Migratory Politics
You would not know it seeing lone Nepalis at work on the streets all over India, but there are a number of groups intent upon organising them and providing them a level of protection. Almost all these groups are politicised, however, with links to parties and factions back in Nepal. While Nepalis have had organisations in India for nearly a century—to fight Rana rule in Kathmandu or to protect the Nepali language, an India-wide organisation for Nepali migrant workers was begun only in 1959 when one D. Ale, an associate of the communist leader Pushpalal Shrestha, started the Akhil Bharat Prabasi Nepali Kalyankari Sangh (All India Emigrant Nepali Welfare Association). Its activities were concentrated in Uttar Pradesh and in Calcutta.
The two most active umbrella organisations of the migrant Nepalis today are both of left orientation, the Emigrant Nepali Association (ENA), associated with the mainstream Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist-Leninists), and the All India Nepali Unity Society which is linked with the more radical "Mohan Bickram group", although now divided into two acrimonious factions. The centrist Nepali Congress has floated its own "Nepali Samparka Samitis" (liaison committees) with branches, it is said, in the main cities of India.