India needs to do a lot more to help
Kathmandu resolve the Madhesi crisis. As of now, Delhi’s handling of the issue
has been below par. It is time for the Prime Minister to personally intervene
and lead the reconciliation efforts. Or else, China will fill the vacuum
Now close to 130 days since the
Madhesi standoff, Kathmandu’s stance has not reached the level where it
can meaningfully end the logjam, created out of discriminatory provisions of
the new Constitution. Insincerity and escapism are on top at the shivering
hills, while at some distance, over nine lakh people suffer without essentials
and shelter. In fact, much of Nepal is living without basic supplies and
witnessing a serious humanitarian crisis.
This situation, as painful as the
one borne out of the deadly April-May earthquake, is man-made. This is to give
traction to the interests of a few political blocks including the CPN (UML) and
the UCPN (M) led by Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’. Notably, Prachanda is today
a weakened force without his key comrade-in-arm.
A thinking politician, Mr Baburam
Bhattarai moved out of Prachanda’s camp to form a new political outfit, the
Naya Shakti, that maintains a rational view on current political issues. So, in
the long term, this fledgling party, with the Nepali Congress and the Madhesi
groups, is going to shape the political future of Nepal. The radicalism will
orient probably more for nation-making than personification, which was the
order of the day for a long time.
Thus, while Nepal is on the cusp of
a structural change, India should come to terms with the aspirations of
Nepalese masses rather than continue with its policies which are making the KPS
Oli-led Government in Kathmandu the cynosure. Remarkably, Mr Oli is at the helm
in Kathmandu only because he played a vital role in ensuring the
‘partition-like atmosphere’ in Nepal by turning a deaf ear to the demands of
the agitating Madhesi communities. The new Constitution makes condemnable
discrimination on the basis of ethnicity, geography and gender.
This writer, while travelling
through Nepal, found that at the public level, the resentment is against the
insensitive dealing of the matters by the regime, cunningly positioned in
Kathmandu. So, this ground reality as such should be enough for New Delhi to end
its damaging slumbering and work its emissaries in Kathmandu, who otherwise
have mostly just been enjoying the sprawling comfort of the Indian embassy in
the capital.
As Nepal has turned into a
black-market, India can’t ignore its role in the mess. It has mostly stopped
supplies to Nepal, but allows around 15 per cent of supplies to be delivered
through legitimate sources. Why this dualism? The four-month economic blockade
has harmed India’s own interests in unimaginable ways — the country has
incurred a loss of over four billion dollars, and the goodwill earned over
decades through being faithful and caring, has come under a cloud.
As per the Nepal Rashtra Bank, the
country’s economy is in negative growth after years — the country, badly
ravaged by the earthquake, couldn’t hold moments before entering to a crisis no
one imagined, sans those who had designed and executed it. In the test of
diplomacy, New Delhi has missed to get a sense from the present cycle of crises
that the angst of the Madhesis stems from constitutional discrimination and is
not directed at the hill-based communities.
The stalemate in Nepal, though most
serious, can’t be said to be a civil war. Ideally, India should have known this
from its official sources in Kathmandu, but that didn’t happen. Now it has
ended up supporting the Samyukta Loktantrik Madhesi Morcha, a joint front of
Madhes-based parties.
The bigger worry is that of the
Morcha’s obstinacy, even when Kathmandu has moved for constitutional amendments
and New Delhi has welcomed it. The Morcha lacks a sense of urgency to solve the
problem — and largely the quality of statesmanship among its leaders. The
movement is for a final solution with genuine demands, but the mode of protest
of the Morcha and the response system of Kathmandu are keeping the solutions
far-placed.
Apparently, the Ministry of External
Affairs in New Delhi is relying on a canard: Its continuing habit of reading
the neighbourhood wrong proves that without much effort. As this crisis has
shown how China is still not a competing force to India in Nepal, New Delhi
must get things right in its favour by ending the imperial ways of its
embassy’s functioning in Kathmandu and channelising the pressure for a
constructive outcome.
India shares a delicate relationship
with Nepal, which is based on roti-beti sambandh. Its approach has to be
distinctly different from how its deals with other neighbours. Upfront, New
Delhi should review the sub-standard performance of its diplomatic regime,
dealing with the complex Nepal affairs in the last few months so as to send a
message that it is committed to its Neighbourhood First policy.
Indians who travel to Nepal in these
currently testing times, find themselves on a low moral footing as they see the
suffering on the ground.
Governments are run by humans, not
only by methods and applications. This has to be proven by someone sensible
enough to carry out course-correction. India cannot afford to have a
permanently unstable Nepal, as this can wreck its geo-political order. India
should not take Nepal for granted and handle the mess on a priority basis.
Notwithstanding the maddening claims
of moral uprightness, the Nepalese in general can’t go much farther with the
present state of affairs. The winter is extremely harsh in Nepal and hearths
are not in proper functional order. This should satisfy the fragile egos of Mr
Oli, his colleagues and their Indian counterparts, who have spent a good four
months without doing anything significant.
India’s strategic interests have
been backtracked in Nepal, not to mention the damage to goodwill. If it
continues with its indifferent attitude towards its northern neighbourhood, it
should get ready for a huge mess: Over 650km of open borders and family-ties
will come under strain and this will finally be leveraged by China.
Realism should touch policies.
Remember the saying, ‘One cannot change one’s neighbours.’ India has to see the
beauty of the small in Nepal. It should bring the Himalayan nation back to
normalcy as early as it can. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has visited
Nepal twice already, should look into matters personally. The failure to do so
in the neighbourhood, will not bode well for him.
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