|
Essay
Insurgents and Innocents
The Nepali armys battle
with the Maobaadi
The soldiers
fight against the Maobaadi since the Nepali Emergency was
put in place six months ago has delivered an unacceptable
volume of human collateral damage. The civilian
government must maintain control over the Royal Nepalese Army
as it goes about trying to purge the Nepali hills of Comrade
Prachandas followers.Market
forces and coverage
by Kanak
Mani Dixit
 |
The hills of Nepal are
alive with the sound of gunfire. While the last few years
have seen mainly the Maoists on the offensive, since end-November
2001, with the deployment of the Royal Nepalese Army, there
has been heavy combat between government forces and the insurgents.
With the politicians all having fled the field to cower in
district headquarters, roadhead towns or Kathmandu Valley,
it is the peasantry that is caught in the crossfire and left
vulnerable between ruthless insurgents and soldiers just learning
to fight. So far, the level of abuse summary killings,
disappearances, torture is only a matter of conjecture
because no one is monitoring events on the ground. Civil society
as a whole, and journalists and human rights groups in particular,
have turned timid after the State of Emergency was imposed
by Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba on 26 November 2001.
There is no one looking out for the people when the army is
out, whereas, earlier, the was quite a lot of watchdogging
over the police.
The villagers of Nepal
find themselves trapped between the demands of the insurgents
and the soldiers imputations. A recent story published
in a Nepali language fortnightly by the social critic Khagendra
Sangraula sums up the situation he tells of a man who
hides from the Maoists, only to be forcibly conscripted. He
escapes the Maoists ranks, and returns home to be confronted
and killed by the soldiers. While fictional, Sangraulas
story was a composite based on information from the Maoist
heartland district of Salyan, and captures the terrifying
reality of a rural populace caught in a jam.
Simple peasantry living
in subsistence conditions is being asked to provide food,
shelter and recruits to an unflinchingly hard-headed insurgency
that is feeling the pressure of stepped-up military activity.
Then there are the soldiers, fighting for the first time in
quint-essential guerilla territory, with poor equipment and
inadequate logistical support, and little in the form of intelligence
to distinguish between innocents and enemy.
Nepal entered this blind
alley in 1996, when far-left politicians who felt excluded
in parliamentary democracy broke with the system and initiated
an uprising. Without doubt, it was the civilian police that
gave the initial momentum to the Maoist war when, following
violent activities by the Maoists just begin-ning their underground
activities, disgruntled policemen sent on kalapani duty
to the western districts of Jajarkot, Rolpa, Rukum and Salyan
went on a rampage. The state terror in these districts provoked
a reaction in which were born the hardcore Maoists who today
form the backbone of the revolution.
The cauldron of disaffection
among youth all over the country that was lit in the west
by dark Maoist romanticism soon set the whole country aflame.
Visions of storming Kathmandu and wresting state power offer
momentum to the insurgent rank and file, who unleashed their
own brand of terror against the police as well as district
and village-level politicians opposed to them. The violence
meted out by the followers of Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal
(aka Comrade Pra-chanda) in these far corners soon outstripped
that of the policemen, who have been on the run since late
1999 and so fearful of the retaliatory rebels that they have
dared not exhibit any bluster. The Maoists molestation
extended to the full gamut of the possible, from blackmail,
extortion and looting to summary executions, torture, maiming
and use of civilians and child soldiers in combat. Their original
promise of social reform lies in tatters as hooliganism has
overcome the movement, with commissars delivering gruesome
punishment to local politicians, teachers and others. This
is Pol Pot terrain in the making, and no amount of revolutionary
gloss and manipulative rhetoric can hide the reality of the
socio-economic dead-end that would be the Nepali Maobaadis
gift to the nation.
No doubt, the Maobaadi
of Nepal engage in anti-humanitarian excess, but they are
renegades, irrespons-ible and unaccountable. The government
and its institutions must have a higher purpose and deeper
responsibility. Nepal is still a functioning democracy. The
security forces, answerable to the civilian govern-ment, must
respect the rule of law and due process even in the most extreme
of circumstances. But since the imposition of the state of
emergency, the civilian government of Prime Minister Deuba
has abdicated all responsibility for bringing the Maoists
to heel to the security forces, and apparently does not hold
them to a high standard.
Because so little investigation
or documentation is being carried out, there is no comprehensive
pool of data to confirm the level of human rights abuse in
the hills and valleys. There is, however, enough evidence
to indicate that the situation is dire. The people of the
Maoist-affected hills, historically backward and deprived
of the socio-economic advances that the rest of the country
enjoyed in the last half-century of development, are those
who have found themselves in the crosshairs. As perhaps happened
more than two centuries ago during the expansionary wars of
the House of Gorkha, subsistence farmers are burdened not
only economically, but also politically, having to support
one side or the other and fend off accusations of being quislings
and collaborators.

Deuba and his shadow |
Disappeared watchdogs
There is little protection for the people, because the
non-governmental groups professing to be engaged in human
rights work went soft during the decade following the restoration
of democracy. After having been gifted democracy in 1990 by
King Birendra with minimal activism, the human rights community
reaped a bonanza of foreign aid meant to support pluralism
in Nepal. However, the donors and recipients alike tuned off
civil and political rights and preferred to invest their time
and resources on human rights defined indis-tinctly.
The attention shifted to child rights, gender rights, dalit
rights, indigenous peoples rights, environmental rights,
refugee rights, water rights... In this flood, the right to
life and liberty was relegated to the background, and the
attention of the NGOs got diverted to such an extent that
now when the people are bleeding there are very few to take
up their cause.
The few who remained focussed on human
rights specifically defined, who might have mediated
between the people, the Maoists and the state, were sullied
by their ideological bearings, which made them look less than
disinterested. Many from the human rights community had compromised
themselves earlier before the publics eye by criticising
everything the govern-ment did and clearly regarding the Maoists
as true revolutionaries. Given their anti-government
stance, these activists should have really been protesting
once it became clear soon after the emergency was imposed
that the human rights situation was deteriorating. But they
kept silent, and remain so today. Additionally, while it had
been clear for some years that the reluctant army brass would
ultimately be forced to enter the fray in a fight that was
originally between the Maoists and the police, the human rights
community did not do enough to prepare themselves and the
country for the challenges that would crop up once soldiers
were deployed. Says Prakash Jwala, journalist and Salyans
member of parliament till its dissolution in 22 May 2002,
The activists should have shown some courage, but they
did not even put up a weak front.
Together with the human rights activists, the
press too has been found wanting in its watchdog role. At
the time the emergency was announced, much of the print media
had already been compromised. It had for long pandered to
the Maoist insurgency by providing breathless coverage of
its activities in the field. This was accompanied by an unwillingness
to challenge the insurgents deeper agenda of destroying
the state structure. This attitude did an about-turn when
with the clamping down of the state of emergency, publishers
and editors vowed to support the governments fight against
the rebels. Overnight, Maoists turned into terrorists
in the news columns, only because the government now defined
them as such. Thus compromised at their topmost levels, most
of the newspapers were also unwilling to test the limits of
the governments restrictions on press freedom.
Apart from media and human rights organisations,
other insti-tutions of society too are not up to the task
of providing an overview. The courts have been made irrelevant
by the state of emergency because the rights contained in
the constitution (to freedom of expression, assembly and movement,
information, property, privacy and constitutional remedy and
against preventive detention) have all been suspended. The
civilian bureaucracy at the centre and in the districts in
any case exercises little control over the security forces.
Parliament was suspended by Prime Minister Deuba in late May
2002 the fallout of the ruling Congress Party wrangle
related to the third extension of the state of emergency,
reflecting an intra-party power struggle between Deuba and
the party president, former prime minister, Girija Prasad
Koirala. As a result the institution of last recourse in a
democracy has itself disappeared.
We have not been able to visit the major
areas of confrontation between the military and the Maobaadi,
says Bhola Mahat, who runs the human rights group INSECs
field office in Nepalganj. Special efforts are needed
in Kathmandu to persuade the army to allow human rights groups
to go in. But groups in the capital are not losing much
sleep over the issue the most one particular group
did was to seek support from a foreign embassy to fly into
the affected areas in a helicopter, but even this was not
entertained.
The security forces
The security forces of Nepal today are made up of the Nepal
Police, the newly raised Armed Police Force (APF) and the
Royal Nepalese Army (RNA). The civilian police have been on
the run for at least three years, during which time they have
served as sacrificial offerings to the Maoists as representatives
of the national establishment. The police force is today a
weak player; most of its personnel have been withdrawn from
posts in rural areas and are now concentrated in district
headquarters and the larger towns. There is no doubt that
the policemen will seek extreme revenge once the Maoists are
on the run and that in itself will be a matter of grave
human rights concern when the time comes but for the
moment there is little fear of excess from this unmotivated
force, the only objective of its members being to live to
see another day.
The Armed Police Force was raised in January
2001 as a para-military unit, by a government that realised
that the non-combatant Nepal Police were not up to the task
of fighting insurgency. While the APF will ultimately have
the numbers, weaponry and training to credibly counter the
guerrillas, it is today an incipient force that will take
a few more years to mature.
It was the debacle at Dang in November 2001,
when the Maoists broke away from talks with Deubas government
and attacked and deci-mated an army garrison, that finally
forced the generals to enter the fray. It is the Royal Nepalese
Army, with its logistics, automatic weapons, heavy ordnance
and helicopter support that is now battling the rebels. However,
the military did not do so before it got the cover
of emergency which would allow the soldiers to fight without
shackles and accountability.
The soldiers, engaging for the first time in
active warfare, find themselves pitted against battle-hardened
Maoists who use all means fair and foul. While the RNA is
a force of 50,000, various duties and obligations including
guarding government installations, national parks, the royal
palace, as well as serving in United Nations peacekeeping
operations, leave a force of perhaps no more than 20,000 to
directly engage with the rebels. Even though the primary focus
of the Nepali militarys training over the years has
been to fight a reactive guerrilla war against an invading
army (which could presumably be either Indian or Chinese),
against the Maoists it has thus far been a largely sedentary
force that only responds to attacks.
The army is today spread out thinly over an
impossibly large and complex mountainscape that is designed
for guerilla action, according to one insurgency expert.
Low budgetary allocation from successive civilian governments
over the last decade has prevented the army from upgrading
its equipment and conducting training exercises. In addition,
the army began its battle with the Maobaadi with practically
no intelligence, having done nothing to build up its own information
sources during six years of the peoples war.
This is a weakness the soldiers have tried to overcome by
extracting information from captured insurgents.
The army has kept a deliberate distance from
the politicians during the 12 years of democracy, and the
royal palace has helped maintain this separation for its own
purposes. This lack of a relationship is all the more critical
today, when the soldiers are in charge of the Maoist war and
moves through the populated hinterland. The government has
abdicated its own responsibilities of control and oversight,
and there is no institution or individual holding the soldiers
to any standard. Respect for humanitarian principles during
the fighting is something that is now completely dependent
on the uprightness and professionalism of individual officers
in the field. A senior officer says that army training at
Kharipati and Tokha training centres includes Red Cross courses
on humanitarian principles and law, but he also admits that
the entire six months of engagement with the Maoists has not
seen one instance of a soldier facing reprimand for excesses
committed. For being the commander-in-chief of a force that
is out among the people, Gen Prajwalla Shumshere Rana has
not made a single statement that indicates sensitivity towards
the human rights of the people his only public pronouncement
consisted of a harangue against the political parties.
Prime Minister Deuba, as the head of government
as well as defence minister, has not shown great enthusiasm
to guide the generals. While he is vehement in expressing
outrage at the betrayal of his effort by Maoists
since he had gone the extra mile to talk to them upon taking
up office last year, he seems unconcerned about the niceties
of a respect for human rights in the larger battle that he
has to fight as head of government. As someone who spent nine
years in prison fighting the Panchayat system and who has
himself suffered torture, it can be presumed that the prime
minister has no stomach for state terror. However, he has
done little to hold the military to humanitarian norms. It
was only in an interview to The Kathmandu Post on 29 May 2002
that he responded to allegations by Amnesty Inter-national
saying, If we find that there are deliberate human rights
abuses by the security personnel, we will take action against
them after proper investigation. Given the tussle he
is currently engaged in with Koirala, it is not possible to
red Deubas statement as anything more than an expression
of intent by an otherwise preoccupied prime minister.
The lack of sensitivity of Deubas government
to the finer issues of human rights was laid bare when a few
weeks ago it placed a price on the heads of Maoist leaders
caught dead or alive NRs 50 lakhs for the
top leaders, NRs 25 lakhs for the field commanders, and so
on down the line. The fact that apart from a few murmurs of
protest, the national human rights community did not vocally
protest against such an outrageous pronouncement in
a country where the death penalty is actually illegal
shows both an exasperation with the Maoists as well as an
ambiva-lence towards principles of civilised governance. One
minister, in fact, announced that people seeking the bounty
could bring the head of a Maoist in a bag, and take the cash
back in the same bag.

King Gyanendra, Supreme Commander-in-Chief
of the RNA. |
Levels of sympathy
When the RNA was fielded a little over six months ago, the
government did three things simultaneously it declared
a nation-wide state of emergency, promulgated a Terrorist
and Disruptive Activities (Control and Punishment) Ordinance,
which granted wide powers to arrest people involved in terrorist
activities, and declared the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)
a terrorist organisation. All these were what
the army wanted in order to be able to engage the Maoists
without the shackles of accountability.
During the first three months of the emergency,
the average death toll of insurgents killed, as announced
by the government, averaged about five a day. After the state
of emergency was renewed for the first time in February, the
deaths of alleged insurgents in defence ministry press releases
have averaged 10 a day. The casualties during the first six
months of the Emergency culled from official sources totals
2850 Maoists, 335 policemen, 148 soldiers and
194 civilians. Who really are the Maoist
dead? How much terror in the hills do these deaths represent?
In short, what is the level of human security for the villagers
in the hills of Nepal at a time when the army is out patrolling
the terraces even while the Maoist have free range of large
parts?
In the beginning, the soldiers were given the
benefit of doubt from most quarters, and no one questioned
the high calibre of the officer corps, whose presence it was
believed would prevent excesses to a large extent. But, as
the armys engagement intensified and the soldiers began
to suffer casualties in attacks by hardened Maoist cadre,
the care with which civilians were treated seems to have decreased.
Not-for-attribution discussions with army officers in the
field, interviews with district and national-level politicians,
talking with the odd human rights activist who has actually
visited vulnerable areas, and with mofussil journalists close
to the action, present a bleak scenario as far as the situation
of the hapless peasantry is concerned. The picture that emerges
is one of grievous and regular excesses by an army forced
to battle a harsh insurgency.
In the course of reporting this article, human
rights activists, international monitors, as well as journalists
and politicians were asked a question: from all the information
that they have access to, would they say that the human rights
situation in Nepal now is: a) very bad, b) not as bad as might
have been expected, and c) cant say. All answered a.
There are many grave instances of misbehaviour
towards the people by the security forces, says Mandira
Sharma, a member of the group Advocacy Forum, who has visited
the Maoist heartland in western Nepal since the emergency
was put in place and the army activated. There is a
state of terror in the villages, but the news is not coming
out. There is little pressure on the army to improve its record.
Hundreds have been held incommunicado, not receiving even
the right to justice which is available under the emergency.
Such observations extend beyond the human rights
community. Sangeeta Lama, a journalist who has been monitoring
media reports during the emergency period for the Khoj Patrakarita
Kendra (Centre for Investigative Journalism) in Lalitpur,
says that even with the subdued coverage, there is substantial
evidence to prove that large-scale human rights abuse is the
order of the day. Often the stories are kept away from
the front page, and the papers try to play it down so that
the authorities do not crack down on them, but there is credible
reportage pointing to lack of accountability among the soldiers.
Sushil Pyakurel is one of the four members
of the National Human Rights Commission set up by the government
in June 2001, an institution with little manpower and resources
but which is nevertheless evolving as a repository for complaints
against authority. Circumspect because of his public position,
Pyakurel says, The situation is not good, and we in
the human rights community have not been adequately on guard
to prevent abuse.
I fear there is a high level of abuse,
says a diplomat who monitors human rights for a Western embassy
in Kathmandu. There is no rule of law, and civil society
has ceased to function. You arrest reasonably prominent people
in Kathmandu and the rest shut up. In the villages, the Chief
District Officer just has to tell people to shut up and they
will. Under such circum-stances, the conditions are ripe for
maltreatment by the security forces.
Referring to the Royal Nepalese Army, the same
diplomat says, The RNA was originally clean because
it had never seen action. But once the rot sets in and mistakes
begin to get covered up, the RNA will lose its lustre. It
must learn to discipline itself in the new conditions. Unsystematic
mistakes should never be allowed to become systemic.
Meanwhile, one retired army officer is convinced
that fielding the RNA has been a set-up, with
the political parties sending in the soldiers to do the dirty
job of finishing off the Maoists. Says the retired
officer, The RNA had better be careful, for the political
parties will try to come out of it unblemished, putting all
the blame on the soldiers. It is a trap, and the only way
to respond is by ferreting out the real Maoists, otherwise
it will lose the respect of the people in the long run.
Speaking of sympathy, there is a lot of it
for the soldiers among the powerful diplomatic community in
Kathmandu, particularly among those who have been helicoptered
out and have seen the conditions in the field. Says one European
diplomat, Here is a country that is Serbia times twenty,
readymade for insurgencies. And you ask the soldiers to fight
on the cheap with inadequate and low-grade equipment, whether
in gunnery, clothing, diet, communications or transport. Under
such circumstance, of course the possibility of gross abuse
increases. A well-equipped army fights more humanely.
Adds the diplomat, The Maoist strategy
of attacking all over the country has forced the RNA to spread
itself thin. The army cannot then spare officers everywhere,
which means that trigger-happy foot-soldiers are patrolling
the trails on their own, and they are more liable to take
drastic action.
Hari Roka, a leftist activist from Khotang
district in the east of Nepal, says that while there is no
doubt about the many problems confronting the soldiers, the
impunity with which they are conducting their operations is
unconscionable. Many who are dying cannot be considered
Maoists even in the wildest imagination. They are political
activists of the main-stream parties, says Roka, adding,
But no one is protesting because the activists have
all abandoned their saahas (courage).
In December 2001, a delegation from the main
opposition group Communist Party of Nepal (UML) met with Prime
Minister Deuba to alert him that the security forces had misused
their emergency powers in Dang, Dolakha, Ramechap, Makwanpur,
Rolpa, Sankhuwasabha and Solukhumbu districts. People visiting
health posts for treatment, returning from the market, or
simply partici-pating in community festivals or pujas, had
been targeted by the security forces, they said. Unfortunately,
the expressions of concern either by political parties,
activists, community groups, or the diplomatic and aid community
have been sporadic and reflect the ambivalence they
all share towards a group as renegade as the Maoists are increasingly
proving to be.

Maoist rebels amidst the public in Jajarkot district,
western Nepal. |
Ways of the soldier
The level of violence and lack of accountability exhibited
by the army is a direct reaction to the savagery of the rebels
when they have attacked police posts and army garrisons. The
RNA and the police both have an unstated take-no-prisoners
policy as far as hardcore Maobaadi are concerned.
The officers in both forces are dismissive of the principles
of war that demand the humane treatment of combatants, maintaining
that this is a response to Nepali reality, excused
by the brutality exhibited by the Maoists when they have attacked
police and army posts. Red Cross instructors who have conducted
courses with the soldiers say they find it a challenge to
explain why the RNA cannot behave like the Maobaadi.
Using the letters of the Nepali alphabet, a
police inspector serving in Dang Valley, the staging ground
in west Nepal for the security forces, says, We just
dont keep those who are in the ka and kha
senior categories, those Maoists in the central or regional
command. We just kill them. But we tend to be more lenient
towards those at the district level and even more so at the
village or ward levels. But do not expect us to show mercy
towards the hardcore when we know they are out to kill us.
The fact that the daily ministry of defence
news bulletins refer only to dead insurgents, and rarely to
the captured wounded, is also proof enough that
few prisoners are being taken. These killings often take place
during staged encounters, and there are many incidents reported
where individuals rounded up from a village one day are said
to have been killed in an encounter in another
village the next day. According to one calculation, in the
half-year of the emergency the government has announced the
capture of only 60 wounded Maobaadi during action by security
forces and the death of nearly 3000 Maoists.
The soldier is taught to engage the enemy
differ-ently, in a way that is bound to raise the number of
innocent deaths, says a police officer in Dang. As
policemen, we have to live in the community and so we have
to be selective even when we shoot to kill. The soldiers,
on the other hand, will shoot first and ask questions later.
Whereas a policeman may flee or surrender particularly
under todays conditions soldiers socialised into
a buddy system are more likely to become aggressive when one
of their own gets killed or wounded. Trained to fight the
invader, says the police officer, the soldiers shoot across
the terrain with their automatic weaponry, whereas Nepals
policemen cannot do as much harm even if they want to, with
their World War II vintage single-fire rifles.
An officer who has seen action in the western
districts disagrees with this assessment: In our case,
the major or colonel himself leads his men, whereas among
the police you rarely find an inspector in vulnerable posts
in the field. The higher motivation of the officers, from
the lieutenant level up and their broader worldview means
that they exhibit more responsibility in the field. The automatic
weaponry makes the soldiers more confident, so there is less
possibility of mistaken deaths.
The killing of innocents
While the effectiveness of the army against the Maoists is
already being demonstrated, the military mans assurances
are not borne out at all times in the field where innocent
villagers and Maoist supporters are being killed
in large numbers together with the militants. The critical
problem is the difficulty of distinguishing between villager,
left supporter, Maoist supporter and
Maoist.
All the army officers interviewed suggested
that the reporter not be taken in by the rhetoric of Nepals
left politicians in particular, and that, barring a few exceptions,
those killed by the soldiers are all Maoists. Said one soldier
based in Surkhet Valley in the west, echoing the sarcasm of
his fellow officers, They are all innocent villagers
or UML supporters by day and Maoists by night. The fact
is, it is difficult to distinguish between villagers who may
have by force of circum-stances become Maoist supporters,
and who are actual Maoist cadre. There is also an understanding
among many that Maoist supporters are fair game, even if they
do not carry a gun, for the sustenance they provide the cadre.
Many villagers who are being killed for being
Maoists are peasants with no ideological grounding to be class
warriors, roped in as supporters through coercion and blackmail.
Others have turned to the Maoists only because the state
in the form of the administration and police has been
absent for so long from their villages that they have had
no choice but to turn to the Maoists. Many village headmen
have been unilaterally declared heads of the peoples
govern-ment at the village level by the rebel leadership
in the districts. These are all considered Maoists by default,
individuals who do not by any stretch of the imag-ination
deserve to die at the hands of the security forces. Says Hari
Roka, the left activist, Are we to call all villagers
Maoists because they give support to the rebels
in the total absence of the government in their areas for
years on end? Just because a poor villager responds to a plain-clothes
soldiers lal salaam greeting with a lal
salaam of his own, does that justify taking him in for
torture and abuse? Howsoever difficult it may be, the
army is duty-bound to make the distinction between who is
a fighter and who is not, says Roka.
While the loose understanding of Maobaadi
leading to death and abuse is a matter of major concern, what
also must get attention are the numerous incidents where innocent
villagers have been killed by security forces in the pursuit
of the real Maobaadi fighters. These instances (perpetrated
by the army as well as the police) add up to a regular, if
not as yet systematic, killing of innocents, and there are
just too many of these instances for them to be brushed aside
as exceptional incidents.
30 November 2001 In Khumel village
of Rolpa, a group of peasants was doing communal puja to the
deity Baraha when some Maoists nearby shot at an army helicopter
flying overhead. The army heli-copter, one of those which
have attached machine guns to the fuselage, swooped down and
opened fire on the villagers, killing six, including a child
and two elderly.
24 February 2002 At Kotwara village in Kalikot,
more than 34 labourers working at an airport site were pulled
out of their dwellings and shot for being Maoists. Many of
them were from the Tamang and Chepang communities, brought
west from Dhading district by a labour contractor.
27 April 2002 At Chieuri Danda village in Khotang
district, a group of four Maoists were fleeing an army platoon.
Two slid into the jungle, while two joined a group of Rais
fishing on the Sapsu River. Everyone put their hands up in
the air, but the guns opened on all of them. All six present
died, including the two Maoists. Among the dead were the supporters
of the Nepali Congress and the UML. What is the sense
of this anti-Maoist action when only one in four killed are
Maoists? asks a politician from Khotang. Why do
we have to be part of a country called Nepal, if this is the
kind of atrocity we have to suffer?
1 May 2002 In an incident reported both by Scott
Baldauf of The Christian Science Monitor and Gunaraj Luitel
of Kantipur daily, a group of soldiers and policemen arrived
at the village of Thulo Sirubari, Sindhupalchowk district
dressed as Maoists. They called out with the Maoist greeting
of Lal salaam, comrade and took away those who
responded, regarding them as Maoists. Altogether six men were
shot in the woods nearby while trying to escape, said the
security forces. Villagers at Thulo Sirubari say that those
killed were just farmers, shopkeepers, and family men with
no interest in either the Maoists or the government.
These examples, say activists, reflect the
general picture of large parts of the hills where confusion,
terror and heartbreak have become the order of the day. Many
of those killed as Maoists may be non-combatant Maoist sympathisers,
but an equally large number may not even be that. How
is it that 15 people get killed in an incident and only three
guns are recovered and a few socket bombs? asks one
activist, referring to the homemade grenades used by the Maoists.
Besides deaths during patrols or in encounters
that are real or faked, the majority of the deaths occur during
offensives by Maoists on police and army positions. While
it cannot be said with certainty that the Maoists make blatant
use of a human shield of innocent peasants from
nearby villages during their assaults, there is no doubt that
they do field untrained supporters in the front line (often
plied with drinks and drugs, say army sources), who are followed
up by the militia and trained fighters. In such instances,
during the heat of battle, it would be impossible for the
soldiers to distinguish between the insurgent and the innocent.
There are, certainly, examples of close
encounters where the alertness of army officers has
kept innocents from falling to the bullet. At the Kulekhani
reservoir southwest of Kathmandu Valley a few months ago,
some Tamangs coming down a hillside at night with flaming
torches in their hands after a puja were nearly mowed down,
but for the presence of mind of the commanding officer. Last
month, Gam village in Rolpa, soldiers were keen to use long-range
guns against a suspicious looking group coming up the trail.
The army officer asked his soldiers to hold their fire against
what turned out to be a group of villagers walking single
file. While in themselves heartening, these two examples set
out a scenario showing how easy it is for innocents to get
killed in the trails and terraces of Nepal.

Army's batle plan, Achham
disrict, west Nepal |
Take-no-prisoner
Nepal Television footage of the Maoist dead shows
many in non-combat gear, indicating that at least some of
these may have been mere supporters and not Maoist
fighters. But in the see-no-evil, hear-no-evil atmosphere
of Kathmandu Valley, these deaths if indeed innocent
to whatever degree are seen as acceptable collateral
damage in the fight to finish off the Maobaadi and get the
country back on track. While government would
like the people to believe the figures announced daily by
the radio and television as to the Maoists killed in action,
there is increasing scepticism about these reports in the
urban centres of Nepal, and particularly so in the affected
hill regions.
According to Mandira Sharma, in the hills of
Dang where the Maoist jana sarkar continue to
function, there is no credibility attached to the numbers.
They do believe the number of people announced as dead,
but not that they are Maoists, says Sharma. So
many have been killed in those villages, who everyone knows
to be non-Maoists, and yet the radio announce them as rebels.
The militarys attitude towards the Maoists
is clear in the way that the bodies of the dead Maoist are
handled. In a country where there remains a sensitivity and
respect towards the bodies of the departed, the footage on
nightly Nepal Television news said to be edited and
packaged by a military officer on duty at the station
has been grievously insensitive. Bodies of dead rebels in
shallow graves, hastily buried by their comrades after battles,
are dug out with picks, turned around by boots, slung on poles,
dumped like sacks of salt, and left to putrefy in the open
until, often, villagers themselves rally to bury them.
Says an officer at the army headquarters, The
army is able to see the Maoists for what they are, whereas
the politicians opportunism keeps them from being honest.
This officer says that the motivation level among the soldiers
is high: We used to be a ceremonial army, but quickly
we have realised that we do have fighting ability. There is
a sense of purpose and achievement among the rank and file.
They realise the Maoists are pests out to destroy our nation,
and that they are not wanted.
There are those who say that the behaviour
of the army in the villages is better than that of the policemen
before they fled the Maoist onslaught. Even so, the treatment
at the ground level seems to depend on the rank and character
of the commander in the field. In general, the more senior
the officer, it is said, the higher the possibility that he
will be cool-headed and hold fire during tense moments. There
are instances of capable officers building bridges to community
leaders, being sensitive to local concerns, and sowing enough
confidence among locals to be able to recruit them in the
fight against the Maoist. But that is the exception,
says a reporter from the far west who has trekked extensively
in the western hills meeting Maoists and armymen alike. The
army officers tend to be haughty and keep a distance from
the people, so the villagers will never trust them nor share
with them the infor-mation they have in their possession which
would finish off the Maoists in two months.
The army, while it might have its own internal
mechanisms to check abuse, has not opened up to human rights
defenders. Neither has it indicated more than six months
into its deployment as the all-in-all force in the Nepali
hinterland an understanding for the human rights concerns
that are rapidly building up among Nepals national-
and district-level politicians. Human rights activists based
in west Nepal, where the army is headquartered for the all-important
western front at Nepalganj town, say that they have not once
been approached by the military. Once, the army did provide
a helicopter tour of the western and central hills to American
and British journalists, and later to a group of parliamentarians
(those that oversee the armys budget and expenditure),
but Nepali journalists and human rights monitors remain shut
out.
So, who will the army listen to? In a country
as beholden to foreign aid as Nepal is, it is the donors who
would seem to have significant clout in peacetime and
wartime. An European Union statement, representing the view
of all parties did caution the government on the excesses.
The Americans are said to have been vehement, that human rights
abuse is a no-no even as the government goes about
battling rebels. The United States does hold inordinate clout
over the army because of the moral support it has provided
the men in fatigues in their war against the insurgents, and,
more so, because the RNA would be the primary beneficiary
of the USD 20 million that the Bush administration has requested
from Congress for a beleaguered Nepali government fighting
the Maoists. And yet, the concern of the embassies and the
donor institutions does not seem to be enough to move the
government or the military top brass to take a second look
at their actions and re-evaluate their strategy for bringing
the Maoists to heel. In the latest instance, on 29 May 2002,
the US Senate Appropriations Committee, while expressing support
for the request by the Bush Administration, said that it remains
concerned about human rights violations by the Nepalese Armed
Forces.
If nothing else works in sensitising the Nepalese
Armed Forces from reworking their present strategy of
containing the Maoists and the collateral damage that it is
exacting, in a condition where a prime minister is busy with
power politics and all governmental and non-governmental institutions
are supine and silent, the only recourse may be the royal
palace. While playing scrupulously by the book and remaining
above politics as demanded by his role as constitutional monarch,
King Gyanendra could perhaps play a part, given the importance
the monarchy holds in the RNAs scheme of things. Having
just emerged from his one-year ritual mourning following the
massacre of 1 June 2001, the monarch may consider having a
talk with the generals about the safety and security of the
Nepali people. Given the incongruous situation in Kathmandu,
where even the human rights community is sitting back and
waiting for the Western governments to speak up for human
rights in Nepal, the new king may feel that this is an area
where his role may come into use on behalf of the people.
Shangri-La
The killings during the Kilo Seirra II police operations in
the western hills in 1998-99 were modest compared
to what is happening all over the country today, says one
human rights monitor. The nation-wide activation of
the security forces has multiplied manifold the chances of
non-combatants and innocents being killed, he says.
During Kilo Seirra II, police units from Kathmandu moved into
Rolpa, Rukum, Jajarkot and Salyan districts, and the instances
of dis-appearances, summary killings and torture increased
dramatically. There is little doubt that it was that period
of state-sponsored terror that gave fillip to the Maoist movement.
Thereafter, it was the Maoists who converted the whole country
into a terrain of mass death. Today, with the Nepali army
being allowed to conduct its activities without challenge,
it can be presumed that unless there is indeed more circumspection,
the very nature of Nepali society and culture will change
as the seeds of deep-set and long-term animosities and hatreds
are sown.
Ingrid Massage, who has followed the happenings
in Nepal for Amnesty International for the last decade, is
extremely worried about the long-term implications of the
killing of innocent villagers. It may not ever be possible
to make a full assessment of how many unlawful killings are
happening in breach of inter-national humanitarian or human
rights standards. In most investigations of killings, it is
the body that will provide most of the clues, but in Nepal
there are no bodies or post-mortems. The absence of
investigation, according to Massage, means that Nepal will
find it that much harder to return to normalcy when the Maoist
problem has been solved. This also means
that at least parts of possible future truth processes, which
have been so important in other countries to reinstate peace
after a conflict is over, will not perhaps be very meaningful
here. The truth about these killings will never be able to
be told, which in itself could be an obstacle to peace and
a contributor to further violence.
The fact is, Nepal never was a human rights
Shangri La to begin with, as far as authoritarianism is concerned.
Historically, the public-at-large was once removed from centre
so that it did not suffer directly from state terror
but they were exploited instead by the administrative satraps
appointed by Kathmandus rulers. The Panchayat era, all
too easily forgotten, was a 30-year-period where the population
was cowed down by the weight of the autocracy. After the Peoples
Movement of 1990, a kind of a truth commission
know as the Mallik Commission was established to study human
rights abuses during the end-run of the Panchayat era. The
commission submitted a report and recommended action against
police, administrators and politicians who had abused power.
Implementation of the Mallik Commissions
report would have cleansed the polity, but instead it was
buried, mainly because Kathmandus establishment is too
small with familial and other inter-connections. A clear message
was thus sent out, that human rights violations could and
would be condoned under the new democratic dispensation. This
pattern of unaccount-ability continues, and the primary reason
the RNA was unwilling to come out and fight in the absence
of a state of emergency was also that it did not want its
hands tied by any future accounting process. It is a measure
of the failure of the political class that, while the Maoist
problem was still on the rise, it was unwilling to use all
its efforts in particular, overcoming the reluctance
of a king who held the key to have the army do the
civilian governments bidding without the cover of an
emergency.
It is against such a background of historical
unconcern for human rights that the Maoist war visited unexpected
violence and abuse on the people. This conflict has by now
had myriad effects on the country-side. Religious festivals
and age-old rituals that provided identity to the hill people
have been disrupted, crops have gone unplanted, and increasingly
large numbers of young men slip across the southern border
into India to escape Maoist kidnappings and/or army action.
As despair sets in, progress in education and public health
has been forgotten, and the overall socio-economic development
of society has been set back by years. However, despite these
broader tragedies, the most critical issue remains that of
life and liberty of the populace.
There is a question that keeps nagging
me, says Sushil Pyakurel of the NHRC. What will
the world say when it finds out of what is happening in Nepal?
We will be shamed.

Army airlift, Achham. |
Ambivalent kingdom
Outside observers tend to be nonplussed at the lack of righteous
anger among the Nepal educated classes against clear
evidence of excesses committed by the security forces. For
all their bellicosity when the going was easy, civil society,
human rights-wallahs and politicians have not made the kind
of remonstrations one would have expected of them. While this
may partly have to do with the lack of saahas, there is another
reason for this ambivalence.
To begin with, one does not hear enough reaction
against human rights abuse by the army because it is still
a relatively new phenomenon, and under the conditions of the
state of emergency credible information is hard to come by.
But, more importantly, the ambivalence has its roots in the
fact that the state committing the abuse itself is threatened
by collapse because of the Maoists. Unlike dictatorships that
can easily be upbraided for threatening the life and liberty
of the people, here is a democratic state, still in its incipient
stage, forced to battle a extreme-left insurgency for its
very survival in the process of which it is trampling
on human rights. Many of those who understand the issues seem
to have decided to support the government whole-heartedly
until the Maoist problem is tackled, even if some innocents
get caught in the middle as the lesser of two evils.
What is wrong with that argument is that
demo-cracy cannot be saved by shutting yourself off to villagers
who are dying, says Prakash Jwala. The government
as well as the army have a duty to take care, and they cannot
get away by pointing to the record of the rebels. Indeed,
no one doubts that large numbers of innocent villagers and
Maoists by default are being victimised in the
hills and valleys even as of this writing. Says Jwala, An
unwillingness to consider the issue as serious will vitiate
the atmosphere throughout the kingdom for the long term. When
elections are held and a new government comes into place,
those who hold the reins of government will find it very difficult
to control a populace which has had such a horrific experience
at the hands of authority.
As experience from all over the world indicates,
killing of thousands of innocents creates lakhs of disaffected,
who tomorrow will rise as different kinds of militants, though
not necessarily Maobaadi. In The Killing Terraces,
a documentary on the rise of the Maoists in Rukum, Rolpa and
Jajarkot by filmmaker Dhurba Basnet, a child of eight whose
parents were killed by the police during the Kilo Seirra II
operation says to the camera, tears flowing down his grimy
cheeks, I want to drink the blood of their hearts,
referring to the police. Revenge and despondency will rule
the land if the army, the government and the educated classes
do not wake up to the need to fight Maoists rather than target
simple villagers.
The blame for todays collateral
damage can, in some ways, be laid at the door of the
privileged and their rush to restore order. The killing of
innocents has its origins in the impatience of the elite who,
distraught at the way that the economy has crumbled following
the boom period of just a few years ago, want it back. There
were many who believed, with reason, that the Maoist organisation
would collapse the moment the army was released to tackle
them, after which the country would coast back to normalcy
with minimal bloodshed. That is not quite how the scenario
has played out and the quick-fix military solution has also
proved to be somewhat more difficult than expected. The reality
is that the Maoists had been allowed to become too big over
too long a period by the time the establishment woke up to
the need to tackle them with its full force.
Kathmandu has always looked away, and it does
so now, while violence continues to extract a price from the
rural society to a degree thought unimaginable even just a
year ago. Today, Nepalis look askance at their own souls,
to see how they have lost the ability to empathise. The large
death toll from a criminally opportunistic insurgency and
an army in single-minded pursuit has made the inhabitants
of towns and villages lose the sensitivity they thought they
had. As the police inspector in Dang explained, The
Nepali people have become like goats at the temple courtyard
awaiting sacrifice, which show no concern even as their companions
are getting slaughtered all around.
The conclusion is inescapable the life
of the villager is considered expendable in Nepal by those
who matter. The Maoists do not value the lives
of ground-level policemen, the soldiers and politicians, and
the army and police in return do not value the lives of the
Maoists or whoever is caught in between. Given that the Maobaadi
are underground, the death of innocents is made possible when
the military goes after them. The lives and livelihood of
poor villagers are simply seen as the necessary price to pay
for ridding the country of insurgents.
The government of Sher Bahadur Deuba today
out of preference exercises little control over
an army whose soldiers only quite simply go about the task
asked of them. It has asked the generals to deliver a country
where the Maoists have been decimated, and a negotiating window
does not seem to have been kept open. Perhaps Prime Minister
Deuba has a plan, and perhaps he understands the long-term
repercussions of the forces he thus unleashes, which go far
beyond the current bout of Nepali society versus the Maobaadi.
It is, of course, impossible not to blame the
Maoists for having started it all. They have weakened Nepal
economically and geopolitically as no anti-nationalist
could have, and they have created the conditions for soldiers
to emerge from the barracks, to be used in all-out war against
their fellow citizens. By forcing the army to become so overwhelmingly
active, the rebels may have helped create a place for the
army in the national equation that it did not have before.
The upshot of this history may be that the soldiers and the
executive in government will become unacceptably more powerful
in the future.
There was perhaps a way out of the cul de sac
if Prime Minister Deuba had decided to activate the army on
the basis of existing anti-terrorist provisions rather than
imposing the state of emergency. By retaining the political
institutions of state right down to the local level, and taking
the civil society and the press along with it, the government
would have been able to isolate the Maoists through a judicious
mix of military and political approaches. This would not have
exposed the RNA to the thankless task given it, and the credit
would have been shared across the institutions of state. By
having let one institution the military monopolise
the war against the Maoists, the soldiers become the fall
guys if things do not work out quite as planned.
The next six months, till the general elections
announced for 13 November, are critical for Nepal and Nepali
democracy. This will be a period when there are no institutional
safeguards in a country that will be dealing with both a state
of emergency and an election campaign. There is no parliament
and there are no courts; the bureaucracy, civil society and
media have proven ineffective as checks on authority. History
will therefore judge the period up ahead on the basis of the
action and inaction of the government and its army. They can
still wake up to the need to fight a war in which the insurgents
are differentiated from the innocents, however difficult and
time-consuming it may be. They owe it to democracy and to
the people, and quick fixes and mass deaths will not work.
There is a nation and a population in trauma out there, in
need of
healing.
|