This week in Nepal, a tiny Himalayan Republic was born. One month after the constituent elections midwifed by such luminaries as Jimmy Carter and overseen by hundreds of UN observers from all over the world, Nepal is set to demolish the monarchy. The removal of the monarchy is one of the key points of the Maoist campaign that sprinted to victory in the April elections after ten years of a tragic people’s war that has seen the deaths of over 13,000 people.
The rise and fall of King Gyanendra is a short and bloody tale in the epic saga of the Shah dynasty who have ruled Nepal for hundreds of years. Seven years ago Gyanendra assumed the throne after the murder of his brother and the death of his successor Crown Prince Dipendra in June 2001.
While the official story is that the then-Crown Prince Dipendra went berserk after his parents refused to give permission for his love marriage and gunned down the entire Royal Family after dinner, the true story is never likely to be told. The shattered pieces of the story of the murder at the palace are like pieces of a broken mirror, reflecting conspiracy theories and whispers in the street even seven years later.
“Did you hear,†says a Buddhist nun to me one day recently as we wait by the traffic lights by the Royal Palace, "that over one hundred members of staff at the royal palace were also murdered that night? They say the Ghats at Pashupatinath burned all night. No witnesses survived,†she mutters darkly before disappearing into the swirl of people and traffic.
But one witness did survive to tell the tale, the current and soon to be ex-Crown Prince Paras. According to Paras, Crown Prince Dipendra was so out of it on drugs, alcohol, and bitterness that he was incapable of standing and had to be helped to his room that night. But within minutes the Prince had recovered enough to dress himself in commando gear and return to the family with guns blazing. The man who couldn’t climb a flight of stairs then set about massacring the entire Royal Family with military precision but sparing Paras. He then used his left hand to shoot himself in the head even though he was right-handed.
Paras was considered to be a reliable witness by the investigators
if not in the eyes of the people. His previous involvement in two
murders and countless other incidents of hooliganism and mayhem
resulted in six hundred thousand people petitioning the King. But his
version was accepted by the investigators and has since passed into
history.
Gyanendra just happened to be absent that night or he would not have
been able to so rapidly ascend to the throne without honoring the
customary period of mourning in such cases. In 2005 Gyanendra dismissed
the democratically elected government and assumed total control, adding
fuel to the fire of the people’s war that continued to rage across the
country.
His authority lasted another bloody year until a massive uprising of the people forced him to step down.
Nepali people traditionally believed their kings to be reincarnated gods but the seven years of bad luck that followed the shattered mirror of the Shah Dynasty from that night is now almost over and the King has today been giving his marching orders. Long live the Republic.