Nepal Today

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Angry Jhalanath Khanal announces party boycott of Friday polls; other details

By Bhola B Rana

Kathmandu, 22 July: An angry UML Chairman Jhalanath Khanal Thursday announced his party’s boycott of Friday’s elections to elect Nepal’s third republican prime minister in less than years and predicted nobody will get even a majority vote.
“No party will get a two-third or majority vote,” he told reporters Thursday at party headquarters adding his party ‘wasn’t power hungry’ and said UML was ‘pushing principled politics’.
‘The vote will only be an exercise,” Khanal said dismissing Friday’s vote.
He called his ‘loss’ in elections Wednesday was ‘only technical’.
He asked for a meeting of top three parties and said a future government should be a ‘government of national understanding’.
Khanal said he didn’t contest elections Wednesday although he had the majority support of 391 legislators.
The two-third ploy was developed in the UML by senior leaders close to Nepali Congress to stop Khanal from forging a majority communist government with Maoist support.
Such a government can be formed by an united UML and Maoists.
A front of four Madesh parties met Thursday to develop a concept paper on terai issues the peace process and constitution.
“Any party that supports the paper will receive out support,” Rajendra Mahoto and Supply Minister of NSP told reporters.
The draft was to be prepared by four in the afternoon.
NC Acting President Sushil Koirala asked rival Maoists and UML to support the candidacy of Ram Chandra Paudel.
“The country is passing through a critical phase with even sovereignty at stake,” Koirala said.
Candidate Paudel rejected amendment in law to facilitate election as analysts predicted a standoff will propel a crisis.
‘Laws can’t be amended to suit conveniences of individuals. People can’t be deceived. What were other parties doing when they were in government?” Paudel asked.
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TRADE, COMMERCE, ECONOMY

Sunrise Bank Ltd records Rs 304m profit

Kathmandu, 22 July: Sunrise Bank Ltd recorded a Rs 304 million profit in the fiscal year 2009/10 ending 16 July—up 125 percent compared to the previous year.
The bank expanded its network from 24 to 40 branches in the fiscal year.
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NRB attempt at controlling money laundering

Kathmandu, 22 July: Nepal Rashtra Bank (NRB) has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Thailand and Mongolia as well to share information to prevent money laundering and funding of terrorist activities, the central bank said.
The document was signed in Singapore this month at a meeting of the Asia Pacific Group on Money Laundering.
Nepal has similar agreements with Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
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Nepali deliveryman faces rape charge in Australia

Kathmandu, 22 July: A Nepali restaurant deliveryman allegedly raped a woman in her sleep in this Australian city as her husband slept in the lounge, a court was told, according to a 21 July Daily Telegraph report from Sydney.
Amit Hamal, 21, who claims that he is a member of the Nepal’s royal family, faced Sydney’s Waverley Local Court on Tuesday. He was charged with having sex without consent at the victim’s Rose Bay home on July 16. He was refused bail and will appear in Central Local Court on July 29.
He [Hamal] was nabbed at Sydney Airport on Monday when he was trying to board a flight to Bangkok, Daily Telegraph reported.
On the night of the incident, the woman and her husband had ordered Indian food but then fell asleep. Hamal arrived at their home and entered through the open door,
He was accused of walking into the woman’s room and sexually assaulting her while her husband was asleep in the lounge.
Hamal’s lawyer Audie Willert said his client admitted having ‘consensual’ sex with the woman.
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Proportions and politics of prejudice


Vice-President Parmanand Jha certainly spoke for much of the country last week. “Even after the year-long extension of the constituent assembly, the Nepalese people are not at all certain whether they will get their constitution,” he declared, Maila Baje writes in Nepali Netbook..
Seeking to prove the Veep wrong, the major parties have set April 13, 2011 as the date for promulgating the new statute. Seeking to project an element of seriousness to their assertion, they gave a two-month timetable to the state restructuring commission to come up with recommendations on one of the more contentious issues. Yet 22 out of the 25 parties in the assembly registered their disagreement over the decision by the Nepali Congress, the CPN-UML and the UCPN-Maoist to form the commission. Not quite a confidence booster.
That’s where Jha’s other assertion gains relevance. In order to build an inclusive society, he said, it is vital to enact inclusive acts and put into practices rather than limiting them into mere words. It would be wrong to view the preceding as a mere reiteration of Jha’s well-known claims of anti-Madhesi discrimination. Things are different this time, something even the Veep appears to acknowledge.
In a statement he made a few days earlier, Jha had the candor to claim that discrimination had been reduced to some extent. The top two – albeit ceremonial – offices have gone to the community. The caretaker premier is associated with the Tarai constituency he lost in the last test of popular strength than the Kathmandu neighborhood that spurned him. Moreover, a Madhesi leader is among the men staking their claim to form the next government. And all this is happening at a time when we still haven’t settled on who is a madhesi or what it take to be one – geography, ethnicity, skin color, verbal intonation, political sympathies, social behaviors, etc.
“Why can’t the state openly accept that there exists discrimination at the state level?” “Is it incorrect to demand equal representation?” When Jha asks such questions, they must be taken as rhetorical ones. Otherwise, the deadliness of the Maoist insurgency and the difficulties of peace process are there for all of us to see.
Stung by the parochialism that marred his last attempt at prominence, the Veep has attempted to rope in the cause of other marginalized groups. But the Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN) has opted to break its own new ground. It declared a fresh stir to pressurize the political parties to draft the constitution on time. “It is immaterial for us which party leads the government and who is elevated as next prime minister,” Rajkumar Lekhi-Tharu, the chairman of NEFIN, said at a press conference. “We want a constitution that ensures rights to the Janajatis,” he said repeatedly.
Finally, someone seems to have their priorities right. NEFIN has declared economic blockade August 14, 2010 for Kathmandu valley and disruption of vehicle movement throughout the country. If this is not the kind of common cause Jha had hoped to build, then perhaps he should begin wooing other constituencies that now feel dispossessed, such as, say, Brahmins and Chettris.
As to the issue of discrimination in general, someone once said that if we were to wake up some morning and find that everyone was the same race, creed and color, we would find some other causes for prejudice by noon. Another averred that human history is written by the fluid of prejudice. Still another claimed that everyone is a prisoner of his own experiences; no one can eliminate prejudices – they can just recognize them.
What do you do after that? Prejudice, not being founded on reason, cannot be removed by argument, we are told. Since it is all in the mind, if you believe that discrimination exists, it will. These nuggets of human wisdom accumulated over experiences good and bad over the centuries have their relevance in our context. But for the international laboratory that we have become, there is that added problem. We can’t really recognize where the highlighting of discrimination ends and the rationalization and legitimization of it begins.
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