Pushpa Kamal Dahal has done it again. He is once more blaming the messenger, the 'big media houses', for undermining his party. Usually when a politician repeats an accusation, it reinforces its significance. But with Dahal, the ranting now seems to have the opposite effect. He has cried wolf so often that the remark made during a speech in Sindhuli on Monday went either unreported, or was relegated to the inside pages.
Yet there is a sinister undercurrent here. The Maoists have made no attempt to hide their contempt for the notion of a free press, just as they have for non-violent pluralistic politics. When Dahal delivered his latest tirade against the media, the YCL broke into a chant of "Name them, name them," so they could 'fix' them.
Warming up to his theme, and egged on by the ovations, Dahal went on to accuse the media of being 'anti-nationalist'. This has always been the Maoist method: accuse everyone critical of their continued use of violence, extortion and intimidation as being "feudal, running dog lackeys of Indian expansionism". The reason Nepal's mainstream media ignored these remarks, according to some editors, was because "he's said it before". But that is precisely why it is unacceptable. Dahal is a former prime minister and the leader of the opposition. Such incitement and xenophobia have no place in the vocabulary of someone who sees himself as a statesman.
Some of Dahal's other remarks in recent days are so out of it they sound downright paranoid. For example, he has publicly stated his belief that both King Birendra and Madan Bhandari were killed by Indian expansionists and that they're after him too. It is difficult to gauge what is worse: that the Chairman is just getting carried away with his own rhetoric and doesn't know what he is saying, or that these speeches are a calculated move to 'scare' the Indians into putting him back in power.
It has been the tradition within the Maoist party that whenever it is threatened by internal contradictions, it turns to fear-mongering about the threat from the south. In 2005, just as Dahal's internal feud with Baburam Bhattarai was reaching a climax, the Maoists started digging trenches in schools across the country to counter an imminent Indian invasion.
The charitable explanation for all this is that the Maoists want to distract attention from fissures within. There is a strong segment within the Maoist Central Committee that is opposed to the ultra-nationalist flag-waving-at-the-border of the Fourth Phase of the agitation. If the Chairman's intention with these antics is to keep his party together, then good luck.
But the Nepali people have other worries. They fear that the peace process is mired, law and order is getting worse and development is non-existent. It would be better for the government and the opposition to start addressing the real and vital concerns of a long-suffering population.
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