The never-ending elections would be hilarious by now, if they weren't so deadly serious.
The political theatre of the absurd in parliament every week has turned people off the present crop of politicians, which may not in itself be a bad thing. But it is also making them cynical about democracy; citizens are not just blaming politicians, they are blaming the value system of democracy itself. This holds serious long-term perils for the country's future.
TV talk shows, radio studio discussions and the op-ed pages of newspapers can't get enough of politicians holding forth, mostly to blame everyone but themselves. Disagreeable politicians are all saying we shouldn't disagree. It is easy to be confused and tune out, and this is exactly what is happening to millions of people across the country. The latest ratings show a mass migration of viewers from the previously top-billed NTV evening news to Star Plus.
One common refrain is that politicians are too crooked, too selfish and greedy, so the country may still not be ready for democracy. If we had trains, it is said, dictators would make them run on time. Nepal goes through cycles of distrust regarding democracy every decade or so. While understandable, such a trend is disastrous for the kind of open society we are striving to build.
For those befuddled by the endless elections for prime ministership, for those who can't differentiate between the good guys and bad guys, there may be a few simple questions to help us make sense of the mess.
There are two kinds of political forces in this country: those that believe in the ideological doctrine of political violence, and those that don't. If we believe that killing and maiming people for political beliefs is not a desirable thing, then it should be pretty simple to agree that we are trying to build a society with a governance structure that abjures violence. At present this excludes the Maoist army and its paramilitary structures, and the quasi-political militias that operate in the Madhes and the eastern hills.
For this, the political forces that do not need violence to attain and remain in power must stick together. And there's the rub. The 'democratic' parties are so mired in individual ambition, greed and one-upmanship they have not been able to rise to the occasion to break the deadlock. Our goal should be to help all parties in their transition to peaceful politics, and failing this, to convince the parties that believe in pluralism to rise over petty individualism to counter the totalitarians.
There are those who believe the Maoists can be reformed, and those that are convinced the Maoists will never abandon their end goal of establishing a one-party people's republic. Even within the Maoists, two schools of thought have emerged in the current Central Committee meeting, hence their contradictory statements.
Democracy can be messy, and elected politicians can be crooks. But it is a system we know how to fix without killing people. We've lived through various models of authoritarianism, and they have been even more disastrous. Grassroots democracy in the mid-1990s was beginning to deliver development; it proved accountability can improve lives. But that was before the war set us back two decades.
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