Kathmandu: Former Maoist guerrilla Sukh Bahadur Roka Magar spent his youth fighting for greater equality in his native Nepal, a goal he had hoped to see enshrined in a new constitution that was voted into law this week.
But the 47-year-old farmer says the long-delayed bill, aimed at cementing the Himalayan nation’s transformation from feudal Hindu monarchy to secular democratic state, has left the revolution he fought unfinished.
Work on the bill began in 2008 and was initially supposed to finish by 2010, but the Maoists were unable to secure enough support for the two-thirds majority needed to push it through parliament.
After years of disagreement, the three biggest parties finally reached agreement in June, spurred by a 7.8-magnitude earthquake two months earlier that killed nearly 8,900 people and destroyed around half a million homes.
They agreed to divide the country of 28 million people into seven federal provinces, a move aimed at devolving power from the centre.
But before voting even
began, violent protests broke
out over the proposed borders, which historically marginalised groups including the Madhesi
and Tharu ethnic minorities
say will leave them under-
represented in the national parliament.
More than 40 people have been killed in over a month of clashes between protestors and police, among them two young children and a police officer lynched as he was driven to hospital in an ambulance.
It was some of the worst violence Nepal has seen since the end of the conflict nine years ago and prompted neighbouring India to issue a statement expressing concern and urging “flexibility on the part of all the political forces”, even as voting on the draft was under way.
Journalist and political commentator Kunda Dixit said the three main parties had “tried to bulldoze a formula that serves their own immediate political interests rather than have an inclusive, sustainable solution that can bring stability to the country”.
This week, parliament finally passed a bill formally establishing a National Reconstruction Authority that was set up to oversee rebuilding after the April quake, but had been unable to start work until its status had been enshrined in law.
AFP