We have been arguing here against replacing Baburam Bhattarai as prime minister mainly because he seems the least incompetent of the politicians on offer. Pushpa Kamal Dahal has a track record for being super-ambitious and highly unpredictable. The UML and NC may have democratic-minded candidates, but they have been tried and tested, and found wanting.
In the public perception, Bhattarai still has the aura of being someone with intellect and integrity despite the thoroughly kleptocratic coalition he leads. None of the sleaze seems to rub off on the Teflon Man, though. His overnight trips to stay and eat with Dalit families in Jumla and Chepang families in Chitwan are expensive populist stunts, but seem to go down well with the public. His demolition of half of Kathmandu has raised hackles, but also bolstered the perception that he is a do-er, because he has sent bulldozers tearing through even the property of the rich and powerful.
But it now has to be said that by clinging on to power Comrade Bhattarai is becoming a liability to himself, his party, and the country. He was someone we trusted to forge a consensus government to take us into elections, but he is now an obstacle to that goal. In fact, all his past commitments about a government of national unity now seem to have been decoy flares to keep himself in power.
Bhattarai is exhibiting the same traits all his predecessors in Singha Darbar did: behaving as if he is another little party boss, and not a national statesman. By going back on the five-point deal, the Maoist party once more shifted the goalpost to ensure electoral incumbency and destroyed what little trust the other parties had in them. Despite President Ram Baran Yadav's repeated prodding, the latest last Friday, we see the four main political forces unable or unwilling to come to an agreement.
The other more serious reason that we need a new consensus government is because this coalition has broken all past national records for corruption. In fact, calling it corruption is a gross understatement. The country cannot survive such blatant ransacking of the treasury for much longer.
The Maoist-controlled Finance Ministry is throwing Rs 10 million here, Rs 180 million there to party cadres to pay retroactively for roads built during the war. An investigative report last week lists proof that the Local Development Ministry (which for some strange reason is under the control of the Maoist Foreign Minister) has spent Rs 5 billion over the past year on fake development projects: non-existent causeways, phantom irrigational canals, roads from nowhere to nowhere.
There is up to Rs 600 million missing in just six districts in the eastern Tarai alone. The fact that much of this money was foreign aid channelled through the Local Government and Community Development Program (LGCDP) should be setting off alarm bells in donor offices. The evidence points to a complete breakdown of accountability in the absence of elected officials at the local level.
The Commission for the Investigation of the Abuse of Authority (CIAA) which should be probing this mountain of malfeasance is headless, and seems to have been co-opted by the Maoist party. Its secretary (recipient of the government's Rs200,000 Best Civil Servant Award) has refused to act on a petition to probe the misappropriation of
Rs4 billion that was supposed to have gone for the upkeep of ex-guerrillas in the cantonments since 2006.
The move to distribute IDs to the poor, the Good Governance Project, the Youth and Small Business Self-Employment Scheme all have such weak oversight that they are barefaced attempts to buy votes at election time by throwing fistfuls of cash at them. By the way, the government seems to be in no hurry to appoint a new Election Commissioner, either.
Prime Minister Dr Baburam Bhattarai, PhD, is obviously a genius. But we wish he had used his considerable intellect to control this haemorrhage of the treasury, and invest the funds in cost-effective social welfare. Instead, he is presiding over the plunder of the state.
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