Dear all,
here is a piece that landed in the junk mail of my hotmail email account. Shishir bhai, who is one of my favorite around when it comes to politics and strategy writes these lines from kathmandu as he happens to be there in regards to his summer project.
Cheers!
Uhi Rajeev,
CT, Amrika
July 14: Kathmandu, Nepal
Life In Kathmandu:
Yesterday evening 7:30 PM, I was returning back home after an evening tour of
downtown Kathmandu (New Road and Basantapur), we saw significant numbers of
people gathered outside of a small restaurant in Samakhusi, about half a
kilometer from where I live. When we queried the crowd, we were told ýsuspected
Maoistsý shot a teacher, who taught at a nearby public school. We were there
within few minutes of the incident, soon afterwards police arrived.
Similarly, last week a police officer was shot dead by the Maoists within a
block of where I live.
Yet, live doesnýt feel out of ordinary in Kathmandu. People go to business as
usual. I guess, there is no alternative to it but itýs amazing how we live
without sense of urgency towards the political violence in the country. Over the
past decades, the deaths of people have become so ubiquitous that people rarely
notice it anymore.
In the last decade or so, at least in the past half-a-decade, since I have left
Kathmandu, the benefit of insurgency seem to have come in the form or rising
business in real estate and consumer products. When I had left Nepal in 1998, it
was difficult to find a buyer to purchase land in Kathmandu. The housing market
had fallen flat. Now, story is completely different.
The rising violence has forced many in the countryside to flee for safety and
obviously, in Nepal there is no place safer (!) than Kathmandu. So, almost
everyone seems to be building house here. Since there is also demand for rent,
the houses are growing taller. In the mean time, because of lack of opportunity
in investment, newly opened private banks and financial institutions have found
real estate sector a hot area. They have also opened credit markets on consumer
goods, so that people now are buying cars, motorbikes and other personal goods
such as electronics on installments basis. So, Kathmandu feels much more
affluent than it was four or five years ago.
It is irony, that all these happened when tens of thousands of people died in
the violence over the last few years. The biggest irony possibly is that the
Maoists have aided in creating a more prosperous middle class, that now can
afford (be that in a credit) more consumer goods than it could otherwise.
Because of this (feeling of business as usual, feeling of personal and economic
security), I feel, there is less urgency among Kathmanduýs elites to resolve the
current political crisis and also because of such circumstances, Maoists have
difficulty in mobilizing strong mass movement that they have always planned to
carry out in the capital city. Thus, they resort to killing individuals and
chosen to terrorize people.
Graduate Student
Robert M. La Follette School of Public Affairs
University of Wisconsin-Madison