Regime change on cards in Nepal

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Regime change on cards in Nepal

Thursday, 11 July 2024 | ashok k mehta

Regime change on cards in Nepal

The new alliance in Nepal aims to  reshape the country's political landscape and introduce significant constitutional reforms to address the long-standing instability

On Friday, Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda will seek his fifth vote of confidence in the last 18 months which he will lose as former Prime Minister KP Oli's UML has withdrawn support to the Left alliance. A midnight 7-point deal last Monday  between former Prime Minister's Sher Bahadur Deuba's Nepali Congress (NC) and Oli's UML (the largest and second largest parties) will  form the fourth government since December 2022 to end the king- maker role or CPN Maoists, the third largest party. A  NC leader told me that the arrest one  day before the deal  of one Bechain Jha,   linked to the Bhutanese refugee scandal whose tread-marks lead to apex NC and UML leaders triggered the deal. Home Minister Rabi Lamichhane  whom NC had been gunning and UML protecting  in Parliament over the Pokhara Cooperative fraud case called the deal: "Oli and Deuba's bid to escape corruption cases". Balen Shah, Mayor of Kathmandu, made snide remarks about GiriBandhu Tea Estate corruption case. Just ten days ago the government had announced eight new envoys including replacing its NC appointed Indian Ambassador, Shankar Sharma who survived an earlier attempt when Oli was Prachanda's senior coalition partner.

The 7-point deal is essentially about power-sharing during the remaining 40 months of Parliament with Deuba offering Oli the first PM as he wants to be premier before the 2027 elections. They have agreed over the number of ministries they will share with UML keeping Finance and NC taking  Home ministry. NC and UML are sworn enemies with differing ideologies . Both their leaders are widely experienced and have done stints in jail. While Deuba has been PM five times, Oli has led Nepal twice. Deuba is recognized as India's blue-eyed boy and is favoured by the West, Oli is coveted by China though he is not a red-blooded Communist but a democrat at heart.

Political instability has plagued Nepal since the first multi-party elections in 2008 under interim constitution. 16 PMs have played musical chairs over 16 years, even after the federal, democratic republican constitution of 2015.

The electoral system produces a hung parliament.  Removing this malaise is ostensibly the aim of the national consensus government by altering the constitution with a two thirds majority of 184 seats in a House of 275.  It will propose deleting  Proportional Representation (PR) system for 110 seats, making changes in the Upper House, turning Nepal into a Hindu state and even removing the federal system. These modifications are emerging from the speculation-mill in Kathmandu. But one message is also clear: the two mainline parties do not intend to be sidelined by so-called king- makers with 20 to 30 law-makers.

Prachanda who led the 10 year long people's war and helped introduce transformative constitutional reforms is no greenhorn. He adores power and considers it the ultimate aphrodisiac. Even with his party's dwindling electoral scores, he has managed to capture the limelight. Despite the proposed Left-Centre alliance holding a sizeable majority of 167, Prachanda has refused to resign on moral grounds. He is expecting that since government formation was under Article 76 (2) of the constitution President Ramchandra Paudyal will invoke Article 76(3) to invite Deuba, leader of the single largest party to form a government which will deprive Oli of premiership. Both Prachanda and another former PM Madhav Nepal, formerly UML, despise Oli and would give their left arm to ensure he does not become PM again.

Senior NC leader Shashank Koirala has said a NC -UML coalition will weaken opposition forces. Another NC top leader Shekhar Koirala noted that government formation may legally  veer towards 76(3) not 76(2).

This will wreck the midnight deal and ensure that Deuba is first PM with Prachanda ready to offer him PM for the entire remaining period. It will restore the democratic alliance of NC , CPN (M) and smaller parties that ruled for a year till March. As Paudyal is an NC appointee backed by CPN( M], he can be easily asked to follow 76(3) junking 76(2). Many in NC are unhappy with the deal.

Neither China nor India has reacted to the impending fall of Prachanda-led government though news in the Kathmandu market is that India was not happy with the China-inspired Left alliance government. The Chinese Communist Party was keen to unite all Left parties under former President Bidya Devi Bhandari wife of late Madan Bhandari, UML's charismatic leader. But Oli rejected the idea. The Chinese will be disappointed with brief longevity of Left alliance,  blaming  India for  it. This  is  the grapevine in Kathmandu even though Delhi does not want Oli as PM.

For a national consensus government securing a two thirds majority will not be difficult. The NC and UML together have 167 lawmakers. 17 other lawmakers are needed for amending the constitution in order to bring political stability to Nepal. Already smaller parties are falling in line hoping for political stability.

But key questions remain. What will become of the NC corruption crusade against Lamichhane who was being shielded by Oli and Prachanda? What about UML-driven change of NC-appointed envoys? Will Oli do to Deuba what he did to Prachanda in not honouring a power-sharing deal earlier? Can a government of opposite poles cohabit ? or will it collapse sooner than later?

(The writer, a retired Major General, was Commander, IPKF South, Sri Lanka, and founder member of the Defence Planning Staff, currently the Integrated Defence Staff. The views expressed are personal)

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