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 Kanak Dixit's "Madi's Mass-Murder and the Future of Maobaad" article

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Posted on 06-10-05 10:42 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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(source: INSN.org)

Madi's Mass-Murder and the Future of Maobaad

Tuesday's setting sun was witness to the cremation of thirteen bodies by the banks of the Reyu, the river that waters the beautiful, fertile, neglected valley of Madi on the far side of the Royal Chitwan National Park. Those cremated were among the 38 who died on the spot when Maoists exploded a bucketful of sulphur compound under a passenger bus packed with 150 people.

Traveling in the bus were a dozen army men in civilian clothing moving between the military posts of Baghai and Bankatta, many of them carrying weapons. For more than a year, the villagers of Madi had been warned by the Maoists not to allow this. It was impossible for the villagers to make such demands of the RNA, however; and the rebels, who seem to be in a violent post-political phase, obviously do not care how many civilians they kill in order to get at a few soldiers.

Pushpa Kamal Dahal, the Maoist chieftan, apologized on Tuesday via email to media houses. But it is not clear from earlier gestures of contrition how much his writ runs any more among the young men whose heads he has filled with the romance of violence and in whose hands he has placed guns and explosives.

Madi is a convenient valley for Maoist activity, surrounded as it is by jungle on three sides, and separated from Bihar by one low range.

To the north, the rebel supply line passes through the national park, across the East-West Highway, past Pithuwa, up to the Chepang Hills, into Dhading and Gorkha beyond. What is known is that the Maoist commander of Madi Valley, carrying the name of Kshitij, was replaced a month ago. It is thought this might be related to the rift that has driven the rebels from top to bottom into 'Baburam' and 'Prachanda' camps.

The week previous to the bus attack, there had been extraordinary nighttime activity on the valley's trails, with dogs constantly barking into the darkness. The wire-guided improvised explosive device (IED) was put in place on Monday night. The rebels placed the sulphur compound ? a chemical used in rock blasting ? in a ten-litre bucket and buried it under sand at the point at which the bus would divert into the dry bed of the Bandar Mudhe stream to avoid a broken-down bridge. Thick intertwined red and black wires snaked away under the sand and through kaans grassland for about two hundred metres to the point at which someone holding a trigger ? most likely a flash mechanism ? would have watched that morning as two tractors drove over the device, followed by one bus making its way up-valley to Baghai, and finally the down-valley bus, crammed with passengers inside and on the roof.

The Shaligram Travels bus, license plate Na 1 Kha 3245, enters the depression of the dry river bed at about 7:55 am. The terrorist presses the switch, and the explosive goes off right under the central chassis. It rips through the passenger cabin, lifts the vehicle high into the air and deposits its shattered remains back on the ground in an explosion of smoke, dust and sand. Underneath, amidst the screams of the mutilated and the moans of the dying, water slowly fills the gaping cavity made by the bomb, as if it were a well. The men who had left their seats to the children, women and elderly and chosen to travel on the roof mostly survive. They are blown away and land on the sand at some distance. Those inside the main cabin do not stand a chance.

Because of incessant flash floods and attacks by wild animals, Red Cross committees are very active in each of Madi's four Village Development Committees. And so within minutes of the explosion, the Red Cross unit from the next-door Tharu village of Kirtanpur was at the site and was soon joined by other units. "There were writhing bodies and torn limbs everywhere," recalled one lad, part of a students' group that cordoned off the site. The local health post ambulance, which could fit four of the wounded, immediately made off for Bharatpur Hospital two hours away across the national park, and buffalo carts were pressed into service to carry others.

By the time the military rescue unit arrived from nearby national park, the locals had already dealt with the civilian wounded, and only the dead lay about. Of the 12 army men who had been on board, three died, four were wounded and the surviving five had dragged their companions to a nearby knoll and waited for rescue. Their guns and magazines were collected by the villagers and handed over to the RNA rescue team.

Soldiers, as citizens, can travel by public transportation anywhere they like when they are off-duty. All over the country, however, they also do so while on patrol, sometimes in civilian clothing with their M-16 rifles under wrap. This amounts to using civilians as shields against ambush by Maoists, who are increasingly relying on landmines instead of launching frontal attacks against military positions. In using public transportation, the soldiers are also presumably relying on some level of humanity amongst the rebels, assuming that they would not willingly endanger civilians. The soldiers from the Baghai post, for instance, may not have reckoned that they and their fellow travelers would encounter a rebel depraved enough to press a switch and watch a public bus packed to the brim with villagers blown to smithereens. Nirmal Sapkota flies to Bharatpur to discover the fate of his wife and child Nirmal Sapkota flies to Bharatpur to discover the fate of his wife and child

Krishna Chaudhary, an active social worker known by one and all up and down the Madi valley, kept the master lists of the deceased and the wounded on two separate sheets. There they were in the list of the departed: Tharu, Gurung, Magar, Chepang, Bahun, Chhetri, and one Shrestha; a Little Nepal of migrants who had settled this fertile, picture-postcard valley originally inhabited only by the Tharu. In Chaudhary's list of the deceased was noted: 'Woman, wife of Nirmal Sapkota' and 'Child, son of Nirmal Sapkota'. I had flown with Nirmal Sapkota to Bharatpur from Kathmandu earlier that day. When we landed, he had headed straight to Bharatpur Hospital by riksa in search of his wife and son. He would have already learnt the terrible truth.

Says Krishna Chaudhary, "Madi has a very close-knit community, because it is isolated from the rest of the country by the national park and its regulations. We suffer flash floods and the trepidations of wild animals. We have evolved the culture of looking after each other. Each villager of Madi feels the pain of what happened on that bus, because we are a special kind of community within Nepal." Looking despondently over his list, Chaudhary says, "The people we pulled out of the wreckage were all people we knew ?18 from Kalyanpuri, 17 from Ayodhyapuri. There was a family of four from Jhapa, one from Dhading and one from Lalitpur."

The attack occurred Monday, 6 June. It is now Tuesday, and the wounded are in Bharatpur Hospital and Chhauni Military Hospital in Kathmandu.

The bodies of the dead have been dispatched for cremation, each according the rituals of the individual's community. Two Chepang passengers are said to be still missing. An eight-year-old boy's body is found in the sand, headless and unclaimed. Already in a state of decomposition, he is buried under a foot of earth which is then covered with a straw mat extracted from the wreckage; he is left there to await a claimant. Scattered about are several infant's bonnets, scores of chappals of children and adults alike. There are mangoes and a bagful of sel-rotis scattered in the sand, someone's koseli from Madi to a relative far away.

The bodies are all gone, and only the carcass of the bus remains. The inside is a mass of twisted steel, protruding beams and bloodied seat cushions. The twin-beams of the main chassis are bent like putty.

Nobody in the center of the passenger cabin survived, the rest of the seated passengers were severely injured. Everyone crowded into the driver's section in the front seems to have survived, including the driver himself, 21-year-old Bikram Mahato. Only his body aches, he says, but he walks about as if in a daze. "Why did they do this to a public transport bus?" is all he is able to express. His fellow villager and Red Cross volunteer, Ram Chandra Gurou, is eloquent in his plea: "Madi was such a peaceful place. What had we done to deserve this? Nobody has cooked a meal here since yesterday, we are in such shock. Let not something like this happen ever again, anywhere in Nepal."

A Mahindra jeep hired by Ramanuj Bhandari carries the body of his mother Sumitra Bhandari, 52, to Gaidakot by the banks of the Narayani for cremation. She had gone to her sister's for a wedding. On their way back from the same wedding, a family of Lamsals ? father Dinesh, mother Ganga, and daughters Dipa and Dipika ? all perished and were cremated by the Reyu on Tuesday. Four sons of Ram Chandra Subedi, a 56-year-old local activist for the Nepali Congress, are already deep into mourning ritual. His 80-year-old mother comes and sits by the four sons, while his bereaved wife stands alone, vacant-eyed and lost. Says the eldest son, Krishna Subedi, "Why do they ambush the public like this? And why does the army take public transportation?"

In the tenth year of their insurgency, the Maoists have carried out an attack that has killed more civilians than ever before. It has been claimed that of late politics has taken a back seat in their organisation as the military-minded hardliners have had the upper hand. But killing innocent civilians is not a military act: it is terrorism. The Madi murders, as one terrible incident, represent the continuous acts of violence perpetrated by the rebels upon the population; individual killings, maimings and acts of terror that force the people into shocked submission.

The abysmal record of the Royal Nepal Army when it comes to civilian casualties is an issue in itself, and there is also a list of those culpable for having brought the country to this pass, from the royal palace to the political party leaderships and every institution in between. But more than any other person or institution, it is the Maoists who have been responsible for stealing the people's future. They have made political killings and violence commonplace in Nepal. They have dragged the army out of the barracks. They have made the monarchy arrogant and ambitious. They have weakened Nepal internationally and vis-à-vis India. And, most importantly, they have exploited Nepal's under-educated rural youth, tempting them with the promise of change imposed by the power of the gun, shunning the much harder but more fulfilling path of social revolution.

The Maoists have changed the nature of the country, and at this late date their leadership obviously understands that the 'revolution' is slipping out of their hands even though their cadre may for the moment have the run of the countryside. But does Pushpa Kamal Dahal have what it takes to come in from the cold? He has apologized often enough, as he did after the Madi mass-murder, but his fighters seem not to be marching to his drum. He has told them, he says, to allow political parties to function on the ground. They do not listen. He says "Do not target civilians," and they do. It is entirely possible that Pushpa Kamal knows he cannot beat the RNA and the existing international geopolitical alignments, but he does not have the strength or the courage to sue for peace. There is today a real question as to whether the fighters will heed the call of the high command. And it is quite likely that the ground-level fighters are unwilling to put down their guns because they know that they will be run out of the villages and the districts the moment they do so.

There are some who have always said in defence of the Maobaadi that "they have a point" when they call for social justice and the emancipation of the downtrodden. What very few of us did as the 'revolution' gathered steam, either out of fear for self or out of mistaken romanticism, was to stand up for ahimsa and challenge the central tenet of the Maobaadi rebellion: that it is justifiable to kill for a political goal. Reflecting the change in attitudes that augurs uncertain times ahead countrywide for the Maobaadi, one elder in Madi says, "They had some friends here. Now, they have none. Some people used to give them shelter. But now no one will." A letter in Kantipur daily on Thursday, written from Baghauda village in Madi, reads: "This question is particularly addressed to Prachanda, Baburam and Mahara: Why kill the people? You may or may not want to recall spending a full month in a particular part of Madi fourteen years ago. Do you remember who looked after you then? Just try and come back toMadi now, and you will see how the folks will chase you and your cadre away. They despise you?"

Despite their ultra-nationalist rhetoric, the Maoists are evolving into what can only be called anti-nationalists as they continue to kill civilians across the land. Let them not fall further into the abyss, into which they will drag all of Nepal. Let the Madi incident serve as a watershed for the Maoists. Let the horrified reaction of the populace bring about a realization to the rebel leadership that they have done the Nepali people grave injustice. That they have tried an unprincipled and impractical short cut to social change by seeking to force change at gunpoint. That they have helped militarise our society and that they have mistreated our trusting young. That there is no future in what they seek. That they must announce an absolute ban on attacks on civilians, followed soon by a willingness to lay down the gun. They must allow political parties to function in thevillages.

The mea culpa by Pushpa Kamal Dahal is not enough. To wipe the bloodstains from his hands, he must make a definitive move to bring his fighters and activists back to the realm of peaceful politics.

First, stop attacking civilians. Desist from the use of
assassinations, ambushes, landmines and IEDs. Make sure directives from the high command get implemented on the scorched ground. Next, drop the gun.

Kanak Mani Dixit is editor of Himal Southasian.

(A shorter version of this article appears in the Nepali Times of 10 June, Friday.)

 
Posted on 06-12-05 11:13 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Ashu जीलाई नेपालमा Adjust हुन गाह्रो प-यो क्या हो ? अब गरिब नेपालीको बानी वेहोरा र कार्यशैली अमरिकानेको जस्तै होस भन्ने चाहनुहुन्छ भने त्यो शायद सम्भव छैन होला । बरु तपाई फेरी 'नेपाली' बन्नुअघि नै अमेरिका फर्किनु उत्तम होला adjust हुन गाह्रो भा'भे।

For me Kanak Dixit is doing a much better job than Ashu or Deepak Gyawali or Ajay Dixit and alikes.
I think most of the sajhaites agree me on this.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 11:21 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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* I mean as a journalist Kanak is doing much better for Nepal than what Ashu is doing as a business consultant or what Deepak Gyawali is doing as a water expert. Instead of criticizing Kanak, let us know what Ashu is doing these days.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 11:24 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Newuser,

You are comparing a whale with a gold fish and saying, how little it is. Comparing a well-seasoned journalist with a naïve one to make a mockery of the later is not fare.

 
Posted on 06-12-05 11:25 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Posted on 06-12-05 11:57 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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त्यो त मलाई नि था छ के houston जी। तर पनि Ashu जस्तो विद्वानबाट कनकको जत्तिकै योगदानको अपेक्षा गर्नु गलत हो र ? Ashu जस्तो विद्वानबाट समाजले एउटा कुरा अपेक्षा गर्छ, उहाँ अर्कै थोक गर्नुहुन्छ/भन्नुहुन्छ जुन अलि पचाउन गाह्रो हुन्छ। अरुले गरेको जुन कुरामा पनि sceptical भैदिने आफूले चैं लौ समाधानको उपाय यो हो भनेर देखाउन नसक्ने। उहाँ जस्तो बुज्रुग मान्छेले सँधै औंला मात्र ठड्याउने हो भने हामी जस्ता अल्लारे ठिटाहरुले Ashu लाई respect गर्नुको के अर्थ रह्यो र ?
 
Posted on 06-12-05 12:10 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Haven't been able to visit sajha for the longest time. Been busy with travels. Leaving for Nepal in few days. Couldn't help noticing few users attacking Ashu for posting his opinions. It's silly for people to have great expectations from him. He's just another user posting his opinions. Why get all judgemental on him? Most of the times I have noticed that Ashu writes on public figures and public incidents and public writings, while he gets attacked personally for his public views. I admire Ashu for the spirit of his sharing his views. Just because you don't agree with his view doesn't mean he's any less of a person. But then I forget lot of users thesedays are of the mentality if you don't think like I do, then you're not worthy or my respect. Or they end up calling you panche or Raja ko Chamcha.

It's surprising that many new users here in sajha are always in the spirit of competition - ko bhanda ko kum - it does not have to be that way.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 12:15 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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going back from your training saroj...stay there in Nepal and goodluck..
 
Posted on 06-12-05 12:15 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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I agree with you Saroj. I come to Sajha to have fun and not to compete with anyone. Have a good trip to Nepal, bro (or sis?) and stay safe.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 12:27 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Thank you Captain Haddock. Ke garne koi koi Nepali haru ko naramro bani. Ati TOP PALTINU parne. Tara thikai chha I don't let their inflated baloons bother me too much tara time time ma baloon futalnu majja aucha. :)

Hushpuppy Thanks for your wishes. I hope you and people like you who have lots of strong opinion about politics in Nepal can also come to Nepal and work in grass root level rather than constantly bitching about the way things are in Nepal and the way things should be, while hiding safely tucked away in the land of the free.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 12:31 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Have a good trip Saroj! May the Gods bless all of your endeavors in Nepal.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 3:16 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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May God Gyanendra bless Sir O. J. with Gorkha Dacchin Bahu.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 4:40 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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While some new users here can keep sucking thier God Gyanendra's juicy parts, I'll be in a village in Nepal helping establish a school with other volunteers few of whom are British.

It's funny how some new users in sajha never get a clue obviously because they are busy writing pages after pages of theory while the very thought of having to go back and do something in Nepal, makes them shit in their pants.

HEHEHE
 
Posted on 06-12-05 7:54 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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LOL @ saroj's last para,

The security situation in Nepal -- in towns and villages alike -- has improved a lot since the royal takeover. The maoist activities have subsided even in the rural areas. As things stand now, there is a lot to be hopeful about. The maoists are on the run. While the previous governments neglected the rural areas as the maoists grew from strength to strength, this government is actively prusuing them. The maoists are a demoralised lot today. Millitarily, they have grown so weak thier ability to mount an assault or fight the army is next to impossible. Come to think of it, I think the recent attack on the civilian bus killing the most civilians in a single terrorist act is a manifestation of their utter desperation. It was a deliberate act -- to 'show' that they are still a force to reckon with.

I dunno if this government can completely wipe out maoists from the face of Nepal (that's a tall order), but it is certainly doing a commendable job, and no mattter what our ideology is, we must support the one who ACTUALLY delivers results. My only apprehension is once the King hands over the running of the country to the netas (which will happen sooner or later), we will be back to square one.

To the cynical lot out there (& blind supporters of netas): ask your folks back home to corroborate my claim -- plain and simple.

 
Posted on 06-12-05 8:27 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Lokman
Thank you for your realistic and more practical outlook on the situation in Nepal. But, be aware that there is a posse of bhusiya kukkurs who cannot bear to know that things in Nepal might be getting better than it was with the politicians. This posse will go at any length to discredit your optimism about the current situation in Nepal.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 9:00 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Mr. Lokman I am writing from KTM. Few days back I had gone to my home sunsari. I didnot find any improvement. Maobadi's, hooligans,thieves and arrogant securityman still were doing what they like.
It took almost two days to reach ktm from sunsari.


Which part of the nepal You are talking. If it(improvement) is true then it is really good.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 9:09 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Shaiva,

A positively surprising thing happens EVERYTIME I get attacked on Sajha, especially
by the likes of you.

I can't really explain it, but something good really happens in my REAL life, when people like you make fun of me on Sajha in your smug, rolling-your-eyes mannner of stand-up comedian tone.

Initially, being stupid, I had failed to see the positive correlation between the increase cyber-attacks against me and something good happening in my REAL life.

But the patterns are so overwhelming that I have forced to conclude that maybe
cyber-attacks are good in that they make you work harder in your real life . . . I don;t know.

This time, too, no sooner did your attack come through on Sajha than I got, well, promoted.

Thanks, buddy.

Please attack me more around September 2005 or so, hai?
I'll be counting on it.

As for Kanak Dixit, let me reiterate that agreeing with him and respecting him as a journalist are DIFFERENT from using his well-crafted report as a springboard for BROADER discussion about the relatively khattam state of civil society activism in Nepal. I am sure Kanak himself will appreciate this, as I shall foward the link to these discussions to him, while writing something about this in Kantipur in the next month.

Meantime, let me sit back and enjoy my good fortune (accidentally brought on by Shaiva) for a few days.

oohi
ashu



 
Posted on 06-12-05 9:12 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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But the patterns are so overwhelming that I have forced to conclude that maybe
cyber-attacks are good in that they make you work harder in your real life . . . I don;t know.

OR

But the patterns are so overwhelming that I am forced to conclude that maybe
it's God's plan to treat FAIRLY in your real life for all the UNFAIR and FLASE cyber-attacks you endure on Sajha . . . I don;t know.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 9:37 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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i dont know where this thread is going, and when it started nailing ideologies on a personal bias, calling names, but it's always amazing to see ppl like newuser, ashu, saroj on ego-clashes. nice nice...keep it up folks! look at nepali diaspora, the educated 'elite'.
 
Posted on 06-12-05 9:40 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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gee.. new discovery: ugly cyber attacks= good fortune in real life. phew!
 
Posted on 06-12-05 9:57 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Guff Puji Bad Ko, Bishwas Bhagya Bad Ko.
 



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