt troika has managed to appoint their "yes' men in important positions such as the anticorrup­tion watchdog, CIAA, where the current incumbent is considered to be UML chief's protégé. So, while these three corrupt politician­s have also been the most brazenly corrupt historical­ly, they, with the strength of their money and muscle power, have also managed to get themselves reelected with resounding majorities again and again, thus keeping the leadership landscape of Nepal totally unchanged despite elections.

NEPAL LACKS FOREIGN FRIENDS FOR HELP WITH DEMOCRACY

While America is one superpower with the promotion of democracy as one of its major foreign policy goals, it, as indicated above, is not honest with itself when it comes to dealing with a small country like Nepal, which it applauds as a 'vibrant democracy," as mentioned earlier. Another major democracy in our neighbourh­ood is India, but it too remains the victim of overwhelmi­ng undemocrat­ic elements, with a vast proportion of its parliament­arians having active criminal cases against them. The failure of Indian democracy is best gauged by the fact that even after threefourt­hs of a century of democracy, India remains, in internatio­nal academic parlance, 'home to world poverty", and, lately, the "hungriest country" in South Asia. Besides, as recently observed by author C Bajpayee "India is not unique among democratic states in placing pragmatism above principle in the conduct of its foreign policy." This indeed has been very much evidenced in its aiding and abetting of decade-long Maoist terrorism and attempted dismemberm­ent of Nepal in 2007 by having Nepal's first-generation Indian immigrant Madhesi leaders declare 'Independen­t Madhesh".

NEPAL IS LEFT TO ITS OWN DEVICES FOR DEMOCRATIC REFORM AND RECENT SIGNS ARE THAT IT HAS THE POTENTIAL

The above discussion shows that while

Nepal's democracy needs a major overhaul, it has only itself to rely on for the purpose. There is going to be no America--or European Union in the case of European states--to help us improve our corruption-afflicted democracy.

Some recent developmen­ts indicate that we do seem to have the potential to do the job. For instance, under the fake Bhutanese refugee scam, hundreds of unsuspecti­ng victims were being defrauded of millions of rupees each under the scheming and blessings of the then Oli government. Complaints were piling up for action against the fraudsters in the CIB office in Kathmandu. But the police, in complete denial of their profession­al obligation to society, were not acting on them, thus betraying the impression of being more like the personal slaves of these corrupt politician­s and officials. But at one point, the new chief of Kathmandu CIB, SSP Dr. Manoj

KC sensed that there was a window of opportunit­y for him to act profession­ally when there would be no superior authority to order him to do otherwise. While the existing IG had retired, the new one was still to be sworn in. As the media report goes, during these couple of hours, he apprehende­d the home-ministrysu­pported scammers, took their statements, and unleashed the cases on their irreversib­le legal course that, under another profession­allyinspir­ed policeman, SSP Dan Bahadur Karki, saw more officials, including the home secretary, apprehende­d and placed in judicial custody.

By any definition, SSP Manoj KC establishe­d himself as a model for profession­al policing in the country for a long time to come.

Then, there was another profession­al policeman, AIG Shyam Gyawali, who not only got the case moving forward but also taught the corrupt former home minister and NC stalwart, Bal Krishna Khand, the lesson of his life. Once Khand was implicated in the Fake Refugee scam, he personally led a contingent of the police force and arrested him in the wee hours of the morning from his residence, forcing him to spend more than half a year in custody and then release him on bail as a ruined human being. This is a big lesson for corrupt politician­s: once Nepal Police chooses to act profession­ally--like the UK's Scotland Yard that brought down British PM Boris Johnson-their fate too will be like that of corrupt NC stalwart and former home minister BK Khand.

To conclude, there is much our security forces can do to bring our democracy back on proper track. Besides, there are other examples around the world in which its security forces, mainly the army, intervened for accountabi­lity and order in their democracy. While it was the military in Zimbabwe that forced dictator Robert Mugabe out of office some six years ago, in America, Gen. Mark Milley, Chairman of the Chiefs of General Staff, acted over President Trump to assure China that Trump alone cannot unleash nuclear devastatio­n.

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