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Home   |   The Socialist 20 - 26 April 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Nepal: General strike movement against regime

"BURN THE crown," chanted demonstrators during the two-week long general strike which has brought the mountainous country of Nepal to a halt, deepening the political crisis. Telecoms and transport workers have gone on strike and many shops and businesses in the capital Kathmandu and in regional towns have been closed in response to a seven party alliance call to end the dictatorial rule of King Gyanendra.

Dave Carr

The beleaguered monarch assumed absolute power in February 2005 after dismissing his prime minister and cabinet. He had blamed the government for failing to crush the Maoist insurgency in the countryside. However, this rural civil war has intensified in recent months. During the current urban protests five people have been killed by police and over 3,000 protesters arrested.

Some 13,000 people have been killed in a vicious ten-year war in which the Maoists and state forces have resorted to assassinations and kidnappings.

The current movement to restore Nepal's parliamentary democracy appears to be a re-run of events in 1990. Then, King Birendra faced a 'movement to restore democracy' which brought together an uneasy coalition of left-leaning parties and the main capitalist Nepali Congress Party.

Over 50 people were gunned down by police and hundreds were arrested. Eventually the King conceded to the movement's demands and agreed to elections, lifted the ban on political parties and released hundreds of political prisoners.

Grinding poverty

Nepal is one of the world's poorest countries. On the United Nations development programme's human-development index, Nepal comes 140th out of 177 countries. Its 25 million people have an average income a head of just $240. One-third live below the poverty level. This grinding poverty, entrenched in a discriminatory and oppressive caste system, has fuelled the growth in support for the Maoists.

As in other neo-colonial countries state enterprises have been privatised. Foreign aid accounts for half of Nepal's investment. Agriculture remains the principal industry employing 76% of the population and providing 40% of the country's output.

Tourism - a big foreign exchange earner - has declined since its peak year of 1999 because of the civil war. The country is largely kept afloat by remittances sent back by Nepalese workers living abroad.

King Gyanendra has found himself out of step with his principal backers - the US, Britain and India - who have stopped arms shipments to the Hindu monarchy and urged a reconciliation with the political parties. Japan too - a large foreign aid donor - has cut back its assistance. And China has now ended its support.

Fundamental social change

The aim of imperialism is to restore a 'constitutional monarchy' and get the main parties to oppose the Maoists. All of the parties accept the market system and capitalism. So too do the Maoists who are tail-ending the alliance.

They proclaim their rural war as simply an adjunct to the struggle for parliamentary democracy, even though the seven party alliance distances itself from them.

Far from threatening capitalism with a 'people's revolution' the Maoists programme is a timid reform programme calling an end to racial, sexual and caste discrimination; land reform; drinking water, roads and electricity for all villages; the promotion of cottage industries.

They advance a classic reformist 'two-stage' theory of social change which inevitably fails to progress beyond its 'first stage' of support for a 'progressive bourgeois democracy' to a 'second stage' of socialist revolution.

Nonetheless, without fundamental social change the rural civil war will continue. The army concedes it cannot win militarily. It has about 78,000 soldiers, and is recruiting a further 7,000. It estimates that the Maoists have 5,000-6,000 armed fighters, with a further 15,000-20,000 in militias, equipped with homemade weapons. Its operations are financed from levying taxes in the areas which it controls, including taxing tourists.

The key to changing society even in a predominantly agrarian country like Nepal is the revolutionary role of the working class in the towns and cities. Its 'social weight', which has been demonstrated in the recent protests, shows it can stop production and transport leaving the ruling regime impotent.

However, a revolutionary party is needed with a clear socialist programme about how to take the struggle forward.


Join the fightback now

hospital cuts


privatisation


Socialists call for "robust" action to oppose Peugeot job losses

Stewards prepare to fight for jobs

conference: Kick big business out of education!



 

 

Home   |   The Socialist 20 - 26 April 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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In this issue


Socialist Party NHS campaign

NHS in crisis: Join the fightback now

New Labour feel the heat on hospital cuts

Super-profits from illness


Housing crisis

Fight to save our council housing!


Socialist Party election campaign

A socialist alternative to privatisation

We need a fighting alternative


Workplace news and analysis

Socialists call for "robust" action to oppose Peugeot job losses

Keep up the pressure on bosses and union leaders

New strikes against DWP job cuts

Kick big business out of education!

Stewards prepare to fight for jobs


International socialist news and analysis

Nepal: General strike movement against regime

Successful CWI public meeting in Caracas

Walmart: the High Cost of Low Price


 

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Socialist Party and CWI

Committee for a Workers' InternationalThe Socialist Party is part of the Committee for a Workers‘ International (CWI) which fights for socialism world wide. www.socialistworld.net.


Socialism Today

Socialism Today 158 - The Battles Continue

Socialism Today is the monthly magazine of the Socialist Party
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- In this month's issue:

The pensions battle continues

Corporate cash hoarders stunt growth


Youth and student

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Socialist Students website


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Books and Videos

How a fightback can stop the cuts

How a fightback can stop the cuts

Online: Lessons from how Thatcher was defeated. This pamphlet outlines how we can stop the cuts


Women and the Struggle for Socialism

Women and the Struggle for Socialism

It doesn't have to be like this - What consequences will the economic crisis and its aftermath have for women?


The Case for Socialism

The Case for Socialism by Hannah Sell

Online: The case for socialism in a period when capitalism is in deep crisis. By Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary


The Masses Arise

The Masses Arise, by Peter Taaffe

The Masses Arise: The Great French Revolution 1789-1815 by Peter Taaffe. New edition out now.


Socialism in the 21st Century

Socialism in the 21st century by Hannah Sell

Online: An essential read for anti-capitalists, trade union activists and socialists.


Videos:


N30 - Millions strike

N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo  Socialist Party

N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo Socialist Party


Socialism 2011

Socialism 2011

Socialism 2011: Crucial preparation for the fightback


Jarrow marchers march into history

Jarrow Marchers 2011

Jarrow marchers march into history


NSSN lobby of TUC 2011

NSSN lobby of TUC 2011: Open the floodgates of mass action

Successful NSSN lobby called for a one day public sector strike


TUC demo 26 March 2011

Half a million march through central London against the ConDem cuts on TUC demonstration, photo Socialist Party

Half a million trade unionists marched against the ConDem cuts in central London


Day X student demo against fee rises

Ian Pattison addresses 9 December Day X student demo against fee rises

9th December 2010: what the students said


London firefighters second strike day

Fire Brigades Union (FBU) in Poplar, London, on strike

Firefighters speak, as all firestations picketed


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