Rocks under the tide of nationalism

Rocks under the tide of nationalism

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For outside observers, the picture currently emerging from Nepal seems rather depressing: the continuing ill-health of 85-year-old Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala; the reluctance of the Nepali Congress and the Nepali Congress (Democratic) to unite; the 'ethnic' demands being raised by the Madhesis, janajatis and other communities; the mistrust about the real intentions of the Maoists – inspired partly by the US lobby, partly by the behaviour of the Maoist cadres themselves, and partly by the general deterioration of law and order in Kathmandu and the rest of the country. Indeed, the Nepali state today is experiencing crises from all sides.

Similar growing pains have been felt elsewhere in Southasia during the process of nation-building. India and Pakistan started their independent journey with the mighty troubles of settling hundreds of thousands of refugees, dousing the fires of communal frenzy and building up their economies and societies. Burma was simultaneously facing similar challenges. With the advent of freedom in these countries and the surfacing of new crises, one scholar memorably noted that, after the tide of nationalism had ebbed, all the rocks that had been hidden within it were emerging into view.

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