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Blaming India, Nepal PM quits
samaylive.com ^ | May 22, 2009

Posted on 05/22/2009 2:37:27 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

Kathmandu: After obstructing parliament for three weeks, Nepal's Maoist party finally allowed the house to convene Friday with caretaker Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda making an impassioned valedictory address, in which he blamed neighbour India, Nepal's President Ram Baran Yadav, his allies and the army chief, Gen Rookmangud Katawal and warned of a catastrophe in the days to come.

The address paves the way for an election Saturday when the 601-member house will choose a new prime minister to succeed Prachanda.

Unless there is a major hitch, veteran communist leader Madhav Kumar Nepal, former chief of the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (UML), will step into Prachanda's shoes Saturday with 23 of the 25 parliamentary parties agreeing to support him.

In his nearly hour-long speech that rambled and repeated much of what he had said when he announced his resignation May 4, Prachanda came down heavily on southern neighbour India, accusing it of trying to behave like Nepal's big brother.

New Delhi, he said, still based its relations with Kathmandu on the humiliating Sugauli Treaty signed between Nepal and the British East India Company in 1816, which forced Nepal to concede about a third of its land. New Delhi had failed to upgrade its ties even after the sea change that overtook Nepal following the Maoist insurgency and the fall of monarchy.

Being the elected prime minister of a federal, democratic republic, Prachanda said he had tried to bring a change in Nepal's ties with its neighbours and had visited China first to attend the concluding ceremony of the Olympic Games.

However, he indicated that India had failed to appreciate the change and had "remote-controlled" his allies into forsaking him.

Flaying the political parties, especially his former allies, as "double-crossers", Prachanda said they had "turned 180 degrees" on their decision to fire the army chief and had made a mockery of civil supremacy.

Prachanda also attacked the president for reinstating the dismissed army chief, calling it unconstitutional.

He said there was a propaganda war against his nine-month-old government with fear-mongers raising the spectre of a Maoist revolt to capture power so that presidential rule could be imposed and the army deployed in the name of combating the Maoist attack.

Prachanda also cast doubts about the new government that would succeed his own, saying it was the byproduct of the "dirty game" of buying and selling legislators.

Though the Maoists are demanding a vote in parliament on the president's controversial move, there was no immediate decision with the house chairman, Subhash Nembang, adjourning it till Saturday afternoon.

Though the Maoists are the largest party in the house, yet, falling short of absolute majority, they are likely to lose Saturday's race for a new PM.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: india; nepal
India thinks it has solved the problem of Nepal's tilt toward Red China. What they seem to ignore is that the new leaders of Nepal are also communists with their own links to China!

Nepal UML leader Khanal leading delegation to China - 04/16/2009 - The United Marxist Leninist President Mr. Jhala Nath Khanal is leaving for a week-long trip to China, on Saturday April 18, 2009. Mr. Khanal will be leading a delegation of UML leaders comprising of UML vice president Mr. Ashok Rai, Secretary Yub Raj Gyawali, Surendra Pandey and Raghuji Pant. The UML delegation is leaving for China at the invitation of the Communist Party of China.

Koirala seeks China’s help to form government in Nepal - 05/14/2009 - Kathmandu, May 14 (IANS) Nepali Congress (NC) leader Girija Prasad Koirala Thursday requested China to help the formation of a new government and put an end to the political crisis in Nepal. Koirala, who met Chinese envoy to Nepal Qui Guohang at his residence in Maharajgunj Thursday afternoon, asked for China’s support to the CPN-UML, the liberal Communist Party of Nepal, in forming a new coalition government in the country.

India should never have helped an alliance of marxists and maoists overthrow the Hindu King of Nepal. Now that they are in power, they don't seem to need India anymore! India should never have put an arms embargo on the King forcing him to turn to China for assistance! India thought they were getting rid of a pro-China King, but they helped into power pro-China Communists!

1 posted on 05/22/2009 2:37:27 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe

If it really did go down like your last paragraph indicates, that’s some really stupid diplomacy by India.


2 posted on 05/22/2009 2:45:58 PM PDT by chuck_the_tv_out (click my name)
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