Around 1,000 leading cadre of
the regrouped Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) agreed to pursue a strategy of
“people’s revolt” against the coalition government that includes their former
allies, during their seventh general convention on January 9-14. The event was
the first of its kind since a radical faction of the United Communist Party of
Nepal (UCPN) split last June and retook the CPN-Maoist name that the party held
during its decade-long insurgency that resulted in the ousting of the Nepali
monarchy in 2007.
In a document released to the
press following the convention, CPN-Maoist Chairman Mohan Baidya described the
current coalition-led Nepali government as “puppets.” The document called for
scrapping the Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (BIPPA)
and other economic treaties with India. Critics inside and out of CPN-Maoist say
such agreements go against the interests of the Nepali people and relinquish the
country’s political and economic sovereignty to imperialism. Convention
declarations of CPN-Maoist also included harsh words for UCPN Chair Pushpa Kamal
Dahal and Vice-Chair and Nepali Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai, describing
them as “stooges of foreign powers” and criticizing them for betraying the
revolution.
CPN-Maoist leaders say a
strategy of people’s revolt will be pursued on the foundations of the previous
“people’s war.” The goal, CPN-Maoist cadre say, is a “new democratic
revolution.” According to documents released by the Maoists, plans for a revolt
in the Himalayan country will be carried out in secret. Immediately after the
convention, Baidya publicly warned that his party will take up arms if the
“rights of the people” are not ensured by the present government.
UCPN Chair
Dahal simultaneously assured Western monitors of his party’s desire to improve
the country’s strained political and economic conditions. Mr. Dahal recently
proposed an ideological shift away from the goal of a “new democratic
revolution” and towards a “Nepali revolution.” According to his
comrades-turn-critics in CPN-Maoist, Dahal’s recasting of the revolution’s aim
is a ploy to deceive the Nepali people.
Background on Nepal’s
Maoists
The roots of CPN-Maoist go
back to 1991, when the Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre) held its first
convention and pledged to pursue a strategy of “protracted armed struggle on the
route to new democratic revolution.” In practice, the party continued along the
route of parliamentary struggle. Three years later a militant faction broke away
and named itself the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist).
In 1996, the new Maoist party
launched its guerrilla “people’s war,” kicking off a decade-long armed civil
conflict. This conflict escalated after a 2001 attack by the Maoist guerrillas
on Nepalese Army forces. The People’s Liberation Army, the CPN-Maoist’s
armed-wing, controlled a majority of Nepal’s rural territory by 2005. That same
year the Maoists, under the leadership of Dahal, changed their strategy and
opted for permanent peace accords while seeking a multi-party alliance against
the monarchy. In 2006, following a general strike and waves of popular
demonstrations in Kathmandu, King Gyanendra stepped down and a 240 year-old
dynasty was annulled.
In a bid to gain legitimacy,
later in 2006 the Maoists signed the Comprehensive Peace Accords, which promised
that the insurgents would lay down their arms in return for a seat in a
U.N.-sponsored political process. In 2009, the CPN-Maoist merged with another
communist party and renamed itself the United Communist Party of Nepal. Since
laying down its arms in 2006, the UCPN has achieved what many would describe as
worthy goals. Both its Chairman Dahal and Vice-Chairman Bhattarai have served as
the country’s Prime Minister. During the 2008 constituent assembly election, the
UCPN came out ahead of all other parties and garnered 229 out of 601 seats. In
2012 UCPN was removed from the U.S. State Department’s list of terrorist
organizations.
CPN-Maoist cadre contend that
these achievements do not outweigh drawbacks that include a failure to implement
revolutionary changes in Nepali society. For example, the failure of the
constituent assembly to write a new constitution led to its dissolution in May
2012. Now that members of CPN-Maoist have accomplished a vertical split, it is
unlikely that the UCPN will repeat its electoral success during the next
constituent assembly election in 2013.
Maoist International
Relations
Besides leading to a split
within his own party, the Dahal-led 2005 strategic reorientation has created
tensions with the neighboring Communist Party of India (Maoist)
(CPI-Maoist).
A 2009 open letter from
CPI-Maoist questioned the strategic turn taken by the UCPN, describing it as
“right-deviationist” and “Euro-communist.” The CPI-Maoist letter also partly
blamed the UCPN for causing the collapse of two international Maoist
organizations: the Revolutionary Internationalist Movement and the Coordination
Committee of Maoist Parties and Organizations in South Asia. Security analysts
worry that the reconstitution of CPN-Maoist may once again lead to cross-border
operations and relations between armed Maoist groups from both countries. The
CPI-Maoist is the largest party in India behind the Naxalite insurgency: an
ongoing civil conflict rarely reported in Western media.
Maoist parties are also
currently engaged in armed conflicts with state forces in Bhutan, Bangladesh,
Turkey, the Philippines, and Peru.
Geo-Political
Considerations
One of the controversies
dividing CPN-Maoist from UCPN is the relationship between Nepal’s revolutionary
movement and the neighboring states of India and China. While in power the UCPN
has fostered close ties with the Indian state, a move that CPN-Maoist and
CPI-Maoist cadre disapprove of.
The UCPN, on the other hand,
accuses the leadership of the CPN-Maoist of secretly meeting with Chinese state
officials, a taboo within international Maoism. Maoist parties have
ideologically and practically distanced themselves from the Chinese state and
Communist Party since the early 1980s because, according the historical
narrative followed by most Maoists outside of the People’s Republic of China,
Maoist ideology was abandoned by the ruling Chinese Communist Party after the
death of Mao Zedong in 1976 and a subsequent coup led by supporters of Deng
Xiaoping against the Gang of Four.
Though China and Nepal are
neighbors, they are economically and politically cut off from each other by the
mountainous terrain between them. CPN-Maoist supporters contend that any meeting
between the Nepali Maoists and Chinese officials would serve to create the
distance from India necessary to carry forward the revolution in Nepal.
CPN-Maoist supporters argue that, since India is a key regional ally of the
U.S., moves by the UCPN to further tie Nepal to India strengthen U.S.
imperialism regionally and globally.
Prospects for Nepal’s
Maoists
Though only six months old,
the reformed CPN-Maoist has managed to draw significant numbers away from the
UCPN. During the week prior to its general convention alone 3,500 former cadre
of the UCPN were inducted into CPN-Maoist. This breakaway party has also
absorbed well over a dozen sister organizations created during the Nepali
Maoist’s nearly two-decade-long history.
Now it is up to the 51-member
CPN-Maoist Central Committee to resolve how to implement the newly adopted
“people’s revolt” strategy.
The UCPN’s own general
convention is scheduled for February 2.
Dustin
Lewis is an independent writer
and political analyst in the United States. He can be contacted directly at
dustin.reads.much[at]gmail[dot]com. Photograph one by Basic
Community News Service. Photographs two, three, six and seven by Prakash
Mathena and photograph four by Gemunu
Amarasinghe.
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