Nepal's Republic & India: Corridors of Power
$44.00
Author: | Dhruva Joshy |
ISBN 13: | 9788170495123 |
Year: | 2016 |
Subject: | Indian Politics and International Relations |
About the Book
The mainstream political parties, having set the stage for the Comprehensive Peace Agreement that looked like London redemption to Nepalis, earned their laurel as champion of consensual politics. Rebels were brought into mainstream politics. Consensus amongst the leaders forced the king to return the usurped power to the people restoring the dissolved parliament .Later it declared the country a republic ending the 238 years old monarchy. The CA I election was held to fulfill the long cherished desire of people to write their constitution by themselves. Trusting that rebels have changed, people overwhelmingly voted making the Maoists the biggest party in the CA I. But the CA I miserably failed to deliver the constitution even extending its life span by two stints for another four years. The political parties used the consensus as bargaining chips to satisfy their ego and political interest of their parties. People were fed-up with their platitudinal harangues and relegated the Maoist party to the third position in the CA II.The rout had a sense of d?j? vu and was the same old lesson of political parties take people for a ride. The Madhes Movement had genuine reasins and was not ennui when started. But the self-declared messiah of the Madhes, hopelessly failed to prove themselves as leaders of the Terai inhabited by several other ethnic communities since generations. Their perception of the Madhes is not only parochial but contentious also, if one goes by logic, not by their indignation. In retrospect, we hardly find from Bhadrakali Mishra?s time till today any Madhesi leader worth their Madhesi emotions had ever mooted the Terai issue in its totality. To bring Nepal out of festering, the leader of political parties should sincerely realize the meaning of a simple massage?people are more important than politics. Ultimately as a damage control effort and overall development of the country, the Prime Minister of Nepal, KPSharma Oli tried to clear the misunderstandings between the two countries while having a dialogue with the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi during his visit to India in February 2016. This book is the manifestation on the wide range of issue and the underlying processes that are at the centre of transition in Nepal.