Friday, April 30, 2010

Nepal faces yet another critical crossroads

May is when Nepal must decide to remain a competitive multiparty democracy or turn into a state slipping irrevocably into ultra-left quicksand fashioned by Maoist former rebels.
After being unable to muster a simple majority to support a no-confidence vote in parliament against the current government, the Maoists are set to launch an indefinite nationwide shutdown from May 2 in a bid to bring Madhav Kumar Nepal's government to its knees.
The decision by former Prime Minister Prachanda, supreme leader of the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), to rally masses in the streets has created a climate of fear in Kathmandu where people are hoarding essentials and silently tolerating an extortionate campaign by the Maoists to feed and lodge their cadres during the shutdown.
The scale of the campaign, rampant in rural areas during a decade of armed conflict, was unheard of in Kathmandu.
But hundreds of thousands of Maoist cadres have already gathered from neighboring districts in Kathmandu, which will be the center of Maoist protests this time.
Several cadres have been arrested for possessing knives, while one Kathmandu-bound cadre was arrested in possession of a hand grenade, indicating the protests may turn violent.
The U.N. Mission in Nepal has called for an investigation and appropriate disciplinary action against the cadre.
The government that was formed after Prachanda's coalition collapsed last May over his sacking of the country's army chief is in a fix.
''Relenting to Maoist pressure and handing over the reins of the government to Prachanda will mean a permanent Maoist takeover,'' says Narayan Wagle, editor of the influential daily Nagarik.
The timing of the protests explains Wagle's argument.
The Maoists are set to enforce the shutdown just weeks before the expiry of the May 28 deadline for settling the future of more than 19,000 Maoist former combatants and promulgating a new Constitution.
Prachanda's plan, analysts say, is to form a new government under his leadership before May 28, exploit the chaotic post-May 28 scenario to prolong his government's life as long as he can and consolidate his party's grip on political life in Nepal.
''The Maoists already hold the lower class physically hostage,'' Wagle says. ''And with their repeated protests and shutdowns, they have achieved a psychological victory over the tired middle and upper-middle classes that are arguing that relenting to Maoist pressure is a far better option than facing indefinite shutdown.''
Premier Nepal, who is in Thimphu attending the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation summit, has said he is willing to step down if Nepal's fractious political parties can agree on a prime ministerial candidate other than Prachanda.
But the premier said that out of humility, Wagle says. ''He represents 22 political parties in his coalition and has to abide by their decision. If the 22 political parties refuse to relent, the other option for the government is a crackdown.''
So far, the government has indicated it will choose the second option.
Despite the ''show of humility'' by the premier, a moderate communist leader who comes from the country's third largest party, his government has issued directives to the Nepal Police, the Armed Police Force and the Nepal Army to remain on a high alert.
On Thursday, soldiers were seen drilling in Kathmandu, simulating a crackdown on protesters.
Ishwor Pokharel, general secretary of Premier Nepal's Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist Leninist), argues the Maoist demand only they should lead a government by virtue of their being the largest party in parliament holds little ground.
''Under Nepal's parliamentary system, one needs simple majority to form a government. Being the largest party isn't sufficient,'' he said. ''And the Maoists had a chance to govern, which they squandered.''
Wagle said if the government intends to safeguard democracy, it must not relent.
''Under a Maoist government, Nepal might remain a competitive multiparty system, but it will not be a competitive multiparty democracy,'' he said.
And Premier Nepal is likely to return from Thimphu to Kathmandu an emboldened man.
During a 30-minute meeting with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at Indian House in the SAARC village on Thursday, Singh pledged continued Indian support to Nepal's government, according to the Nepal's National News Agency.
That could mean a further hardening of positions in Nepal.
''The best course for the country would be to form an all-party government. But with Prachanda's insistence that only he should lead such a government and his decision to confront government forces, that option is also unlikely to be explored,'' Wagle said.
The power struggle has overshadowed Nepal's peace process.
The special assembly elected in April 2008 as part of the process aimed at settling the future of Maoist combatants and writing a new constitution by May 28 has few attendees these days.
Prachanda led a 10-year armed conflict against government forces until 2006, demanding the abolition of monarchy and a new constitution.
The special assembly where Maoists have the biggest presence abolished the country's 240-year-old monarchy in May 2008, but Prachanda's order last year to sack the army chief united rival parties, including those in his own coalition, against him and President Ram Baran Yadav countermanded the order.
Since then, Nepal's peace process has progressed at snail's pace with the Maoists focusing more on toppling the government than settling the future of their combatants and writing a constitution.

==Kyodo

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

South Korean Is First Woman to Scale 14 Highest Peaks



Climbing on all fours after 13 grueling hours, a diminutive South Korean woman, Oh Eun-sun, reached the summit of one of the Himalayan giants on Tuesday to lay claim to being the first woman to scale the world’s highest mountains.
In keeping with her country’s intense pride in its athletes, she pulled out a South Korean flag, raised her arms and shouted: “Hurray! Hurray!”

“I would like to share this joy with the South Korean people,” Oh, who is 5 feet 1 inch, said after reaching the summit of Annapurna in central Nepal.

South Koreans — who watched her climb because it was broadcast live by an accompanying camera team — hailed her as a national hero.

A message left on the Web site of the broadcaster KBS said: “All our people watched each step of your climb. You have demonstrated our country’s greatness all over the world.”

Annapurna was the last of the 14 peaks taller than 26,247 feet (8,000 meters) that Oh needed to climb to make history. She reached the summit — 26,545 feet above sea level — 13 years after she scaled her first Himalayan mountain, Gasherbrum II, in 1997.

“We recognize her achievement as the first woman climber to scale all the highest mountains in the world,” said Ang Tshering, president of the Nepal Mountaineering Association, according to The Associated Press.

Oh’s closest rival, Edurne Pasaban of Spain, scaled Annapurna this month but has yet to reach the 26,330-foot-high Mount Shisha Pangma.

Pasaban has raised questions about whether Oh actually reached the summit of Mount Kangchenjunga, the world’s third-highest peak, last year.

“Her sherpas told me that she didn’t reach the summit because of bad weather,” Pasaban told The Times of London recently.

In the absence of an international mountaineering body, Elizabeth Hawley, an 86-year-old American mountaineering journalist, is considered the final arbiter on such disputes. She agreed last week to record Oh’s ascent of Kangchenjunga as “disputed,” pending an investigation.

Oh, 34, scaled 4 of the 14 peaks last year but retreated several hundred feet from Annapurna’s summit because of bad weather.

On her historic climb, she was carrying a photograph of Ko Mi-young, her rival and fellow South Korean, who plummeted to her death last year while descending from Nanga Parbat, the world’s ninth-highest peak. Ko had climbed 11 of the 14 peaks.

“She showed us what challenge means,” Lee Myung-bak, the president of South Korea, said of Oh in his congratulatory message. “I am proud of her.”

Oh was bound to receive a hero’s welcome home in South Korea. Mountain-trekking is a national hobby in the country, where 70 percent of the land is mountainous.

Fewer than 20 people have made it to the top of the 14 peaks that are at least 26,247 feet high, including three South Korean men.

In recent weeks, the South Korean news media gave almost daily updates on Oh’s condition. On Tuesday, KBS showed hours of live coverage.

Nationalism looms large in sports in South Korea, a country obsessed with making a mark on the international scene. Kim Yu-na, the figure skater who won this year’s Olympic gold, is a national star.

News reports about sports stars winning world championships brim with patriotism. Reporters often ask the athletes to “say something to the people back home,” and they always thank “the people and the fatherland” before mentioning their family and loved ones.

“When life was hard and we were tired, sports have encouraged us with good news,” said Ko Dong-guk, one of hundreds of TV viewers who left congratulatory messages on the KBS Web site.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Maoist strike closes thousands of schools in Nepal

A strike called by former communist rebels shut down more than 8,000 private schools across this Himalayan nation over demands that school authorities reverse a decision to increase fees.

The student wing of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), the former communist rebels, warned the schools to stay closed or face violence until the new fees are withdrawn.

Surya Krishna Shrestha of the Private and Boarding Schools of Nepal, which decides school fee rates for its member schools, said more than 1 million students were forced to stay at home Monday.

Initial reports said a handful of schools that defied the strike call and opened were attacked, Shrestha said. Buses and buildings of these schools were vandalized, he said.

Private schools make up about 30 percent of the total schools in Nepal. Government-run schools remained open.

This academic year, private schools increased fees by an average of 25 percent. The Maoists' affiliated student union have insisted that hte fee increase was unfair and that it took place without appropriate input from consumer groups.

Education Ministry spokesman Lekhnath Poudel said the government was urging the two sides to resolve the differences through talks and reopen the schools. Poudel said the government was willing to mediate the dispute if invited to do so, but that it did not have the authority to intervene.

The Maoists gave up a decade-old armed revolt in 2006 to join a peace process. Since then they have confined their fighters in U.N.-monitored camps, joined mainstream politics and contested elections in 2008. They emerged as the largest political party and briefly led a coalition government before withdrawing to lead the opposition.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Passportgate makes Nepal cancel deal with India

KATHMANDU: After the 1950 Peace and Friendship Treaty that Nepal wants to scrap and the Integrated Mahakali Treaty for river-water sharing that Nepal’s parties say are against national interests, Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal met his “Passport Gate” on Sunday, being forced to convene a late-night cabinet meeting and cancel a controversial new deal with India to print new Nepali passports.

Information and communications minister Shankar Pokhrel, who is also the spokesman of the coalition government, told waiting journalists at the end of the emergency meeting that the contract to Security Printing and Minting Corporation of India would be cancelled and the government would call for new bids following the advice of a parliamentary committee.

The passport debacle marks a blow against Foreign Minister Sujata Koirala, who is accused of “illegally” halting an earlier tender process to force the government into handing over the contract for printing 3 million Nepali passports to the Indian company. Koirala’s chances to assume her father Grija Prasad Koirala’s mantle as the leader of the Nepali Congress party will receive a serious setback with the passport climbdown.

It also shows up India’s Nepal policy in a poor light yet again. The passport contract was discussed by External Affairs Minister S M Krishna himself and the ministerial involvement, when it was common knowledge that a tender process was already in place, shows the Indian establishment’s chronic tendency to become dubiously involved in deals.

The Nepal government had floated a global tender and shortlisted four foreign companies to prin machine-readable passports. However, the tender process was stopped on the insistence of the Foreign Minister and given to the Indian state undertaking despite it quoting a higher rate and despite the Public Accounts Committee of parliament asking the government to follow the tender procedure.

The issue is now in court as well after two individuals filed public interest litigation applications separately. The Supreme Court will begin hearing them from Monday when it has asked the prime minister and foreign minister to appear before it.

The Maoists too have grabbed the opportunity to embarrass the prime minister and called a Nepal bandh Monday to protest against the deal with India. It was not known immediately whether they would still go ahead with the protest. The former guerrillas are also demanding the ouster of Nepal over the debacle.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Calif boy, 13, aims to be youngest on Everest

KATMANDU, Nepal — At age 13, Jordan Romero is headed to Mount Everest in an attempt to become the youngest person to scale the world's highest mountain — and complete his goal of climbing the highest peaks on all seven continents.

The teenager from Big Bear, California, was busy Saturday with his father Paul and stepmother Karen packing mountaineering gear and planning details of their expedition with three Sherpa guides who will accompany them.

The team leaves Katmandu, Nepal's capital, for China on Sunday and then will travel to the base camp on the Chinese side of the 29,035-foot (8,850-meter) mountain.
Jordan has already climbed the highest peaks on six other continents and hopes to reach Everest's summit in May.

"I just wanted to do something big, and this was something I wanted to do for myself. It was all about the experience and I just happen to be 13 at this time," Jordan told The Associated Press.

The record for the youngest climb of Everest is held by Temba Tsheri of Nepal, who reached the peak at age 16.

Jordan, who climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa when he was 10 years old, says he was inspired by a painting in his school hallway of the seven continents' highest summits.

Everest, however, will be his first over 8,000 meters (26,240 feet).
"This will be a big leap, but we have been training for the altitude," he said.
His father and stepmother have also accompanied him on his previous climbs.

Jordan said he would not take any unnecessary risks and would turn around if they encounter problems like bad weather. He said he has read about past disasters on the mountain that have claimed many lives and has learned lessons from them.

"This may be the first of many attempts," he said. "It could take a couple of years, but I am determined to do it. If I don't reach the summit this time, I will try next time."

"I do feel ready," he said. "I feel very prepared emotionally, and definitely physically."

While he is acclimatizing at the base camp before the May push to the summit, Jordan plans to do his algebra homework, some book reports and write a journal about his experiences.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Apa Sherpa to Climb Everest for 20th Time


Nepali mountaineer Apa Sherpa, world record holder for 19 ascents of Mt. Qomolangma, is now attempting for his 20th ascent.
Popularly known as "Super Sherpa," Nepali hero Apa is back in Nepal to climb the mountain, also known as Everest, from Nepali side, but this time he is not climbing to the top of the world to keep world record and fame.
"I am climbing Everest 20th time not for personal name and fame, " said Apa in an interview with Xinhua on Tuesday.
"The major reason that I'm summitting Everest this time is to raise global awareness about the impact of climate change over Himalayas," said Apa who is summitting Everest as a Climbing Leader of Eco Everest Expedition 2010.
After successfully leading two sessions of Eco Everest Expedition held in 2008 and 2009 respectively, Apa is again leading Eco Everest Expedition 2010 for the third time with the noble reason of cleaning up garbage on Mt. Everest. This is the third time Asian Trekking in Nepal is launching Eco Everest Expedition.
After summitting the Everest 16 times in May 2007, Apa is leading Eco Everest Expedition till the date to clean garbage left by previous expeditions.
"New expedition teams are much aware and they don't leave any garbage they bring with them," he added.
"This time I'm climbing Everest for the shake of my country. Since, Himalayas are melting day by day due to global warming and climate change, it's time to save our Himalayas," he added.
According to Apa, as snow-clad white mountains are melting due to climate change, parts of the white mountains have turned into dark rocks.
"Appearance of dark rocks over white mountains have made mountaineers' way to Everest much tougher to conquer their destination," said Apa, comparing the past and present of Everest.
Apa first reached the summit of Mt. Everest on May 10, 1990 with a New Zealand team led by climber Peter Hillary, son of Edmund Hillary.
Before leaving Nepali capital Kathmandu for the Eco Everest Expedition on Tuesday, Apa said that the expedition may take two months. But the team is hoping to return by May 29 to mark the International Everest Day.
Meanwhile, the Eco Everest Expedition 2010 once again focuses on climbing in an eco-sensitive manner, bringing old garbage, and all human waste produced on the mountain down to base camp for proper disposal.
The expedition will also be using the highly successful alternative energy solutions like the parabolic solar cookers and the SteriPENs for water purification.
"In 2008 expedition the Eco Everest Expedition team brought down 965 kg of garbage including 65 kg of human waste.
In 2009, the team brought down 6,000 kg of garbage under the " Cash for Trash" program which included 700 kg of wreckage of an Italian Army helicopter crashed between Camp I and II during the Italian Everest Expedition in 1973," Apa told Xinhua.
Moreover, Eco Everest Expedition 2010 team plans to collect and bring down 6,000 kg of garbage from Camp II and below under the " Cash for Trash" program.
Similarly, the expedition aims to bring down 1,000 kg of garbage from above Camp II under the "Cleaning up Everest" program. Cleaning the trails at 6,500-meter and above will need a special team of 10 Sherpas who will dig out frozen garbage as well as clear up garbage found on the route.
The collected garbage will be ferried down to Base Camp where it will be sorted into biodegradable and burnable which will be handed over to the Sagarmatha Pollution Control Committee for proper disposal, according to Apa.