Ashok K. Behuria

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Dr. Ashok K.Behuria is a Fellow and Coordinator of the South Asia Centre at MP-IDSA. He is a Ph.D in International Relations from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India. He has worked on “India-Pakistan Relationship During the Eighties” for his Ph.D. He joined IDSA in 2003 and before that he worked as Assistant Director at the International Centre for Peace Studies, New Delhi. Dr.Behuria has also been Editor of International Studies, the prestigious research journal from Jawaharlal Nehru University, and has been in the Editorial Boards of Journal of Peace Studies and Strategic Analysis, the flagship journal from IDSA. He has taught at the University of Delhi and JamiaMilliaIslamia, New Delhi. He is a close observer of developments in South Asia and has been awarded the prestigious K Subrahmanyam Award for excellence in strategic studies for his work on Pakistan in 2009. He has published many research articles on strategic issues related to Pakistan, India-Pakistan relations, Sri Lanka, Nepal and South Asian security environment in Indian and foreign journals. He has edited several books on South Asia and continues with his research on internal politics in Pakistan, evolving strategic scenario in the Pak-Af region, radicalisation of religious discourse in the region, India’s engagement with the neighbourhood, regional security, and inter-state cooperation.


Senior Fellow

Publication

How Sri Lanka Walked into a Debt Trap, and the Way Out

Sri Lankans love to project their country as the land of serendipity. So, when the island country saw the back of a four-decade-old violent Tamil insurgency in 2009, it was expected that it would surge ahead in a serendipitous way. The turn of events ever since has, however, proved that the country has not been that fortunate. In fact, immediately after the conclusion of the war, Sri Lanka (re)lapsed into multiple crises, occasioned by a regime which functioned in an authoritarian manner.

Trump Plain-Speak Shatters Pakistan

Senior Fellow, IDSA, Dr Ashok Behuria’s commentary on the impact of US President Donald Trump’s Afghanistan Policy, titled ‘Trump Plain-Speak Shatters Pakistan’ was published by the Air World Service, the External Services Division of All India Radio, on August 25, 2017.

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  • Published: 25 August, 2017

Importance of PM Modi’s Visit to Iran: Opportunities and Challenges for India

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Iran is important in many ways. It came at a time when India is seriously contemplating activation of its ‘Look West’ policy and banking on Iran as a ‘gateway’ and provider of a corridor to Central Asia and Afghanistan. The visit sought to revitalise India–Iran bilateral relations which has passed through an uncertain phase during the last decade.

ISIS down, not out: Ways to kill it

It’s necessary to fight the ideology of terror that ISIS has spawned by evolving a counter-ideological narrative which would rescue both Islam and Muslims from the abyss that ISIS is seeking to push them into

Close on the heels of the Holey Artisan Bakery attack in Dhaka’s posh Gulshan area on July 1, came the brutal attack on a multi-storeyed shopping mall in one of busiest corners of Baghdad on July 3. The former attack, orchestrated by a team of seven young men of decent pedigree, claimed 22 lives, most of them foreigners. The latter, caused by a suicide truck bomber, has so far claimed 250 lives, most of them Shias. Days before the Dhaka incident, three fidayeen armed with automatic weapons and explosive vests staged a simultaneous attack at the international airport in Istanbul on June 28, killing 42 people.

Bloody Ramzan

What connects these three attacks? These attacks came on the eve of Eid-ul-Fitr, and were claimed by Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (or Levant) — call it in its acronymic form, ISIS or ISIL. A day later than the Baghdad attack, there were three separate suicide attacks in Saudi Arabia — in Jeddah, by a Pakistani origin driver who blew himself close to the US consulate; in Medina, by a suicide bomber who wanted to enter the Prophet’s mosque where he is buried; and third, in Qatif, by again suicide bombers, who attacked a Shia mosque. All these three attacks, however, went unclaimed. Only a day before the Eid-ul-Fitr, the harrowing tale of 18-year-old Yazidi girl

Lamiya Aji Bashar was splashed in the international media. She luckily escaped the ISIS torture cell in northern Iraq, where about 3,000 Yazidi women and girls are being held captive as sex slaves ever since ISIS swept the cities of Zumar, Sinjar, and Wana in northern Iraq, which had the significant presence of Yazidis — a Kurdish-speaking minority with a religious outlook that was a curious amalgam of Zorasrianism, Islam and Christianity. Institute for Study of War, a non-partisan, non-profit, public policy research organisation, based in the US, had predicted quite correctly in its publication in May this year that this year’s Ramzan, starting on June 6 and ending on July 6, 2016, would witness a surge of attacks which ISIS would launch to make up for serious losses it had suffered in the preceding months. The attacks would aim at boosting the morale of its followers on the one hand and catalyse its recruitment process in the Western Asian theatre. It had also isolated slow penetration of ISIS into Saudi Arabia.

Predictable trajectory of ISIS

Was it not so predictable? Aren’t we seeing all this for quite some time? Turkish President, right-wing and known for his sympathies for Islamic rule, called “Daesh” — as ISIS is called by its Arab detractors — “a dagger plunged into the chest of Muslims”. The ISIS cadre hate their outfit to be referred to as Daesh, as it has pejorative meaning in Arabic language. Call it ISIS or Daesh, the outfit, known for its brutal tactic and regressive ideological moorings based on ultra-orthodox reinterpretation of Islamic history and theology, has spread like wildfire across the world both in countries where Muslims are in majority as well as in those where they are in a minority. Ever since, the reclusive leader of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, announced the arrival of the new Caliphate on June 29, 2014, the appeal of ISIS has overtaken the appeal of all other radical Sunni Muslim groups in recent history. ISIS has expanded its network during the last two years from Africa to the Philippines with ease, as splinter groups from local Islamist radical groups, many of them formerly pledging notional loyalty to al-Qaeda, switched their allegiance to ISIS — starting from Boko Haram to Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar (JMA) in Chechnya, from Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) to Jabhat al-Nushra (a known al-Qaeda affiliate, initially created by Islamic State of Iraq, the predecessor of ISIS). Egyptian militant Islamist group, Ansar Bait al-Maqdis, and Libyan radical Islamists also announced their loyalty to ISIS in 2014. Similarly, there is a steady desertion of cadres from other sister Salafi-Wahabi outfits, who joined ISIS over the last two years, as it operated like a defect State with a well-operated revenue system, howsoever illegitimate and based on fear, and also with a well-oiled propaganda machinery which made good use of modern communication technology — catering to the new twitteratti and Facebook generation. Its glossy internet publication as well as circulation of videos and audios exhorting the faithful to join the Caliphate did result in gradual expansion of its ranks worldwide.

Outflanking al-Qaeda

Although a split-away group from al-Qaeda, ISIS has managed to establish itself as non-al-Qaeda group fighting for the rights of Muslims the world over. Unlike al-Qaeda, which sought to use territory held by — like-minded groups — like Mullah Omar’s Taliban in Afghanistan, the ISIS first occupied significant stretches of territory in Iraq and Syria before it announced its presence as a force to reckon with. Unlike many other groups, it tried to consolidate its financial position well before it announced its arrival. It has raised its finances quite skilfully by gradually overrunning oil fields, engaging in oil and drugs trade, looting of banks, extortion, levying of taxes, in territories held by it. Unfortunately, ISIS has benefited from the turmoil set into motion, first in 2003 with the fall of the Saddam regime in Iraq, and also in the wake of the call for regime change in Syria since 2011. (In my earlier piece in The Pioneer on July 7, 2014, I had traced the origin of ISIS). Five years later, today, all the anti-Asad forces, trained and supported by the Western countries, are losing their cadre to ISIS as it is showing its resilience in the face of concerted attack by powerful countries to weaken and decimate it. As the age-old dictum has it — nothing succeeds like success. The consolidation of ISIS in a large geographical area straddling Iraq and Syria has led to Islamic terror groups affiliating themselves voluntarily to ISIS. Most of them have expressed their willingness to operate as ISIS franchisees. The net result has been obvious. It has come up as a new but powerful group, slowly poaching on most groups cutting across States and regions. In the bargain, al-Qaeda has lost its shine vis-à-vis ISIS, and there is a competition for influence between these two radical outfits. Sometimes it has resulted in clashes between the affiliates of these two outfits. Ideologically speaking, there is not much difference between al-Qaeda and ISIS. However, ever since ISIS decided to operate as a State, especially since 2011, and that too much before declaring Caliphate, al-Qaeda leadership had cautioned against ISIS efforts to territorialise Islamic struggle and look for global Islamic revolution. ISIS under the leadership of al-Baghdadi turned over a new leaf and decided to first strengthen their hold over the territory they controlled and look for global jehad at later date. Al-Qaeda snapped all its relationship with ISIS in February 2014, and in 2015, top al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri criticised al-Baghdadi for engaging himself in sedition within the fold of Islam. He has questioned the way al-Baghdadi was chosen as the Caliph of the entire Muslim umma and also taken objection to al-Baghdadi’s emphasis on the apocalypse and the day of final judgement. In fact, ISIS followers are made to believe that as per the prophecy cited in the hadees (compilation of prophet’s sayings and deeds), the final battle between the forces of Islam led by it and those of the West will be fought in a place called Dabiq, in Syria. Al-Qaeda leadership is not that certain about such apocalyptic vision of ISIS. Moreover, al-Qaeda, known for its intensely conservative Sunni outlook, has raised its concerns about the anti-sectarian, anti-Shia activities of ISIS. Such differences at the top leadership level does not foreclose the possibility of al-Qaeda supporters gradually shifting their loyalty towards a group which is showing better promise of realising its Islamic goals it has set for itself. In that sense, ISIS has managed to attract the attention of the Muslim youth through its unapologetic endorsement of violence as a tool for radical change in society, and also its aggressive zeal to defend Islam against its enemies. Moreover, lower rung al-Qaeda sympathisers have pooled their resources with ISIS in certain theatres of war against a common enemy.

Southern Asian theatre

In the Pakistan-Afghanistan region, ISIS is slowly but surely making its presence felt. The leadership of Taliban and al-Qaeda have been particularly chary of their affiliates and cadres veering towards ISIS. There are several reports of ISIS sympathisers being neutralised in Afghanistan, especially in Faryab and Nangarhar. Some factions of the Pakistani Taliban group have also joined ISIS and registered their deep aversion for both al-Qaeda and Taliban. In fact, the central philosophy of Pakistan Taliban is similar to the worldview of ISIS. Most analysts in South Asia believe that the penetration of ISIS into the region has been rather exaggerated by the regional media. However, as the recent attack in Bangladesh suggests, ISIS sympathisers have shown exceptional zeal and enthusiasm to adopt its brutal methods to propagate their extremist world view. Moreover, South Asian countries have a large labour force in the oil-rich Arab countries, who run the risk of getting exposed to the ISIS world view. That is how, one has witnessed even Maldivian and Indian Muslims coming under the sway of ISIS and recruiting gullible Muslims for the “final battle” to be fought in Syria. Interestingly, the lure of ISIS continues despite many returnees from the Syrian theatre sharing their horrible experiences with the ISIS in the media. Recently, reports of security agencies busting ISIS cells in India have hogged the headlines. Therefore, there is no room for complacency when it comes to dealing with a threat as real as that of the ISIS today.

Fighting ISIS

After the ISIS-claimed attack on Russian aircraft and frequent suicide bombings in Turkey, there is a consensus now emerging among the wider international community that there is a need to arrest the growth of ISIS and its ideology of terror. After Russian pounding of ISIS facilities in Syria and recent recapture of the town of Fallujah from ISIS, it is being hoped that, if this tempo could be maintained, ISIS can be neutralised soon. However, the sectarian animus haunting the region is likely to interfere with the consensus that was slowly emerging among the world powers that decimating ISIS ought to be the prime goal of international intervention in the region. As it has been noticed, regional heavy-weights like Saudi Arabia and Iran are busy working at cross purposes creating the context for ISIS and its affiliates to regroup and reassert. An asymmetric threat like ISIS can only be countered through united action, which is now impossible to find. Ever since the invasion of Iraq in 2003, there has been no leader of vision and calibre in Iraq to hold the country together. The resultant uncertainty in the country is likely to indirectly strengthen ISIS further. True ISIS has suffered some reverses and has also retaliated very fast in the shape of a string of attacks in different parts of the world. But the war is not yet over. ISIS is down but not out. It is also necessary to fight the ideology of terror that ISIS has spawned by evolving a counter-ideological narrative which would rescue both Islam and Muslims from the abyss that ISIS is seeking to push them into. As the Islamic world is passing a serious churning process, in different countries across the world voices of sanity are slowly coming to the fore. These voices stress on plurality within Islam; they are ready to reinterpret Islamic precepts in light of the requirement of the times. Such voices need to be encouraged to share their perspectives and devise a counter-ideology that can fight out the ISIS effectively. One must remember that today the appeal of ISIS is primarily ideological. While every possible measure needs to be taken to militarily weaken ISIS, it is the fight at the ideological plane that can alone neutralise ISIS. Until then, ISIS will continue to surprise us with its terror tactics and lure away people to fill its ranks.

The article was originally published in The Pioneer.

  • Published: 9 July, 2016

India and Pakistan: Will They Move beyond ‘Sharing of Intelligence’?

Intelligence sharing by the Pakistani National Security Advisor (NSA) with his Indian counterpart in early March 2016 came up as an interesting outcome of the ongoing engagement between them since December 2015. Such exchange of critical information has raised the levels of expectation among the peaceniks in the subcontinent about the prospects of peace talks between the two countries, after a whole series of false starts since 2008.

Between Despair and Hope

Rather than hoping for fatigue to set in among the agitators, or playing the China card vis-à-vis India, the Nepalese leadership should shed its intransigence, own up the Madhesis, Tharus and other such communities in the Terai region, value their aspirations and secure a consensus to amend the new Constitution to put an end to the stalemate

On November 23, the Madhesi agitation in Nepal completed its 100-day mark. A day later the first sign of a possible thaw was visible in the shape of two amendment proposals fielded by the Nepali Congress party which seeks to secure inclusive and proportional representation of the Madhesi people in all State bodies and delimitation of electoral constituencies taking into account the grievances of the people in the Terai region.
This has been welcomed by some of the prominent Madhesi leaders. As per media reports, the NC and Unified Communist Party of Nepal (UCPN) Maoist leaders are ready to even bring about changes to the bills to accommodate the demands of the Madhesi people.

From the beginning of the third week of November, media reports from Nepal indicated that UCPN Maoist leadership Prachanda in particular — has been busy advancing some tentative proposals aimed at addressing the demands of the Madhesi people. He was reportedly positive about settling the demarcation issue together with other disputed issues and went as far as accepting the demand for a separate Tharuhat province in the west and including some parts of Sunsari in the Madhes province in the east.

There were even talks of merging Madhes-Janjati majority areas in Jhapa, Morang and Sunsari with this province. There is thus hope that the ongoing dialogue between the Madhesi groups and major political parties may be able to pull Nepal out of the crisis it is in.

The Deepening Crisis

However, pessimists would argue that the crisis does not show any sign of ebbing so soon. On November 21-22, four people were killed in police firing in Saptari while trying to block movement of vehicles on the highway at night.

Despite Prime Minister Oli’s participation in the Chhath puja which is celebrated with fervour in the Madhes region and expression of his desire to shed inflexibility while dealing with the demands raised by Madhesis, his Government continues to remain as adamant as ever.

NC spokesperson Dilendra Badu acknowledged it when he remarked that the Government was not serious about amending the Constitution. Many observers in Nepal would also tell you that powerful sections within the three major political parties continue to oppose the idea of granting any major concessions to the Madhesis.

As per the calculations of the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FNCCI) and National Trade Association, industrial sector in Nepal has incurred a loss of Rs 200 billion due to the Madhesi agitation. The Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) released a report titled ‘Impacts of the unofficial Indian embargo on Nepali economy’ on November 20, which predicted a negative growth rate for Nepal due to the impact of over 100 days of unrest in the Terai region, where 80 per cent of all the manufacturing industries in the country are located, as well as the unofficial blockade by India.

For the first time in the last 33 years, Nepalese economy would contract to minus 0.9 per cent if the blockade persists till mid-January. An editorial in a Nepalese newspaper said reacting to NRB report that the Nepalese economy fared better even in the worst days of the decade-long Maoist conflict. The NRB report held that such economic downturn could push an additional 800,000 people below the poverty line.

Scapegoating India

The reactions to such looming crisis from the Government as well as the editorial in the newspaper have not mentioned the need to engage in purposeful dialogue to end the crisis. Rather, Minister for Industry Som Prasad Pandey stressed the need “for ushering the country forward on a path of self-dependence” to avert such crisis.

The editorial attributed the crisis to “Nepal’s unhealthy dependence on India for both fuel and food” and “inability of successive Governments to take lessons from history”.

Rather than reducing dependence on India, it mentioned ruefully that the Nepalese leaders ensured that India accounted for 63 per cent of the total bilateral trade in 2014-15, compared to 34 per cent in 1988-89.

The efforts on the part of the Nepalese Government to scapegoat India for the distress of the people at large, to build an anti-India nationalism among the people, and to aspire for illusory self-dependence, signify the strategy the leadership has adopted to fend off the crisis that refuses to die down primarily because of its unwillingness to address the Madhesi demands, which have been accepted by Nepalese leaders as genuine from time to time.

Going Back on Commitments

Not long ago in January 15, 2007, the first draft of the Interim Constitution was issued in contravention of the spirit of the Jan Andolan, to build an inclusive and federal State. This led the Madhesis to take to the streets the very next day. The agitation forced the Interim Constitution Drafting Committee to bring about the first ever amendment guaranteeing “participation of Madhesi, dalit, indigenous peoples, women, labours, farmers, disabled, backward classes and regions in all organs of the State structure on the basis of proportional inclusion”.

There was a 22-point agreement signed between the then Government of Nepal and Madhesi Janadhikar Forum on August 30, 2007 “to ensure proportional representation and partnership of Madhesis, Adivasi/Janajatis, Dalits, women, backward classes, disabled people and minority communities, including Muslims, who have been excluded for generations in all organs and levels of Government and in power structures, mechanisms and resources” and to “immediately establish a commission of experts for State restructuring and ensure that its Constitution is inclusive”.

There was also an assurance given to the Madhesis that “while restructuring the State, a provision shall be made for a federal governance system with autonomous provinces/States”.

Sensing lack of commitment of the leadership, the Madhesis took to the streets again in January 2008 before the elections were to take place to elect the first Constituent Assembly of the country. There was yet another agreement signed on February 28, 2008 between the Government of Nepal and the Samyukta Loktantrik Madhesi Morcha (SLMM) “respecting the sentiments and aspirations of the Madhesi people of Nepal, expressed during the protests and movements that they have organised time and again for equal rights”, and “to ensure the establishment of federal democratic republic in Nepal for multiparty democratic system of governance, to guarantee equality, freedom and justice for all, and to end all forms of discrimination”.

The Government also accepted “people’s aspiration for a federal structure with autonomous regions, including the Madhesi people’s aspiration for an autonomous Madhesi State”. There was also a commitment to ensure “proportional, inclusive group entry of Madhesi people and other communities into the Nepal Army to impart national character to the Nepal Army and to make it more inclusive”.

Past Record of the Nepalese Leadership

The political experiment in the shape of electing the new Constituent Assembly (CA) raised the hopes of the Madhesis by securing their participation in the elections and securing a proportional representation for them in the new Assembly. However, the Maoist-led Government during the first CA and the Nepali Congress-CPN-United Marxist Leninist coalition Government in the second CA more importantly, the senior political leaders of the majority parties were rather too smug and complacent about their roles.

Contrary to what they promised in public, they functioned in an opaque, non-democratic, and non-accountable manner. A handful of top leaders tended to hijack the agenda and functioning of the Constituent Assembly, with the result that important issues like ensuring a truly federal and inclusive Nepal were not paid the attention they deserved.

True they could resolve difficult issues like integration of Maoists into the Army, brought in many progressive principles into the Constitution like , abolishing death penalty, recognising the rights of sexual minority or the rights of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community, equal rights of women to ancestral property and their proportional inclusion in all agencies of the State through positive discrimination, providing for right to compensation for victims of environmental pollution, and empowering differently abled citizens etc.

However, when it came to accommodating the sensitivities of a significant section of the population the Madhesis, and Tharus who constitute about 30 per cent of the population, inhabiting the Terai region bordering India, the leaders proved rather jaundiced and myopic. They also disregarded different proposals of the State reorganisation commission to have both identity and geography based provinces which ranged from 10 to 14 in number.

Lack of Foresight: Default or Design?

They could not perhaps foresee the trouble lurking for them when they entered into the 16 point agreement in June 2015, which provided the basis for their finalisation of the Constitution on the basis of majority disregarding their own commitment to evolve a consensus based document, which would have been acceptable to all.

In view of the fact that the people in the Madhesi region had started agitating since August 2015, and there were regular inputs from India at the highest level to go for a consensus based Constitution without shortchanging Madhesi aspirations, the decision of the majority parties to ram the Constitution through a majority vote in desperate hurry clearly demonstrated their unwillingness to even consider the Madhesi demands, leave alone, thrash them out with their leaders in a spirit of dialogue and reconciliation, so germane to democracy.

If the recent report by Human Rights Watch were to be believed, the Government had anticipated the Madhesi agitation and had issued a new regulation governing the Armed Police Force (APF), arming it with enhanced powers to use lethal force.

The report stated that the APF personnel were given impunity if anyone was killed by them. As per section 8, article 58(3) of the new regulation an APF personnel “may use necessary or final force in order to defend self” while discharging his duties to maintain law and order and to arrest the attacker.”

The very next clause clearly states that “if a person is injured or killed” in the process, “no case will be filed against the APF personnel without the consent of the Government of Nepal.”

The Demand and the Neglect

The Madhesis were demanding for one or two provinces in the Mechi-Mahakali belt comprising the border districts where they have significant numerical presence, including some districts having majority hill population like Jhapa, Morang, Sunsari in the east, Chitwan at the centre and Kailali and Kanchanpur in the west.

The hill leadership finally decided to have two provinces in the Madhesi area without these districts, choosing to attach these with the northern districts having majority Pahadi or hill population.

Moreover, some hill districts like Palpa, Gulmi, Argha-Khanchi, Pyuthan, Rolpa, Sallyan and Rukum have been added to the second province in the region in western Terai, which was certain to provoke the Madhesi-Tharu population in the area. This also militates against the spirit of the agreement the Government of Nepal had signed with the Adivasi Tharu Community agitating in the Terai on March 14, 2009.

The result of such neglect is there in front of us. The agitating population in the region has obstructed commercial vehicles entering into Nepal from India. Nepal is facing acute shortage of essential goods, including petroleum products and cooking gas, due to the blockade of key trading points with India. As many as 50 people have lost their lives so far. The decision by some Madhesi parties to continue with the agitation threatens to protract the crisis further. The lack of political consensus among the three majority parties and factions within them may make it difficult for them to resolve the issue through dialogue.

Indian Position

The fact remains that it is primarily the shortsightedness and inflexibility of the leadership that has led to the present crisis and its prolongation. India is concerned about continuation of this crisis, as much as the Nepalese leadership. A careful study of India’s reaction would show that right since the start of the Madhesi agitation, India stayed out of the process of internal negotiations and Indian Prime Minister conveyed to his counterpart very clearly that “India’s one and only desire was to see the emergence of a peaceful, secure, stable, democratic and prosperous Nepal, which draws strength from its rich social diversity, enormous resources and extraordinary talent”.

In fact, the message from the Indian PM on August 25, 2015 was loud and clear, “The political leadership of Nepal should resolve all outstanding issues through dialogue between all political parties and through the process of widest possible consultation, including with the public, so as to strengthen the climate of trust and confidence across and between all sections of society, and arrive at solutions that reflect the will and accommodate the aspirations of all citizens of a richly diverse society within a united, peaceful, stable and prosperous Nepal”.

A day before the final promulgation of the Constitution, on November 19, the Indian Foreign Secretary made a special trip to Kathmandu and met all senior leaders of the NC and the CPN-UML. He conveyed India’s apprehensions clearly when he said India strongly supported Constitution-making process in Nepal and it “would like its completion to be an occasion for joy and satisfaction, not agitation and violence”. He urged Nepalese leaders “to display the necessary flexibility and maturity to ensure a durable and resilient Constitution that has broad-based (ownership and) acceptance”.

A day after the promulgation, India expressed its concerns about “the incidents of violence resulting in death and injury in regions of Nepal bordering India” and talked about Indian freight companies and transporters voicing their “complaints about the difficulties they are facing in movement within Nepal and their security concerns due to the prevailing unrest”.

As the troubles for the Nepalese people mounted throughout October due to non-supply of oil and gas, the Nepalese leadership deflected the attention of its people towards India, disregarding the fact that Indian suggestions of seeking a political solution at the earliest aimed at preserving the unity and integrity of Nepal through effective inclusion of the Madhesis through dialogue and widest possible consultation.

New Government, Old Tactics

The change in the Government after the promulgation of the Constitution, as per the understanding between the NC and the CPN-UML, and the new leadership quest for popular support have interfered with the process of reconciliation with the Madhesis.

There seems to be a temptation on the part of the new leadership to expand its support base by interpreting Madhesi agitation as a function of Indian provocation and support and by demonstrating its resolve to stand up to India. By opening a channel of communication with China and securing its willingness to supply oil and gas to Nepal at this critical juncture, the new Prime Minister, KP Oli, from the UML, has conveyed to his people that Nepal is seeking to reduce its dependence on India. At the same time, the Oli Government seeks to both cultivate and benefit from anti-India sentiments in Nepal.

At another level, the new Government is aware of the limits of Chinese help given the opacity that characterises Chinese deals and the lack of adequate physical infrastructure to sustain transport of oil and gas from China to Nepal.

While China may take advantage of the situation and it does have the capacity to lay down smart transport network if it is serious about making permanent inroad into Nepal, the Nepalese leadership knows that it may take a long time to fructify. The people of Nepal may not be prepared for such a long wait. The terms and conditions of Chinese help may also not be acceptable to the people.

Moreover, the long-term consequence of any rupture in bilateral relationship with India may not be lost on the leadership of Nepal.

Limited Options

As much as India would like the situation to get back to normal, the Nepalese leaders should not expect India to arm-twist Madhesis for an agreement deemed unfavourable by the latter. This would be blatant interference. As regards, Indian leverage with the Madhesis is concerned, there is an exaggerated account of it among the Nepalese people and leadership, which must yield ground to pragmatic thinking the need to engage Madhesis and work out a solution to the ongoing crisis.

If the leadership deeply believes that the crisis has been either midwifed or stoked by India, there is a need to do some frank talking at the bilateral level rather than indulging in a pointless blame game that serves nobody’s interest.

Rather than hoping for fatigue to set in among the agitators, or playing the China card vis-à-vis India, the Nepalese leadership should shed its intransigence, own up the Madhesis, Tharus and other such communities in the Terai region, value their aspirations and secure a consensus to amend the new Constitution to put an end to the ongoing stalemate.

It needs nothing short of a change in mindset now to reclaim sanity in the process of democratic transition in Nepal. The leaders of Nepal have shown exemplary maturity in solving many knotty issues in the past. They have an opportunity to demonstrate it again.

This article was originally published in The Pioneer.

  • Published: 28 November, 2015

India’s Renewed Interest in Chabahar: Need to Stay the Course

India has to play a critical role in developing and thereby realising the full potential of Chabahar port which will significantly boost its image as a proactive regional power that is building such critical infrastructure not only to maximise its financial and strategic gains but also to propel regional growth and prosperity.

Early Trends in Afghan Elections: Abdullah Leads the Show

According to a poll survey, 29 per cent supported the candidacy of Ashraf Ghani, a former World Bank expert, who is one among the three probable candidates President Karzai is supposed to favour. Abdullah Abdullah, runner up in 2009 Presidential poll and former foreign minister, came second with 25 per cent. The rest of the candidates, including Abdul Rab Rasoul Sayaaf, polled under 10 per cent.