13-19 June 2014 #711

Times of war and peace

Prashant Jha’s Battles of the New Republic will anger and shame us
Anurag Acharya
In Kathmandu, a capital city that lacks basic sanitation facilities, an elderly man from the Tarai is forced to take a roadside leak. A local man pelts a stone and curses him. The next day, the same man humiliates the old man in front of his son by trying to publicly pull down his dhoti. The young boy holds on to his father’s hand as the old man runs away.

Two decades later, the boy has grown up to be a young man, and is working hard to ensure that the next generation of Nepal’s Madhesi people do not have to live in fear and humiliation in their own land.

Hundreds of kilometres away in the remote hills of Rolpa district, another young boy joins an armed rebellion to undo historical wrongs. For the next 15 years, he fought his own government and wrote songs of awareness to instill passion and indignation in the hearts of his fellow comrades. Mal Bahadur Budhamagar and thousands like him sacrificed their youth for a life of dignity.

Battles of the New Republic

Aleph Book Company, 2014

Paperback, Rs 635, 288PP


Prashant Jha’s Battles of the New Republic: A Contemporary History of Nepal will anger and shame us at the same time for being part of a society that has failed to stand up for its weakest and most unfortunate. Divided into four sections, the book is the personal account of a journalist as he discovers underlying causes of an insurgency. It is about the people who joined the rebellions, those who betrayed it, and those who amassed personal and political fortune cashing in on the misery of Nepalis.

The book goes back and forth in history to explain behind-the-scene events that shaped our immediate past and present. We see how ego and ambitions prompted Girija Prasad Koirala to thwart peace efforts during the Krishna Prasad Bhattarai government. The favour was returned by Sher Bahadur Deuba few years later, when Koirala’s own effort to broker peace with the Maoists failed.

Based on interviews with protagonists and fact checked with others who were there, Jha unravels what was happening in the corridors of power. But he has also managed to capture the mood on the streets, for example, that led to the rise of the Madhes-based parties and their leadership through the stories of citizens who were part of the movement. This is also a subaltern history.

Jha’s personal rapport with actors across Nepal’s political mainstream, security agencies, diplomats and Indian spooks gives him enviable access to insider information. We hear the dirty secrets behind those closed door meetings, mid-night deals and uninvited visits from down South.

One reads with disgust how, behind all the drama of a sovereign exercise, even the head of state and chief of the Army have pleaded with New Delhi to intervene and influence political course back home.

In a moment of vulnerability and arrogance, an Indian intelligence officer, after the fall of the Maoist led government over the sacking of CoAS Rukmangad Katuwal in 2009 tells Jha: “If Katuwal was the problem, he (Pushpa Kamal Dahal) should have come to us. We would have worked something out.”

As in Sudheer Sharma’s Prayogshala the book exposes the hypocrisy of politicians of the left, right and centre who seek foreign patronage, are subservient to them but then shout the loudest about sovereignty and nationalism.

Jha also exposes contradictions and mutual distrust among pro-federalist forces like the Janajati and Madhesi outfits, which he believes was one of the reasons for the failure of the first CA.

A senior military officer’s prophetic observation about the fate of the CA after a Maoist win in 2008, and a lawyer’s comments on the impossibility of a ‘Maoist written’ constitution, help us understand that the course of history was being shaped by powers within.

Battles of the New Republic is a meticulously researched book, a tale of aspiration, conviction and empowerment, as well as about anger and dejection with hopes dashed. The plot is almost cinematic with an array of emotions including passion, empathy, ambition, envy, greed, lust, betrayal and revenge. In that sense it is a political thriller.

Jha ends with a note of hope, a tinge of optimism, to remind us of the momentous changes to which he had a ringside seat.  

For archive of Prashant Jha’s Plain Speaking column in Nepali Times

Read also:

“India-bashers and ultranationalists will be disappointed” Interview with Prashant Jha

The year of the madhes Prashant Jha

Charting the times

Generals in the labyrinth

Failed experiment Anurag Acharya

comments powered by Disqus