
Their anger spent, the taxi driver and the motorcyclist realise that the crowd may attract the traffic cop which will mean endless hassles at Baggi Khana, perhaps even confiscation of the license, and the loss of several hundred green rhinos (or maybe even an elephant) to grease appropriate palms. So they hurriedly go their separate ways. The crowd disperses, disappointed at being cheated of a good fight.
The insurgency has become a similar spectator sport. The daily body counts are rattled off like basketball scores, losing all meaning and masking the human cost of the conflict. And when we do attach a human element to the statistics, it is to show gory television footage of dead Maoists being pulled out of the banks of the Rapti River with pickaxes.
Here, you can't really fault voyeuristic viewers. The gatekeepers of our media are singularly insensitive to what is proper to show on television and what is not. Raw footage of corpses, the more grisly the better, are played over and over again on nationwide television. If we can't treat fellow Nepalis with dignity when they are living, let us at least give them some dignity when they are dead.