Nurturing the Nepali makeover
It was never going to be easy to bring a violent insurgency into open politics. The immediate challenge in Nepal, which is engaged in such an experiment, is finding a mutually acceptable mechanism to deal with the military component of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). For now, the entire exercise is euphemistically termed hatiyaar byabasthapan, or 'management of arms'.
Mature politicians today find themselves maintaining a carefully calibrated stance vis-à-vis rebel leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal ('Prachanda') and his colleagues, which could ultimately enable the rebels to lay down their arms. In doing so, the political parties are recognising the full extent of Maoist vulnerabilities. This assumes added significance at a time when the bravado of the rebels, amidst a honeymoon period with the Kathmandu civil society and media, gives the impression that they are in control of much of the polity.