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May Day 2013 - Kathmandu, Nepal

Thousands of workers marched through Kathmandu in rallies organized by the All Nepal Revolutionary Trade Union Federation, chanting demands for 8 hours for work, 8 hours for recreation, and 8 hours for rest. The workers delivered a 25 point demand list, chanting “implement it without change.”

The crowd was led by Biplab, a leading member of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist, who then gave a speech stating that the unconstitutional coup government of Kil Raj Regmi has been attempting to brutally suppress their party, and that the sham elections are a part of that plan. 

Biplab said that the Maoists have heard the state is planning to deploy the police and the army if they disrupt the sham elections. “Our decision is, if they try to conduct the election without arms, we’ll defy it without arms. If they use arms or armed forces, we’ll do the same.”

By Eric Ribellarsi, Kasama Project

Photos: Bikkil Sthapit

05.06.13 8
Zoom Portland, Oregon

Portland, Oregon

04.18.13 14
It's On: Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) Launching National General Strike

dancepunksnotdead:

It’s on: revolutionary openings in Nepal

CPN-Maoist militants seize prime minister's land

CPN-M militants seize prime minister’s land

A profound legitimacy crisis has emerged for the anti-revolutionary forces of Nepal. As we go to press, 33 political parties, led by the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist, are launching a national general strike (known as a bandh, a tactic where workers and militants surround and force the closure of all businesses) throughout the entire country beginning tomorrow, April 7. Let’s rewind a bit and understand the root of these strikes and the crisis surrounding them.

Nepal is one of the poorest countries on the entire planet. It is one of the few places in the world that has never been formally colonized. Its monarchies more or less prevented a direct British conquest of the country (losing two-thirds of its territory in the process). The ruling army of Nepal is unlike the state of other oppressed countries where the state is usually directly integrated into global imperialism. In Nepal, the state has historically been of a feudal-nationalist type (one that bitterly oppressed the people while resisting integration into the imperialist world system).

Through a ten year long protracted people’s war (liberating 80% of the country’s territory!) and torrents of revolt in the capitol city of Kathmandu, the old monarchy of Nepal was toppled in 2006. The leading revolutionary party, the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), emerged as the largest political party in the Constituent Assembly elections (a post-revolutionary electoral body) following that rebellion. While this was viewed as a victory inside of the party, there were very different lines inside of the party about how to approach this victory.

Some viewed the Constituent Assembly as a place to expose the limits of this form, and to prepare the minds and organization of millions of people for a new national armed insurrection. They based themselves on the millions of poor peasants and Nepal’s small urban proletariat, organized in dozens of mass organizations and the All Nepal Trade Union Federation (Revolutionary). Others, notably Bhattarai and Prachanda (two counter-revolutionary leaders of the party), viewed the Constituent Assembly as an end in itself, and aligned themselves with powerful international imperialist forces, NGOs, and urban middle classes.

The movement split in 2011 after a deal that brought Baburam Bhattarai to the position of prime minister in Nepal. Bhattarai had gone to the state of India (and the United States), and promised India increasing ownership of Nepal’s natural resources and industries in an agreement known as BIPPA. He had promised the Indian state to integrate 10,000 fighters from the south of Nepal (Terai) where many are pro-India secessionists. This was meant to curtail the feudal-nationalism of the Nepal Army and place it more directly under imperialist control. He ordered the handover of the arms of the People’s Liberation Army, and the dissolution of that revolutionary army. And yet, in the face of all of this, the revolutionaries of Nepal have regrouped.

They have regrouped into the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist. They have been in preparations for a new “People’s Revolt” – a national armed insurrection aimed at bringing about a new revolutionary road in Nepal. This strategic orientation has been the plan of their party when it entered the cities from the countryside, and they are creatively innovating and investigating how to make it a reality.

The BIPPA agreement did not go well for the Bhattarai regime. This agreement was even more reactionary than anything ever proposed by the old bourgeois political parties of Nepal, who were not fully on-board with it. The Bhattarai regime’s central promise to Nepal was to write a new constitution and stabilize the country. Two years later, it has failed, providing only a new corrupt bureaucracy. The CPN-Maoist describes the new form of oppression as neo-colonialism, meaning a colonized society ruled by local oppressors (like South Africa). There is no new constitution, the country is in chaos, and Bhattarai has been exposed as a counter-revolutionary who has betrayed the people on a profound level.

In this context, Bhattarai’s ruling party, the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), handed over the government to Nepal’s chief judge, Khilraj Regmi, who is now the completely unelected prime minister of the country. Regmi along with the political parties that handed power to him claim that this is a preparation for “fair and democratic elections.” But millions of people say it is a part of a larger coup, meant to impose a new, even more reactionary form of oppression on the people. They point out that these elections do not even claim to guarantee the replacement of Regmi as Prime Minister of Nepal.

CPN-Maoist militants have seized the land of the prime minister, and re-distributed it. They have, together with 33 other political parties, brought the country to a halt. They say this is a preparation for “People’s Movement III.” People’s Movement I was a national rebellion that forced Nepal’s monarchy to hold elections in 1991, and People’s Movement II was the country-wide revolt that toppled King Gyanendrah in 2006. More militant actions and confrontations are coming.

Meanwhile, the government has demanded that the CPN-Maoist’s security officers hand over the remaining arms that are used to protect the party’s leadership. Responding, CPN-Maoist General Secretary Thapa said, “We don’t’ need the old rusted weapons, we will submit it and take new ones to the houses of people… New arms are being made in the factory… They will come to the homes of the cadres.”

Let’s be alert, and prepared to stand in solidarity with Nepal’s revolution if future revolutionary openings (or extreme repression of revolutionaries) emerge.

04.08.13 36
Maoists regroup in Nepal: Ruptures and obstacles

By Liam Wright

The Nepali Maoists always talk of peace and revolution.  To us, arriving as a reporting team from the U.S., this seems like a peculiar contradiction. Revolution would seem, to us, to be sharply opposed to peace. And a social peace seems like an absence of revolution.

But here in Nepal, the revolutionary process is deeply embedded among much of the population, and it is therefore just as idiosyncratic and contradictory as its people. The country went through a difficult and brutal decade of civil war to overthrow a hated king – and the costs of igniting a new war are understood by everyone. And yet, even after all the changes and events of the last years, the great majority of people in Nepal truly need a much deeper, more thorough-going revolution – they need deep changes in the social system, they need profoundly different, and new, forms of power at all levels, they need to break with the dominating treaties with India. Nepal’s people want peace, but many of them also want radical change.

We got to attend the founding congress of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M) to see how the revolutionaries were going to work through that peculiar contradiction: how they would bridge the Nepali people’s desire for peace andthat aspiration for revolution.

For six days, our reporting team watched over 2,000 communist delegates debate the future. Just walking into a conference of that size and hear those debates in real-time, we got a gut sense that, that for Nepal, revolutionary change is not just a dream. Here it is a living movement and confronts a set of very intense and urgent problems.

02.12.13 6

Trivandrum , Kerala, India: Opening day of the 3rd All India Women’s Conference on crimes against women, organized by All India MSS, January 29, 2013.

Top: the dias; middle left: Comrade Sita Polkhrel, former member of parliament, Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) addresses the opening rally; middle right: conference attendees; bottom: Mallika Sarabhai presents a dance recital on women’s empowerment.

Photos by Ajanta Sinha Ghosh

01.30.13 28
Zoom selucha:


The most surreal thing about Nepal is the mass proliferation of the hammer and sickle. Seriously, it’s everywhere. Murals, posters, banners… oh yeah, and this massive billboard that was promoting the 7th Congress of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist.

selucha:

The most surreal thing about Nepal is the mass proliferation of the hammer and sickle. Seriously, it’s everywhere. Murals, posters, banners… oh yeah, and this massive billboard that was promoting the 7th Congress of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist.

01.23.13 15
First Impressions: reporting on new tremors of change in Nepal

By Liam Wright and Natalio Pérez

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.

01.22.13 1
01.18.13 20
Zoom 3rd All India Women’s Conference organized by AIMSS
In the last week of January 2013,the people of Thiruvananthapuram, the capital of Kerala, shall witness a unique event. An event that is solemn in its purpose, yet bubbling with a new enthusiasm. Eminent personalities from all over India, conscious citizens, fighting women from all walks of life will come together with a deep conviction that the life of women shall be changed for the better; that all the age old fetters be broken, that the ghosts of newer problems shall be exorcised. For this, a new, vigorous, blazing programme of action shall be charted. Such an occasion-a time to take pledge, a time to hope and rejoice, will be the 3rd All India Conference of Women organised by AIMSS.
Programme Schedule2013 January 292.30 pm - Women’s Rally(Starts from Martyrs Column, Palayam)4 pm- Public meetingInauguration: Justice M.N.VenkitachaliahPresident: Chhaya MukherjeeSpeakers: Manik Mukherjee (General Secretary, International Anti Imperialist coordinating Committee)Justice Suresh HosbetSara JosephRepresentatives from USA, DPRK, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka.6pm - Dance DramaDr.Mallika Sarabhai (Danseuse of International Renown and Social Activist)
2013 January 3010 am - Delegate Session3pm - Seminar: Women as the victims of Communalism and the fighters against Communalism.
Venue no.1 (Conference Hall)Seminar: Women against imperialist onslaughtsVenue no.2 (Karthika Thirunal Auditorium)Seminar: Role of women in Social ProgressVenue no.3 (Theerdhapatha Mandapam)5pm - Interaction with women delegates from abroad.Conference Hall2013 January 3110 am to 6 pm - Delegate Session

3rd All India Women’s Conference organized by AIMSS

In the last week of January 2013,the people of Thiruvananthapuram, the capital of Kerala, shall witness a unique event. An event that is solemn in its purpose, yet bubbling with a new enthusiasm. Eminent personalities from all over India, conscious citizens, fighting women from all walks of life will come together with a deep conviction that the life of women shall be changed for the better; that all the age old fetters be broken, that the ghosts of newer problems shall be exorcised. For this, a new, vigorous, blazing programme of action shall be charted. Such an occasion-a time to take pledge, a time to hope and rejoice, will be the 3rd All India Conference of Women organised by AIMSS.

Programme Schedule

2013 January 29

2.30 pm - Women’s Rally
(Starts from Martyrs Column, Palayam)

4 pm- Public meeting

Inauguration: Justice M.N.Venkitachaliah
President: Chhaya Mukherjee
Speakers: Manik Mukherjee (General Secretary, International Anti Imperialist coordinating Committee)
Justice Suresh Hosbet
Sara Joseph
Representatives from USA, DPRK, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka.

6pm - Dance Drama
Dr.Mallika Sarabhai (Danseuse of International Renown and Social Activist)


2013 January 30

10 am - Delegate Session

3pm - Seminar: 
Women as the victims of Communalism and the fighters against Communalism.

Venue no.1 (Conference Hall)

Seminar: Women against imperialist onslaughts
Venue no.2 (Karthika Thirunal Auditorium)

Seminar: Role of women in Social Progress
Venue no.3 (Theerdhapatha Mandapam)

5pm - Interaction with women delegates from abroad.
Conference Hall

2013 January 31

10 am to 6 pm - Delegate Session

01.18.13 6
Zoom Nepal Maoists will take up arms: Baidya
KATHMANDU, Jan 17: The CPN-Maoist on Wednesday warned that the party will take up arms if the state power cannot assure the rights of the people. Speaking at a press meet organized here by the party following the conclusion Tuesday of its seventh general convention, the CPN-Maoist also informed that the time for the revolt will be determined by the political situation. “Give rights to the people. It the people get their rights, who will take up arms? Nobody. Why is the state conspiring instead of assuring people their rights in accordance with previous agreements and assurances. If rights are not given to people, it is sure that arms will be taken up,” answered Mohan Baidya, newly elected chairman of the CPN-Maoist, when asked about the reason for people´s revolt. “As far as the date for launching a revolt is concerned, it is not a matter to be announced at present. It will rather be determined by the circumstances. Asked when they would launch their revolt, Baidya said, “We will launch the people´s revolt or people´s war as and when circumstances compel us because no one takes up arms just on the basis of the whim or interests of certain leaders”. “Arms will be taken up by any other force also when the situation so demands, even if we ourselves drop the idea.”
The general convention endorsed the launching of a people´s revolt on the foundation of the decade-long people´s war as the party´s political line. The foundation of the people´s war is people´s government, people´s court and people´s liberation army, according to the party line. 

Nepal Maoists will take up arms: Baidya

KATHMANDU, Jan 17: The CPN-Maoist on Wednesday warned that the party will take up arms if the state power cannot assure the rights of the people. 

Speaking at a press meet organized here by the party following the conclusion Tuesday of its seventh general convention, the CPN-Maoist also informed that the time for the revolt will be determined by the political situation. 

“Give rights to the people. It the people get their rights, who will take up arms? Nobody. Why is the state conspiring instead of assuring people their rights in accordance with previous agreements and assurances. If rights are not given to people, it is sure that arms will be taken up,” answered Mohan Baidya, newly elected chairman of the CPN-Maoist, when asked about the reason for people´s revolt. 

“As far as the date for launching a revolt is concerned, it is not a matter to be announced at present. It will rather be determined by the circumstances. Asked when they would launch their revolt, Baidya said, “We will launch the people´s revolt or people´s war as and when circumstances compel us because no one takes up arms just on the basis of the whim or interests of certain leaders”. “Arms will be taken up by any other force also when the situation so demands, even if we ourselves drop the idea.”

The general convention endorsed the launching of a people´s revolt on the foundation of the decade-long people´s war as the party´s political line. The foundation of the people´s war is people´s government, people´s court and people´s liberation army, according to the party line. 

01.17.13 9