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The Collusion of Monarchy and Militarism in Nepal

April 18, 2006
Sanat Mohanty

All Desicritics articles are required to be original article. However, I felt, the following article smuggled out of a Nepal jail, written by a detained journalist, needs to be an exception.
- Sanat Mohanty

Kanak Mani Dixit, Editor Himal South Asian and Publisher Himalmedia, has been detained since April 8th in Kathmandu with a host of other professionals for defying curfew to press for democratic rights in Nepal. He remains in detention still. This column was smuggled out of jail.

All over the subcontinent, every day, the most disadvantaged fall through the cracks. They are pummeled by the forces of state, market or feudalism.

The middle class, the political parties, or those linked to the state
there is recourse although it may not be always available or efficiently delivered. The tragedy of Southasia is that those who are
left out are not the exception but the rule.

This abuse can cover a whole spectrum of activities, from displacement of tribals from forest reserves which has been their traditional homes, to trans-boundary missiles that land in the middle of shanties of NWFP, to street-side youngsters devoured by the security machinery of an autocratic state bent on repression.

Taken in by Kathmandu's royal regime with two dozen other protestors last week for willfully (and with prior announcement) breaking the curfew order, this writer had opportunity to see how a `militarising' autocratic state machinery can ride rough-shod over some of the weakest members of society. It was an opportunity to take a look at the underbelly of the monster that government can be. What we have seen during our incarceration is something that the privileged with contacts in high places or money to buy oneself safe passage rarely care to see or understand.

There are three types of inmates in this makeshift detention center
at the Duwakot armed police barracks outside Kathmandu. The relatively well-known human rights activists have little fear of violence once they are taken in. Then there are political activists both senior and junior, who receive some protection from party affiliations and linkages. But here in Duwakot there is an entire category of true innocents.

Most of these young adults, some of them mere boys, are migrants who have left their families in faraway hills and plains, to work in menial jobs. They represent the rural poor of all ethnicities and castes, but they are united in their lack of influence anywhere in the state structure. This lack of agency is only matched by their absolute poverty. The trauma that these boys of Duwakot have faced and are facing exists at several levels. Firstly, it is the chase on the streets, the attacks by batons and staffs, the abuse, and the bundling into the back of trucks.

Once in the holding center, the toilet facilities are non-existent,
then they are transported from one detention center to another, provided with no information whatsoever. No food is provided for more than a day, and when it is it is of the lowest grade imaginable. There is fear that authorities in need of proving Maoist `infiltration' of the democratic movement can with the flick of a pen declare you an insurgent and do away with your life and prospects.

Who will tell the family, who will inform the employer, who is the lawyer or activist to speak for you? Who is to defend you, and to charge the regime with wrongful imprisonment, and seek a writ of habeas corpus, and demand release and reparation?

Dambar Nepali, is 14, from Udayapur in the hills of the east. He works as a construction labourer and was taken in and beaten while coming home from work. Ramesh Basnet, 23, from Dhading, was returning from the printing press where he works. Ram Kumar Tamang drives a microbus, license plate No 4266, and was crossing the road during a curfew when he was detained. Biraj Sharma, 18, was loitering outside a roadside shop in an area outside curfew limits. "The policemen were like demons," he recalls, "they kicked my head as if it was a football."

Three kids were resting inside a bus at a bus stop where they work as
cleaners when they were dragged out: Dhruba Timilsina, 17, of Hetuada, Buddha Lama, 16, of Sindhupalchok, Ramesh Thapa Magar,17, and Ram Lama, 20, of Chapagaon. They have all been moved elsewhere.

Individuals who are in the lowest class bracket in detention, get the toilet that is furthest and the rice that is the worst. It will be
important for the ICRC to determine their fate and whereabouts.

Some policemen can be fine, sensitive individuals. But they take orders from an insensitive state run by a ruler who has sought again and again to prove his contempt for the people of Nepal. When autocracy and militarisation is combined with contempt those without recourse suffer unseen and unheard. This is one more reason for a quick return to democracy, pluralism and peace.

Ramesh Basnet told me the day before yesterday before he was taken away: "This turns out to be the kind of country I was born into. I love my country, but I hate the government. I have not picked up a stone, I have not burnt a tyre in protest, why am I here, and where will they take me?"


----------------
Kanak Mani Dixit
Nepal

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The Collusion of Monarchy and Militarism in Nepal

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Author: Sanat Mohanty

 

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Ping #1
Things That Bang
April 18, 2006
12:41 PM

Nepal: A Paradise Lost In Bid For Freedom: For Indians Nepal is nothing more than a tourist destination. The little kingdom is torn between an overbearing ruler, the growing influence of the Maiosts in the poverty stricken villages and the increasing demand for democracy by the educated class....

#1
temporal
URL
April 18, 2006
09:59 AM

thank you sanat for this

let me share here what a 'friend' sent me the other day...

___________________________________________

Dear all

Our friend Kanak Dixit, Editor of Himal Southasia, was arrested on Saturday April 8 along his wife Shanta, a teacher, and an uncle, and hundreds of other pro-democracy activists who came out on the streets of Kathmandu to defy the curfew. Those arrested include other journalists, doctors, teachers, lawyers, social workers and students
They were given the option to pay a fine and be released, but refused and have been sentenced to a month in prison.

This is part of the ongoing agitation for democracy in Nepal. In the recent demonstrations, about a hundred people were arrested in Kathmandu and thousands around the country. Some have been in jail since Feb.

I just spoke to Kunda Dixit, Kanak's brother and Editor of Nepali Times in Kathmandu. He said they are in high spirits, have managed to smuggle in a laptop (no internet access though), lots of space to walk and hold meetings. They can receive email on a flash drive, Kunda says.

He pointed out that it's interesting that those who've been imprisoned are "the ones who espouse non-violence, peace, democracy and conflict resolution."

Kanak emailed us some photographs of the demonstrations the day before he was arrested. In response, our friend Afsan Chowdhury in Dhaka wrote:

"I managed to reach my inbox of the other address and opened the pictures. Believe me, a thrill went through me and i could almost feel the moment. It's fantastic and heroic. While i worry about you as much as my brain can handle i think it's worth all of it. You are right there producing history and that's incredible.

"Be careful and be where it matters. For a few moments, you are in contradiction with the State in the form of monarchy. You are part of a collective breath, a roar. You are becoming part of the people.

"When history beckons all chains fall away."

Kunda's office number is +977-1-5543333. I'm cc'ing this to him.

'friend'


#2
temporal
URL
April 18, 2006
12:30 PM

i was being prudent but have spoken with her since i wrote the earlier post...she has a public yahoo group and interested folks can join it:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/beena-issues/

her name is beena sarwar and she writes on current issues in pakistan, the sub continent and the world.

she is an editor of news-on-sunday, a writer, journalist, documentary-maker, activist, columnist, currently on a niemann fellowship at harvard ... and a friend

pssst...am trying to get her to join DC and write for us too;)

#3
deepti lamba
URL
April 18, 2006
12:45 PM

Temporal, that would be cool as we are always in need of better info than the stale stuff that we get to read in newspapers

#4
jonathan rai
URL
August 17, 2006
02:14 AM

imformation about udayapur gaighat and much more!!

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