Ekushey: Nepali Lai Maya Garau!

I feel sorry that I am writing this blog in English – a language that is not my mother tongue. I also feel sorry that I couldn’t compute in Nepali.

Exactly a year ago, I was in Chittagong, Bangladesh to cover Youth World Cup cricket and saw the Bagladeshi people celebrating Feb 21 as a very important day and they called it Ekushey. On Feb 20, at midnight, they will walk barefoot in groups to the chowks where I find three black pillars that represent martyrs who died during the movement for the Bangla language in 1952. Continue reading…

How Many Sides A Story Has?

While having lunch with Dinesh and me, Deepak talked about an incident. He told us that he along with Saroj, a reporter of Nepal Weekly, went to receive their editor at the airport when he returned from Europe. Other at his office called it palm-greasing. He replied them saying they didn’t go because they were afraid of tight security at the airport. And he told us – it showed a story has two sides. Then, I told them actually any story has more than two sides.
Continue reading…

Where Does NewsLookMag Go?

I don’t know what happened but when I tried visiting NewsLookMag.com, a site that collects all the headlines relating to Nepal, it didn’t appear. It looks like either the site has ceased operation or is being blocked by my ISP.

Update:Ditto with Nepalipost.com, a site operated by Nepali journalists in US. Thanks to Dinesh

Making Mockery of Democracy

Democracy is the government of the people, by the people and for the people.

– Abraham Lincoln, 1864

Lincoln’s definition to democracy, in his Gettysburg Speech given at the height of American Civil War, is the most widely used and simplest to understand. But Nepal’s King Gyanendra either couldn’t understand it or is trying to make mockery of it.

Falgun 7, which fell on February 18 this year, is celebrated in Nepal as the Democracy Day because in 1950 AD, for the first time democracy was introduced here ending the 104-year-long autocratic Rana Regime.

King Gyanendra’s grandfather King Tribhuvan, a democratic king, led the fight for democracy. Gyanendra’s father Mahendra however didn’t like democracy and in 1960, suspended democratically elected government to introduce partyless Panchayat System that ended through People’s Movement in 1990.

History is gone. But what King Gyanendra is trying hard these days is to show him the most ardent supporter of democracy. The function of democracy day that was live on state-run television and radio, Gyanendra listened while his follower reiterated his support for democracy.

The democracy day was celebrated in manner that would have made a lot of sense in democracy. But at the time, when democracy is dead, it was not more than a mockery of democracy. Continue reading…

An Account from Kantipur TV News Staff on Censoring

This report was written several days ago and recounts the moment immediately preceding the coup when the military took control of Nepali broadcast facilities prior to the announcement of the coup by King Gyanendra.

The army began cordoning our office premises at around 9:30 (0445GMT) in the morning, some half an hour ahead of the Royal Proclamation… the state-owned radio and television had already announced that King Gyanendra was going to address the nation. Nothing more than that had been said, except that the King had summoned the then Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and chiefs of security agencies for a Royal audience.

As the group of armymen covered the periphery of the premises, an army major, in his military outfit and a gun, asked for an entry into the television station’s newsroom. He politely said that he was here to provide security to the office in case an incident like September 1 occurs (On Sept 1, following the killing of 12 Nepalis in Iraq, there were riots in the city…the rioters had vandalized the office, burning several vehicles and pelting stones on the office building).

All of us, almost the entire news team, watched the Royal Proclamation live on the state owned television. Following the proclamation, the army major asked whether he could visit the control room. By then, the telephone lines were already cut and the cellular phones were cut during the address to the nation itself.

He was promptly shown the studio and news control room of the television station. A lot of confusion had already been created with the announcement of emergency, following the sacking of the then government. A lot of fundamental rights were suspended with the announcement. Continue reading…

Cats to Guard Milk: The Anti-Corruption Move

Corruption, which has been continuously spreading its tentacles, has not only cast a shadow over politics and administration, but has also obstructed the nation’s march towards progress. Corruption has struck at the very core of our society, the result of which the common man’s confidence in the laws of the land has been shaken. Therefore, in keeping with the popular will and to fulfill the main criterion of good governance, effective measures will be adopted to curb corruption, while ensuring that the principles of justice are not infringed upon.

King Gyanendra told the nation in his Royal Proclamation on Feb 1. His commitment towards curbing the corruption which is deep-rooted in the country ‘ensuring that principles of justice are not infringed upon’ was sweet to the ears. On Feb 16, he constituted five-member Royal Commission for it.

But sadly enough, the reality is, what he had told and what he had done do not match. Indeed he has been asking cats to guard milk.

Let’s begin with Day 2 when he constituted his cabinet. His sweet-worded commitment towards curbing corrupting became bitter within 24 hours. His cabinet included two such ministers who can not be called clean in the regard.

Minister of Home Affairs Dan Bahadur Shahi is still under investigation for the suspected embezzlement of NRs. 6,7100,000 along with 14 others. The Commission for Investigation of Abuse of Authority (CIAA) is investigating that ‘corruption’ in importing chemical fertilizers which happened when he was agriculture secretary. And wasn’t he the one who was sacked during Girija Prasad Koirala’s premiership for dubious charters tics (later to be reinstated by court). Continue reading…

Celebrating Democracy Day!

This morning I woke up earlier than usual to celebrate the Democracy Day. I had a sheet of paper with the plans for the day, but unfortunately not all of them could be done. The first was to put a Democracy Day Message on my site, www.NepalCricket.com, which I couldn’t do as there were on phone lines. Morning shows the day, I very much believe in this, and when the first item on the list could not be done, then how can others be? Continue reading…

After Recovering From Fever

Somehow, all unknowningly, fever hit me, took me to bed for complete rest for two days and still now, when I am at my office, the fever is still haunting me with a feel of weakness, slight headache and aching eyes.

My country is the same. Something went wrong for it for last few years, now its bed-ridden, in a crisis, and the head of the state, King Gyanendra promises us all will be well soon. We all know something is going to chage for forever, but we all are unanswered to ‘what and with what conseqences’.