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NEPAL: Rural poor pin hopes
for better life on 10 April elections
March 10, 2008 - (IRIN) After witnessing so much
violence over the past 11 years in Nepal, Laxmi Motari, aged 60,
was beginning to lose hope of ever improving her impoverished life.
“But now I am quite hopeful that things will change for the
better,” she said, explaining that the Constituent Assembly
(CA) elections on 10 April could restore lasting peace.
Motari and her 70-year old husband, both of whom were displaced
from their village in Mahottari District of eastern Nepal, are now
planning to return home - to vote.
“We would like to have a member of parliament from our area
who will share our problems of food shortages and extreme poverty
in my village,” said Motari.
Millions of impoverished and food-insecure Nepalese like Motari
are pinning their hopes on the elections.
The decade-long armed conflict (1996-2006) between the former Maoist
rebels and the Nepalese government ended with the signing of a peace
agreement in November 2006 but new political conflicts surfaced
with protests by pro-Madhesi political groups in the Terai region,
Nepal’s most fertile and industrialised region.
Pro-Madhesi parties have led a year-long campaign demanding the
government give the region greater autonomy and local people more
political rights. According to human rights groups, the protests
and strikes have almost crippled the nation’s economy.
Accord
However, an agreement between the Nepalese government and the main
Madhesi parties signed on 29 February has gradually restored peace
and security for civilians in the Terai, according to rights groups.
They said the elections were key to lasting peace and greater prosperity.
“This is a major breakthrough for all Nepalese and now we
should all focus on making the elections a great success,”
said senior political leader Madhav Nepal, leader of the Unified
Marxist Leninist (UML), one of the main parties, which played a
key role in reaching an accord with the Madhesi groups.
Hopes high in Bajura village
“I have been counting the days to cast my vote,” said
Shanti Nepali, a low caste woman who was displaced from her remote
village of Bajura District, nearly 600km northwest of Kathmandu.
Nepali is also preparing to return home to vote.
Bajura is one of the most food-insecure areas: Most people live
on less than US$1 a day, according to government Village Development
Committee (VDC) officials.
The villagers are hoping that currently defunct government initiatives
might be revived, and that officials might bring in money for agricultural
projects, better storage of farm products and better market facilities.
“For villagers, the election is a symbol of the country returning
to normalcy and better livelihoods,” said Kausi Giri, a Bajura
teacher who works to educate local people on elections.
She said all the villagers wanted to take part in the election in
the hope of bringing about such things as road construction, improved
electricity distribution and better farming technologies.
“I think now that the political war is over we can finally
breathe an air of peace,” said a 70-year-old farmer, Shiva
Yogi.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77204
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