The Guessing Game Continues

Barely
a fortnight into his tenure, Indian Ambassador Rakesh Sood has zeroed
in on his brief: regaining India’s initiative in Nepal. Midway through
our peace process, New Delhi clearly felt matters slipping from its
grip. The United Nations was exceeding its mandate. The Chinese were
becoming a far more assertive player – and flaunting it. The
much-touted convergence of views with the United States looked fuzzier
by the day.
By winning back Afghanistan as India’s top man in
post-Taleban Kabul, Sood was the perfect candidate for Nepal. Jayant
Prasad’s nomination was quietly buried in the Indian media.
Sood
went straight to the heart of the matter. He suggested that India was
not privy to any agreement on retaining the monarchy that supposedly
facilitated the transfer of power from King Gyanendra to the Seven
Party Alliance in April 2006.
But, then, Sood would be the last
person to acknowledge the existence of such a document. India’s record
speaks for itself. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru revealed the
existence of secret letters exchanged with the 1950 Treaty nine years
later. He didn’t do that to undermine Mohan Shamsher Rana, then safely
in exile in India. Nehru did so to undercut Prime Minister B.P.
Koirala’s assertion of Nepalese sovereignty.
New Delhi made public
the existence of the 1965 arms agreement only four years later when
King Mahendra prepared to expel the Indian military mission that, among
other things, manned check posts along Nepal’s border with China.
India
has not said a word about the draft treaty it presented to King
Birendra in the spring of 1990. It essentially aimed at bringing Nepal
tighter into the Indian sphere of influence, in exchange for pledges of
support for the Panchayat system. When the palace refused, the monarchy
paid the price. Interim prime minister Krishna Prasad Bhattarai wasn’t
too thrilled to find the same draft thrown at him months later.
And
then there’s the 12-point agreement against King Gyanendra’s regime. It
was one thing for top Nepali leaders to require urgent medical care in
India at the same time. It was quite another for US Ambassador James F.
Moriarty to accompany many of them on that flight. New Delhi has left
it to the signatories to expound upon its precise role. Many of them –
including Maoist leader Prachanda – did so in glowing terms. Yet when
the Madhesi leaders met with government negotiators inside the Indian
Embassy, it wasn’t the royalist right but the SPA and the Maoists that
cried foul.
If there was any agreement on saving the monarchy, it’s
up to King Gyanendra to release it. As the clock ticks down to May 28,
when the interim constitution envisages Nepal becoming a republic, the
palace is keeping us guessing. One report suggests the monarch has
already sent a letter to the Maoists pledging to vacate the palace
before that deadline. Others suggest he intends to dig in his heels
until the full constitution is written and ratified.
Throw in the
soothsayers who predict the monarchy will eventually prevail over the
politicians. Then juxtapose that with some of these same stargazers’
assertion that Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala would never be able
to pull off the constituent assembly elections. The fogginess is
perfect for the behind-the-scenes games Sood and other Indian
representatives are feverishly engaged in on all sides.
By Maila Baje: http://nepalinetbook.blogspot.com/