|
Nepal: Nepal's democratic future
hinges on Constituent Assembly Poll
By Surya B. Prasai
April 7, 2008 – (American Chronicle) On April
10, 2008 Nepali people are making a historic tryst with their destiny
by voting in the Constituent Assembly Poll. Nepal has never had
a CA Poll before though there was talk about it after 2007 B.S.
(1951A.D.) when the country got its first taste of democratic freedom
under late King Tribhuvan, four years past India and Pakistan´s
own independence. The essential test of Nepali democracy to be determined
by this election is the notion of political choice, in other words:
can we cross the democratic hurdle? Can we prove that Nepali leadership
consisting of various political parties, not only the Seven Party
Alliance, are capable of democratic governance without resorting
to periodic andolans like JA-1 and JA-2 or violence which is anathema
to the rule of law? Are Nepalis confident enough to determine whom
they will be governed by based on a democratic choice, for, by and
of the people´s choosing? And, finally, will Nepali people
be able to elect honest representatives that can be entrusted to
run future governments impartially?
The CA Poll 2008 is Nepali history in the making, a mixture of Nepali
culture, traditions, institutions, myths, beliefs, and loyalties
being played out by Nepali political parties in wooing the Nepali
voters to their own concept of Nepali democracy. The Carter Center,
UNMIN, EU, our observer friends from Thailand, Japan, South Korea,
Australia, our two immediate neighbors, India and China, and other
countries of the world are eagerly observing this historic moment,
to lend us their valuable insight, share with us their experiences
and help shape Nepali democracy. There is unanimous feeling among
all that Nepali people need a much needed democratic ´moral´
boost. The CA Poll 2008 is also a new Asian trendsetter, with nearly
22 Asian countries observing the act of how Nepalis will evolve
the future democratic set-up, step—by-step.
Therefore, on April 10, all Nepalis do want to make sure their vote,
deposited in that one ballot box, and the multiplicity of those
ballot boxes counted by Nepal´s Election Commission in the
presence of thousands of national and international observers, will
be able to reign in the people's final ideal political choice --
a proper, democratically elected , sovereign, representative Constituent
Assembly consisting of 601 members. The winners in the end could
be anybody, the most popular of the big parties, or even the smaller
parties forming a broader coalition. As Chief Election Commissioner
(CEC) Dr. Bhojraj Pokharel, immensely respected by all Nepali political
parties´ as much as foreign observers, stated recently in
Kathmandu, the post-conflict CA election, by definition, will also
imply compromises for the sake of peace. The CA Poll 2008 will leave
Nepal's post-transitional conflict scenario behind, and help Nepal
take off with its international democratic partners to forge ahead
on national reconstruction, rehabilitation and aim at steadfast
economic growth. There will be full Nepali citizenry participation
in all national efforts as much as future Constitution making. Real
development highways will be built as much as a Constitutional Highway.
After two botched attempts, many Nepal analysts had doubted whether
the CA Poll would ever take place. However, Prime Minister Girija
Prasad Koirala's commitment to national reconciliation, Nepali democracy,
sovereignty, independence, and helping the Seven Party Alliance
and other political parties forget the past civil conflict differences
and build a new Nepali future must be considered a remarkable political
accomplishment in the BPist line of national reconciliation, which
late B.P. Koirala, in turn, had founded on the post-Nehruvian socialist
era based on India's lessons learnt in gaining true independence.
This time around, the CA Poll is happening because political commitment
is stronger from the international community. They want to see Nepal
climb a more permanent, stable democratic hierarchy, given its geo-strategic
importance, its abundant natural resources, its rich secular Hindu-Buddhist
tradition, its abundant tourism prospect, and its free, democratic
and independent thinking people who believe in living in peace amongst
two giant neighbors, yet contribute to the global community in fostering
international peace, understanding and harmony. Thus, the US, India,
China, the EU, the UK, Germany, France, Japan the NORDIC bench,
and all our traditional globalist friends have hoped that this election
will be an historic opportunity for the people of Nepal to choose
able representatives who will decide the constitutional framework
for Nepal's future government. The Nepali people's choice, in turn,
will determine and mark that important turning point in this transition
to what everyone hopes will be the new peaceful, prosperous and
democratic Nepal, a political DJs mix of the past hits with future
chartbusters.
For many Nepalis, voting in the current CA Poll also signifies helping
Nepal cross an important political hurdle with an able voting choice,
whether Nepal should maintain its traditional Monarchy or go for
a federalist structure. Both sides have strong advocates, undoubtedly,
but the main fact worth considering is, Nepal cannot backtrack on
its democratic promise, which the country did, four times in the
past five decades. Neither can Nepalis afford to hold CA Polls every
time. Thus it becomes important that the Nepali people preserve
their democratic virtues and cultural traditions through this public
vote but also display their inner democratic bent of mind in walking
the talk on Nepali democracy.
Logistically speaking, Nepal's CA Poll is a unique opportunity for
nearly 17.5 million to vote in a fair, equitable, basis. There will
be 20,888 polling centers in 9,821 places, nearly 1,200 international
observers, 90,000 national observers and 234,000 polling staff deployed
to carry out the election. In the First Past The Post category a
total 3947 candidates were registered, of which 367 were women;
of a total 6000 candidates registered under Proportionate Representation
category, 3068 were women. The Nepal Election Commission's thorough
preparations are proven in that only 299 candidates in the closed
list of various parties have been disqualified for minor reasons
such as failure to produce citizenship certificate, being underage
(below 25 years of age), duplication of candidates' names, and voters´
complaints against them. The only other disappointment has been,
one-third women candidates anticipated to run from among the various
political parties did not materialize, despite Nepal´s commitment
to the Beijing Platform of Action in 1995. I would anticipate in
future that Nepal produce more dynamic women such as Dr. Arzu Rana
Deuba to stand up for elections.
What are some of the challenges ahead for Nepali democracy after
the CA Poll? On the political plane, fashioning new rules of democratic
representation will in itself appear insufficient to shape Nepal's
future political destiny if parties continue concentrating only
on coalition making and breaking. It will also take some time for
all to adjust their moral vexation on the word DEMOCRACY, given
that so much corruption had taken place among past administrations
in the name of propelling democratic virtues. Some also argue that
Nepal cannot become more democratic than Singapore, but it has to
move forward on a similar economic plane. The Nepali broadsheets
which earlier churned out hundreds of miles worth of news coverage
doubting the CA Poll process itself, are now writing encouragingly
on what kind of representation Nepalis should have and who should
represent them in the Constitutional Assembly.
On the socio-economic plane, Nepali people should
remember that in judging themselves as successful democrats in the
making, their anticipation of fair and equal access to the governance
system must not be taken for granted at the international level.
Democracy is a game of fair competition; to nurture democracy requires
hard work. Nepalis must also learn to expand their democratic horizons.
According to Prime Minister Koirala's senior foreign policy advisor,
Aditya Baral, "Getting more genuine development assistance
for Nepal has been PM Girija Prasad Koirala's focus as well in every
meeting he has had with foreign leaders, foreign parliamentarians
and diplomatic representatives; in other words, how to make Nepal
shine out as a democratic example in the international community.
The CA Poll April 10 results will certainly vindicate this, that
Nepal's democratic credentials are accepted worldwide. Nepal has
also occupied an important berth in inter-SAARC diplomacy now and
enjoys excellent relations with the world's great and small powers.
Nepal has no enemies in this world, probably the only country with
such a peaceful, independent diplomatic history in Asia." Baral
went on to mention, "Our foreign policy is heading in the right
direction…. we are very much in control of our political future.
Both our neighbors respect us immensely and we respect them. We
are committed to our national destiny in giving the Nepali people
an even more prosperous, rich and democratic berth. This has been
the PM's instruction every time we meet, "Do something for
the country and work hard in serving the Nepali people, promote
Nepali values and culture (abroad) and, in turn, accept the global
freedom agenda as your own. But the bottom line is successfully
conducting the CA Poll first." The truth is, only by stressing
democratic participation in state affairs can Nepalis shape their
future economic destiny."
On the evolving sociological plane, given the fatalism and mysticism
inherent to the Nepali Buddhist-Hindu tradition of thinking, much
importance needs to be attached in the post-CA Poll phase so that
the elected CA representatives will cast secular views and apply
much more discretion in engaging one another, so there is no feeling
of individual, religious, or geographical supremacy or bias. In
effect, astrologers should not be helping Nepali leaders run the
government by sacrificing lambs in various temples so their political
enemies become lame, mute or disappear from the horizon! Democracy
has to be inclusive of political competition. Nepali politicians
should rather demonstrate personal probity, modesty, honesty and
integrity combined with individual parties´ transparency.
It will be on this basis that the international community will judge
Nepal´s evolving democracy, and how we conduct our state affairs.
As Anand Panyarachum, Thailand's well known statesman once stated,
it is only a rare exception and in only a few - very few authoritarian
states where authoritarian officials might raise to the top, in
democracies the most virtuous people rise to command their people.
Germany's post World War II rise in Europe is a good example of
how a hard working people can annex democracy to their daily living
and Quality of Life. Russia's democratic and economic ascendancy
with the Gorbachev era of Perestroika is another good example for
Nepali politicians to study on the world stage.
In Nepal's case, currently we have three major parties that will
determine the vote sway, the Nepali Congress, the Communist Party
of Nepal (UML) and the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). Benjamin
Franklin once noted, "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting
on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting
the vote!" Nepali people too are eagerly waiting to find out
whether they will have voted for the wolves or the lamb once CEC
Pokharel's en-results declaration becomes final. All have an equal
chance to shine as the winners noting Thomas Jefferson's prudent
and wise words that a "A democracy is nothing more than mob
rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights
of the other forty-nine!" It is after all the recurrent globalist
Jeffersonian argument that holds sway over the Nepali CA Poll like
every other world election conducted in the past; trying to determine
what the other half want.
Nepal's past democratic history also recounts the perils of aiming
too high in evolving ambitious democratic plans while forgetting
the pervasive poverty which has been there for centuries. The fact
is, everyone should be clear that the institutions of democracy,
free markets, a free press, a strong civil society, cannot be built
overnight, and they cannot be built at the end of a barrel of a
gun, but rather through the ballot, according to Barack Obama. Similarly,
ex-U.S. President Jimmy Carter, who is in our midst today, leading
the Carter Center Team has also spoken high words of wisdom for
countries like Nepal caught in the bubbling cycle of democratic
progression and regression, that we must always realize the freedoms
Franklin Delano Roosevelt once spoke of – especially freedom
from want and freedom from fear – that, they do not just come
from deposing a leadership or handing out ballot papers; they are
only realized once the personal and material security of the people
are met and all must work towards this end, namely forging national
reconciliation. In the end, Nepal belongs to all Nepalis just as
all Nepalis have the right to live truly democratic lives in one
singular Democratic Nepal.
From:http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/57705
|