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keystone
22nd January 2013, 22:53
[ this is the first dispatch from the winter has its end revolutionary reporting team currently in nepal. source: http://www.kasamaproject.org/component/content/article/64-winter-has-its-end/4369-first-impressions-reporting-on-new-tremors-of-change-in-nepal ]

First Impressions: New tremors in Nepal

Category: Winter Has Its End Created on Monday, 21 January 2013 03:24 Written by Liam Wright and Natalio Pérez

http://www.kasamaproject.org/images/ericribellarsi/kathmandu-busy-streets.jpg
Photo credit: Natalio Pérez

The sky stretches on forever here on the rooftop of the world.

Old and new, the foreign and indigenous are contradiction that wrack Kathmandu. The ease with which this place could welcome Western money and culture is apparent. And you already see the toll of that -- the inevitable price of "aid" or commerce from India and the West.

But just as apparent here is the terrific desire for New Nepal with dignity. There is a political movement for a different road of development without the poisonous domination of expansionist capital. And that, after all, is what drew us here.

Streets in this city can wind on forever. People, bicycles, motorcycles, and cars are packed into the same centuries-old, dusty lanes. Walls splattered with old dirt, energetic hawkers, and storefronts with wares. All that sits right nextto the red flags, banners, and posters of communist parties. The very appearance of this place speaks to both its ancient history and the dynamism of its insurgent radicalism.

Walking through Kathmandu reminded us of the cramped avenues of old Mexican cities; streets designed for pedestrians somehow manage to accommodate every imaginable type of vehicle, resulting in some of the most harrowing near-misses and the most phenomenal driving I have ever seen. The car horns seem to speak a language of their own, but it doesn't take long to realize that here a honk means "Excuse me," not, "F*** you!"

It is difficult to convey the strange feeling of being constantly surrounded by the presence of hammers and sickles while knowing that the slightest nuances in aesthetic and language signify the difference between capitalist democracy and radical egalitarianism. Then again, Nepal is an enigma: this is a country where “communists” are conservatives, "Unified Maoists" are liberal-Western modernizers, and the "dash Maoists" are revolutionaries. It is easy to understand how so many, looking from the outside, are initially confused.



We have been in the city for a little over two weeks now--learning and watching. Our focus has been on the newly regrouped Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist, which is coming from decades of struggle and over a decade of incredibly successful and popular revolutionary People’s War that began in 1996, liberating 80% of the countryside of Nepal at its peak.

We observed their first congress in twenty years and are learning of their new program and direction. They have seen both profound victory and crushing setbacks. The Maoists once held base areas in the countryside where land was re-distributed, where communes were erected, where the people had their own courts and popularly elected government. All of this, in the third-poorest country on the planet where before, only tyranny by corrupt police and a now-overthrown god-King ruled. That overthrow was unquestionably the product of Nepal’s People’s War and the diverse alliance rallied by it. The struggle escalated when Nepal’s Maoists organized general strikes which shut down every major city in Nepal for 6 days. Inherent to these complex experiences are lessons for changing the world in our own conditions.

In recent years, these revolutionaries have suffered both error and betrayal; their base areas are gone, though so is much of the more obvious feudalism. They no longer have an army, and their organization has split: some taking the easy path of reform, of investment, and foreign domination. Others, the revolutionaries of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist, have just regrouped, forming a new party as their first step back onto the stage of history. As one of their leaders at their congress said, "We will make a revolution which will shake both heaven and the Earth."

In new situations come new challenges, new struggles, new possibilities: determined revolutionaries now find themselves struggling not against a monarchy which justifies its rule by divine right, but a regime which legitimizes itself by the gains of the revolution it now seeks to terminate.

While in Nepal, we want to give the world a look into the important events unfolding here, the feelings of the people, and especially to give a sense of who are the partisans, the revolutionary dreamers of Nepal. It is a narrative and a story which is far too seldom heard anywhere. The Maoist movement here is commonly spoken of by decadent and oppressive powers as though it was a mass of violent terrorists. But this is far from the truth. These selfless people are militant abolitionists of the worst forms of oppression.

Stay tuned.

With revolutionary love,

-Liam Wright and Natalio Pérez with Winter Has Its End



Reports coming soon:

Retaking the Stage: Nepal's Maoist Congress

After the People's Liberation Army: Still Won't Surrender

Women Before, During, and After the People's War

Interview with Biplab

Electricity in Recession

...and more

Yet_Another_Boring_Marxist
22nd January 2013, 23:02
I wish my Nepalese comrades the best of luck. God bless them.

Prometeo liberado
23rd January 2013, 01:42
I really wish the Nepalese people all the best. And thank you Kasama for the upgraded site and steadfast reporting on the situation.

Grigori
23rd January 2013, 02:02
The idea of a maoist buffer state between India and China intrigues me. Do you think China could interfere if they wanted to?

TheGodlessUtopian
23rd January 2013, 18:35
I will be intrigued by the primary reports. The quality of the reporting is always high so I am greatly looking forward to seeing what transpires, especially since the social-atmosphere of Nepal is quite tense.

keystone
24th January 2013, 19:36
The idea of a maoist buffer state between India and China intrigues me. Do you think China could interfere if they wanted to?

i don't think that's a probable outcome in the near future. if anything, nepal is treated by india as an extension of its own territory. many of the roads in nepal don't connect nepali towns to each other, but go from resources in nepal directly to indian cities. the development is very extractive and nepal is much more threatened by indian expansionism than any chinese interests.

the US has expressed interest in militarily occupying nepal to further surround the chinese borders. if anything, from a geopolitical perspective, china would probably defend a revolutionary nepal against indian intervention (which is the very real threat that nepali revolutionaries have worried about for decades). this is important on a number of levels - including the fact that china has a seat on the UN security council, giving it veto power over possible interventions and some leverage against imperialist intervention.