The ethnic card

Nepali Times issue #186 5-11 March 2004

20 years ago this week, Nepali Times published a report warning about the Maoists using ethnicity for recruitment. Following Mao Zedong’s example, they declared autonomous regions named after ethnicities. This laid the seed for subsequent tumult over provincial demarcation post-federalism.

Till today, Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal pays lip service to ethnicity when it behooves him politically as with his support for the renaming of Kosi Province.

Excerpts of the report published 20 years ago this week in issue #186 5-11 March 2004:

There are examples of revolutions through history that start as freedom struggles, but soon degenerate into religious or ethno-separatist wars. The nine-year-old Maoist ‘People’s War’ could be headed the same way. The slew of ethnic and regional autonomous regions that the Maoists have launched in recent months makes this a legitimate concern.

In addition to their ‘central government’, the Maoists have set up seven ethnic and two regional autonomous regions. There are several tiers of district and town-village local government units with their own ‘people’s assemblies.’ However, it does not look like the selection procedures for who gets to be in these assemblies is going to be done under democratic principles of adult franchise. There are provisions to ensure that at every level of government there will be more nominated members than elected ones. 

The present series of announcements of autonomous regions started with the declaration of autonomy for the Magarat Region in Rolpa’s Thawang on 9 January. Within two weeks, the Maoists had declared the Tamsaling Autonomous Region for the Tamangs, Bheri-Karnali Region, the Madhes Region, the Tharuwan Region, the Seti-Mahakali, Tambuwan and Kirant Autonomous Regions. They have left the declaration of the Newar Region in the capital for a later date.

For archived material of Nepali Times of the past 20 years, site search: nepalitimes.com