Jiyalal Sah
By successfully holding the first phase of parliamentary and provincial elections early this week, and gearing up for the last phase next week, Nepal is now on the final lap leading to full promulgation of the new Constitution.
As Election Day draws closer, candidates appear to be growing anxious and are doing — or promising — anything that voters might want to hear. They are trying to outdo each other in wooing swing voters, and win power.
This week, a rightist group advocating for restoration of Nepal as a Hindu nation held separate meetings with NC President and Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and UML Chair KP Oli. Both leaders reportedly promised to address the outfit’s concerns, hoping to win its support.
In Parsa district’s constituency 3, where people suffered a devastating flood in August caused by Indian embankments, voters asked NC parliamentary candidate Ramesh Rijal if he would be able to raise the issue with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
“Why not?” he replied, folding his hands and flashing a smile to greet voters.
Most voters are smart enough to figure out if their candidates are lying. And contenders also know that their empty promises will not really work — so some candidates are even distributing cash, booze and goods.
In the Marchwar area of Rupandehi district this week, police seized a truckload of booze being smuggled into Nepal probably by a candidate to woo gullible voters. In Bhairahawa, UML supporters accused RPP candidate Dipak Bohara of erecting electricity poles at his own expense to influence voters — a charge refuted by the RPP.
Former Chief Election Commissioner Nilkantha Uprety urges people to choose candidates wisely, as their decisions could be instrumental in shaping the country’s future.
“Voters should realise that they are also partly responsible for bad governance,” he says. “So they have to vote for parties and candidates who can safeguard democracy, bring prosperity and deliver stability.”
He adds: “If the voters fail, the country will fail too.”