The Nepali Revolution Moves On
by Bill Templer
In a historic vote on 15 August 2008 in
Kathmandu, Pushpa Kamal Dahal (aka
Prachanda), chairman of the Communist
Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M), was
elected first Prime Minister of the
Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal,
where now a
"Maoist leads from
the top of the world."
Prachanda garnered 80% of the votes cast
in the Constituent Assembly. This turn
came on the heels of the surprise
election of Ram Baran Yadav of the
Congress Party as new President of the
Republic on 22 July,
a move then regarded
as a momentary serious blow to the CPN-M.
In elections on 10 April 2008, the CPN-M
gained
a clear popular
mandate
(40% of all elected delegates to the
Constituent Assembly) after a
decade-long armed struggle by the CPN-M
against the recently deposed monarchy.
As
Shyam Shrestha
stressed after the elections: "The
Nepali people are rising, their level of
arousal is amazing. They are more ahead
in consciousness than the leadership of
the political parties. The feudal class
will try to resist change, but the CA
composition and the level of awareness
of the people is very high, they cannot
withstand this pressure."
With
Prachanda
now at the helm of state, the CPN-M is
expected to gain ministerial control of
a number of key ministries, as the CPN-M
and its movement are given
a chance to prove
themselves:
"to show they are serious about the
social transformations in whose name
they went to war. They have a very
strong presence in the villages, and
many now long for them to be able to
build on the starts they have made at
eroding caste and gender
discrimination. They also promise a
more equitable system of land
ownership."
Yet Prachanda and his party, even after
the landslide electoral victory and now
a democratically chosen Prime Minister,
still rank high on Washington's
Terrorist Exclusion list. The DoS and
the US Embassy in Kathmandu are juggling
various definitions of 'terrorism' which
they can try to apply to the CPN-M.
U.S. Ambassador
Nancy Powell
is cautious in a recent interview in
expressing how Washington really views
the transformation in Nepal and
underscores neoliberal concerns for
promoting "the private sector, the free
market and foreign direct investment" in
the country: "We strongly hope that the
new government will recognise that the
private sector is by far the most
powerful engine for economic growth." Roshan
Kissoon
stresses: "When groups on the
'terrorist' list start winning
elections, another curious thing takes
place. The very term' terrorist'
becomes inverted, its utter falsity is
seen through, and a kind of moral
collapse of the US and what it
represents take place. There is a kind
of moral reversal."
It's really important for progressives
everywhere to better grasp the
significance of what is happening in
Nepal. Reportage on these pretty
momentous developments is generally
eclipsed in both the corporate and
independent media, including much of the
socialist press. As
Gary Leupp
commented last April, "It ought to be
the ballot heard 'round the world. It
ought to be front page news." But it
hasn't been. You can read
The Red Star,
the English bi-weekly of the CPN-M, for
firsthand reporting and views. A broad
spectrum of local opinion on the
Revolution and the challenges ahead in
Nepal is reflected on
a unique blog,
well worth exploring.
The CPN-M is a major party within the
Coordination
Committee of the Maoist Parties and
Organisations of South Asia
(CCOMPOSA), made up of parties from
Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Bhutan,
and the
Communist Party of
Iran (ML-M).
CCOMPOSA also needs to be better known
outside the region, however we may
critique particular positions or
tactics. Its
Declaration
was adopted in August 2002 and can help
us to better understand the orientation
of revolutionary socialists in South
(and West) Asia who see themselves as
part of a Maoist movement.
In Europe, the (n)PCI (nuovo Partito
Comunista Italiano) in Italy, founded in
Oct. 2004, has been especially outspoken
in its support for the people's struggle
in Nepal. Its
Founding Declaration
sets out a new vision for revolutionary
socialist reconstruction and mass
mobilization in Italy and beyond. An
article
"The First Great
Victory of the International Communist
Movement in the 21st Century,"
published in Italian in the party paper
La
Voce (1 July 2008), stresses
the historic importance of what is
happening in Nepal. The
Party of the
Committees to Support Resistance -- for
Communism (CARC)
in Italy, closely allied since 2005 with
the (n)PCI, issued an article on the
Nepali Revolution in the current edition
of
The
Red Star, drawing on the
earlier article in
La
Voce. It is reprinted
below, and raises important points for
the broader international workers'
struggle.
The article notes the strong support for
the Nepali revolutionary upsurge inside
the
International League
of People's Struggle.
The ILPS, formed in 2001, is an umbrella
organization of many NGOs. It recently
mobilized activists to assist Dave Pugh
in connection with
his detention in
India for his fact-finding work on the
anti-displacement movement.
Jose Maria Sison, ILPS chairperson,
issued a
"Letter of
congratulations to Comrade Prachanda on
his election as Prime Minister."
Few socialist parties or organizations
have done so.
The Nepali Revolution deserves
international solidarity. It can be a
source of direct inspiration for
people's resistance hands-on
along the southern
face of the Himalaya
and well beyond.
In the region,
it is feasible that "given the extreme
and intensifying contradictions in
Indian society, a real revolutionary
regime in Nepal will have immediate and
deep reverberations throughout India,
especially the north and northeast.
Furthermore, although it has no common
border with Bangladesh, Nepal is only a
few dozen kilometers from that country,
most of whose 150 million people live in
conditions of great hardship." Writing
in
The Red Star,
Kissoon is apprehensive but confident:
"we have seen how a coup was engineered
to stop Hamas becoming the government of
Palestine. There is every reason to
believe that the US is trying to plan
something similar in Nepal. [. . .]
Here, the CPN Maoist has planned
accordingly, and prepared for any
necessity." The gains now being
achieved and on the pathway forward need
to be protected.
I worked many years in Nepal, but I and
my students then never thought we would
see the day of a Federal Democratic
Republic dawning on Sagarmatha (Mt.
Everest), now a reality. Roshan Kissoon,
who taught English and much else to men
and women of
the People's
Liberation Army in the countryside,
and who knows the people's movement
at the grassroots,
puts it well: "For the masses of people
in Nepal, the poor and the oppressed,
the destitute and the landless, history
is only just beginning."
*******
The International
Communist Movement and the Nepali
Revolution
The ongoing revolution in Nepal is
provoking many reactions within the
international communist movement. Many
are positive, others positive with
reservations, and some negative. These
many reactions demonstrate the
importance of the Nepali revolution, and
it is best if they develop and relate to
each other and an open and frank debate
develop within the many forces of the
international communist movement. An
open and frank debate is a necessary
means for overcoming sectarianism, that
is, in this case, the attitude to ignore
each other, each shut in its own
ideological or national ambit.
Sectarianism is a weakness of the
international communist movement,
persisting in this beginning of the new
wave of proletarian revolution. A
concomitant expression of this weakness
is the attitude of the great
aggregations of the international
communist movement towards the Nepali
revolution.
In fact, for decades, some great
aggregations have been in existence,
constituted in contrast with modern
revisionism, which collect communist
parties and organizations all around the
world. The Communist Party of Nepal
(Maoist) itself is a member of one of
these aggregations, and our party is one
of another. These aggregations have not
yet clearly expressed themselves on the
meaning of the Nepali revolution. The
only one that did so was the
International League of People's
Struggle (ILPS), which, however, is an
aggregation of mass organizations, not
of political parties and organizations.
The fact that the existing aggregations
of the international communist movement
have not yet expressed themselves on the
meaning of the Nepali revolution is
important. In our view, it shows their
limit.
All these aggregations, in fact, set
themselves up and gained significance as
means of struggle against modern
revisionism. They have been useful in
fighting this enemy of the communist
movement, whose days, however, have come
to an end in many countries. It
maintains its strength in the
international ambit and in some nations
(i.e. in India, where it slaughters the
popular masses, as it did in Nandigram,
or in China, where it rules the
country). However, elsewhere,
revisionists no longer, or hardly,
exist. Some disappeared with the
collapse of the first socialist
countries. Some in the imperialist
countries practically vanished, as it
happened in Italy with the latest
elections. Some keep on existing but
they have already been crushed, as it
happened in the elections for the
Constituent Assembly in Nepal. The more
revisionists withdraw, the less
anti-revisionism serves as a sufficient
means to unite the various communist
forces.
The many existing international
aggregations are ideologically different
among them (Marxist-Leninist,
Marxist-Leninist with a positive
attitude towards Mao Tse-tung's thought,
Marxist-Leninist-Maoist). Still, they
have had anti-revisionism as the common
character and strong point. The more
this character loses importance, the
more they lose it as a strong point
around which they can rally.
Today, the various international
aggregations of communist parties and
organizations cannot say only what they
are fighting against (revisionism,
imperialism, etc.), but they have to say
what they are fighting for. They have
to mark out a course for advance. The
fact that they can denounce
revisionists' lies and imperialists'
crimes, but they are unable to give
their opinion or stutter about the
situation in Nepal where Communists are
advancing, is a sign of their
difficulties.
None of the various aggregations of
communist parties and organizations can
set itself even as an embryo of a new
International if it does not overcome
this difficulty, if it just restricts
itself to denouncing revisionism and
imperialism, if it does not propose a
course that could lead communists to
victory, in the imperialist countries
and the semi-colonial and oppressed
ones, according to their respective
specific conditions.
Such proposals do not arise from some
individual genius, nor from the
particular qualities of a single party
or organization. They arise from an
open and frank debate among the various
communist parties and organizations on
the international level. This debate,
then, must be united to the practical
organizations on all the struggle fronts
(against imperialism, for defending the
conquests of the working class and the
masses, the oppressed peoples and
nations, women, young people,
environment, etc.) and to mutual
solidarity. Then, the debate cannot be
reduced to an empty and abstract talk:
the common practice will confirm which
positions are right and which are not.
Open and frank debate, common practice,
and solidarity are the pillars that
support the main road of the unity of
the International Communist Movement.
CARC, International Relations Dept.,
July 2008