Nothing can be more  surreal than a country supposedly in the process of drafting a constitution in  an environment that has exceeded the constitutional limits prescribed for the draft. The  Supreme Court insists that the interim constitution limits the tenure of the  constituent assembly to two years and allows and extension of, first, three and  then another three months only in the extraordinary circumstance of a national  emergency. The constitutional decree has been ignored not once by one year but  again at the moment by another three months. In other words, this extension by  amendments is itself unconstitutional. This is regardless of the technicality  that the extension date was exceeded by a day. The illegitimacy of the exercise  is as impudent as is the decision at the outset to insist on a republican  constitution before the constitution has been drafted. This constitutional  crime, moreover, is to be accepted as legitimate even if the very legitimacy of  the total constitutional drafting exercise and the elections to the constituent  assembly and even the restoration of the duly dissolved parliament by a king  that was asked to accede to the demands of the Janaandolan 2. Indeed, that this  agenda should be so blatantly endorsed and the unconstitutionality ignored by  the external sponsors of 'democracy, human rights and constitutionalism' makes  obvious the non-national agenda of the supreme law for this land and this, by  itself makes the whole process surreal.
    
  It is another matter that this external  sponsorship of the perverted political process chose to ignore the democratic  aberrations of the Janaandolan 2 in the very first place. A constitutional  monarchy was asked by an elected prime minister to prolong his term in office  without elections because he could not conduct elections for which he had asked  the monarchy to dissolve parliament. A resignation not forthcoming, the king  was given no choice other than to sack his prime minister and ask the parties  represented in the dissolved parliament for a national government in view of  the constitutional crisis. Party leaders, ignoring the need for an all-party  government recommended themselves to the post and, if not, asked that the king  nominate minority party leaders to head government and later combined to oppose  such governments from the streets, remarkably, when these governments began  dialogues with the primary threat to the constitution, the insurgent Maoists.  Resignations inevitably forthcoming, the constitutional monarch then nominated  the next best thing to a national government, a majority government in the  dissolved parliament. That coalition government unable to evolve a common  approach to the insurgency, the constitutional monarch who was the guardian of  the constitution and the symbol of national unity sought the cooperation of all  stakeholders in parliament under his chairmanship in order to put the  constitution back on track. Strangely enough, these stakeholders sought to  coalesce with the very threat to the constitution, the insurgents, at the  behest of forces which had branded the insurgents as terrorists even before the  Nepal government, isolated the monarchy and successfully launched Janaandolan  2.
    
  This stark anomaly of the very political parties  that defied the constitution now advocating another without the king and  defying the very limits of the interim constitution that they set themselves  only speaks of the surrealism evoked in the fact it is they being given the monopoly  of drafting a new constitution. The fact is that, if the constitution is to be  what the three major parties say it is, then the whole process of  constitutionalism has already become redundant. That a media which actively  partnered the change and the external forces which sponsored it refuse to see  the continuing anomaly and the glaring impudence makes obvious that the agenda  is much more than constitutionalism, democracy and human rights for the  country. It is not for nothing that the sponsors dismissed as indulgent  'walkabout' of the king's countryside trips where the bulk locals dared to  throng the king despite the real bullets and threats of the Janaandolan 2. 
    It took none less than the  insurgency leader to publicly allege particular party leaders provoking the  insurgents to fatally target candidates to the municipal elections held by the  king in his bid to put the constitution back on track for which he had asked  for a three year limit. Nothing is more surreal than the fact that this is the  fifth year without elections and over nine years of no local government. What  can underscore the impudence more than a supposedly caretaker government being  allowed to introduce a national budget for the year along with a program to man  the local bodies when the constitution- extended on the ruse of a five-point  program- is due to expire in about two months now? It is not for nothing that  this surrealism is, this year too, accentuated by the thousands who continue to  throng the king (now former) to wish him a happy birthday today (Thursday) too. 
As a nationalist who chooses to remain in the country even without his throne  and as a constitutionalist and democrat, the former king deserves his due from  his people regardless of the organized foreign sponsored detraction.