The Asian Age

PROTESTERS WANT NEPAL KING BACK ON THRONE

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Kathmandu: Sixteen years ago, mass protests in Nepal forced then-King Gyanendra Shah to give up the throne and clear the way for a republic. Now, a new wave of protest is trying to bring him back.

The capital of the Himalayan country is again teeming with demonstrat­ors, this time demanding that Shah be reinstated as king and Hinduism brought back as a state religion. Royalist groups accuse the country’s major political parties of corruption and failed governance and say people are frustrated with politician­s.

“Come back king, save the country. Long live our beloved king. We want a monarchy,” the crowd chanted at a rally last month in Kathmandu.

Growing frustratio­n with the present system has led to calls for radical change. Pro-monarchy rallies have been growing larger, and an increasing number of homes and businesses are displaying portraits of the ex-king and his ancestors.

Gyanendra was a constituti­onal head of state without executive or political powers until 2005, when he seized absolute power. He disbanded the government and parliament, jailed politician­s and journalist­s and cut off communicat­ions, declaring a state of emergency and using the army to rule the country.

Protests that drew hundreds of thousands of people forced him to give up power to the parliament in 2006, and two years later parliament voted to abolish the monarchy and Gyanendra left the Royal Palace to live the life of a commoner.

But many Nepalis have grown frustrated with the republic, saying it has failed to bring about political stability and blaming it for a struggling economy and widespread corruption. Nepal has had 13 government­s since the monarchy was abolished in 2008.

Many Nepalis believe elected politician­s are more interested in power and patronage than addressing their problems, said Dhruba Hari Adhikary, an independen­t analyst based in Kathmandu. “That’s why some people started to think that, well, it was far better under the monarchy,” he said.

In November, tens of thousands rallied in support of the king in Kathmandu, where riot police officers used batons and tear gas to halt them from marching to the centre of the capital.

Kings were long considered reincarnat­ions of the god Vishnu in the majority-Hindu nation. “The king is the umbrella that is really needed to block and protect (the country) from all the pressure and influence that is being put on Nepal by countries like India, China or America,” said Rudra Raj Pandey, who was among the protesters at last month’s rally.

“Our country will retain its values and identity only if it is turned back to a monarchy and the king is reinstated to the throne,” he said. But the movement is too small to prevail any time soon, Adhikary said.

With polls and surveys rarely conducted in Nepal, it’s not clear how many people support the monarchy. Gyanendra was an unpopular king, but the monarchy remained broadly popular before he seized absolute power.

The country’s major political parties have rejected the possibilit­y of the king returning to power. “Nepal is a republic and the monarchy will never be reinstated,” said Narayan Prakash Saud of Nepali Congress, which led the revolt against the kind in 2006 and is currently the largest party in parliament. “The only way it would be possible would be through changing the constituti­on, but there is no possibilit­y of that happening at all.”

The most powerful group supporting restoratio­n of the monarchy is the Rastriya Prajatantr­a Party, or national democratic party, which was founded in the 1990s by allies of the monarchy. It has 14 seats in parliament — around 5% — but wields outsize influence as a representa­tive of the protest movement.

Party leaders met with the prime minister in February and presented their demands. “I think it is very possible and the environmen­t throughout the country has never been so congenial for this agenda,” said Rabindra Mishra, deputy chairman of the party. “If we can’t restore the institutio­n of the monarchy in this country, there is no future for the youth in this country and the existence of this country itself could be at risk,” he said.

Gyanendra himself hasn’t commented on the movement. He has stayed out of open involvemen­t in politics since his abdication, and only rarely makes public appearance­s.

Nepal’s monarchy did not allow political parties to form until 1990, when a pro-democracy movement brought in elections and reduced the monarchy to a ceremonial role. Gyanendra became king after his elder brother, then-King Birendra, and his family were killed in a massacre at the royal palace in 2001.

 ?? —AP ?? Protesters light candles to bring back King Gyannendra to the throne of Nepal.
—AP Protesters light candles to bring back King Gyannendra to the throne of Nepal.

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