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Sunday, May 27, 2012

Strike Striking the Nation, Crippling the Minds and Nothing Else


Education! Education is for those who don’t have skills for survival and need to work to meet their daily demands; we protest articulating our demands to be met in the streets not through skills learned in the school. Schools after all are shut every now by the teachers themselves demanding their lavish (not basic needs) be satiated and all the learning you draw from schools is just “Demand You Rights, rights you inherit as Nepali and not that you earn through bearing civil responsibility. So schools have since long have been redundantly incepting ideas of political Bandhs (nothing creative). It has finally emerged clean from the dearth of Nepalese poverty- A Cult called Bandh! (Now that’s hip.)

Bandh is a culture deep rooted in the psyche of the youth. Youths are imparting their rebellious ways/visions upon the silent majority, creating an aura of fuming pressure cooker in the Nation through bandhs, and bewildering the national economy and educating the young minds about demanding like spoilt brats of rich parents (Countries), totally discarding the thing called national civil responsibility. The political faction is there to look after these necessities. (Yeah Definitely!!!!) What they voice raucously for is their demands which they want though they may be unaware what exactly they’ll do after the demands are met.

(Empathetically- Speaking like them)
Who cares? Let tomorrow think about it before it comes to us (Nepal). For now, we don’t care about thirst, hunger, pain or empathy. Who says the economy is suffering? Nothing new! So let it bear some more excruciation, since we voice for the greater good and we don’t look at the aggravation culminating our nation, jolting down under woes of faltering economy, the imminent food shortages and the ominous inflation in daily consumer goods, we won’t hear more complaints about hungry children or sick infants or crippled people/economy. The people are resilient to such food crisis as well, since half of the population has learned to live off single meal and devoid from the luxuries of lavish cuisines like in many of the moderately developed or all of the well developed countries. This is how empathy has grown in the young and fervent minds taking shape of apathy to the observers outside the pressure cooker.

So what is it that is happening in the nation, what is the cause of it, where is it leading us and how are they leading us? We have to know all this about ourselves since even a blind person would want to know where s/he is going since we are not handicapped and have perfect senses- if feeling accounted for sense, this perfect sense phrase would be an irony here. Yet, more importantly, where are the proponents, the strident crowd, propelling the notion of state restructuring with division done on the basis of caste and ethnicity? Or are they just similar to the bulls’ herd rampaging through in San Fermin (Bull Running festival shown famously in the Hindi Movie Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara’s last scene) on the back of the vision imparted by the visionary leaders who might have had an undiagnosed case of myopia, metaphorically.

I guess, the nation which is steaming up to the deadline of Constitution in Nepal, Jestha 14 and the scenes are reminders that we are indeed being treated royally for wanting some change for better. Well, we might have been getting something better, a better show to say the least, something to pass time, watching the news channel as there is a people versus people war show on TV. Yes, a war indeed, an internal conflict to term it perfectly, but for what- an uprising for something called caste, ethnicity and culture? Well we might not be aware that newer unheard castes and ethnicities have emerged in an outcry seeking a state for them as well, more like a piece from the Nepal’s (B’day) Constitution Cake. Moreover we have already created another culture- the bandh culture.

If they don’t get something, then the only option at their disposal, their arsenal of wit, is Strike!! Nepal Bandh!! Now even kids have learned that Phrase- Nepal Bandh! One day, our kids in our homes will protest if their parents don’t buy them a Play Station. They will go on hunger strikes against parent for reprimanding them for not focusing on creative studies. Well, no one will be able to complain about such demands and protest. It is now a culture for Christ Sake!!!! (As you sow, so shall you reap?) And every culture is for good, isn’t that what we grew up learning in schools and that Nepal is a country of diversity in demographics, language and culture. Here’s another culture to add to that list of omnipresent cultures. Now that’s creativity on part of Nepalese. (I am hearing Loud Applause or is it my hallucination?)

But where did this culture stem from? Now this is a part of the deductive reason skills we lack in school or are forgotten to be taught in school. But wait…. It isn’t even part of our age old curriculum. (No!!!)

(Empathy lesson again)
We, the bandhkartas, the proponents of this Bandhs, didn’t learn it; we are but merely cult followers. So who are the trend setters? I guess this is lamely rhetoric question to ask. The political parties, of course!!! And the major political parties should take the biggest credit for being such pioneers. We are, but following the trails of the footprints left behind by our leaders- our visionaries. They have been talking about Radical Change for the last 20+ years since the reinstatement of democracy in 1990.

Now, the vision- of changing Nepal into Switzerland or USA in 20 years- was portrayed by the then revolutionary cult setters. And now seeing that they failed in their mission of creating a Utopia in Nepal, at par with those two exemplary countries, bewildered by their ravenous appetite for money and power, and overindulgence in riveting acts of corruption, the herd called people has taken over charge to getting along the mission themselves and creating a world beyond their imagination. I guess, here ignorance and years of suppression under fascism and staying aloof from the world around may have kept them away from knowing the history that Modern American History dates back a few centuries. Well, no one can blame them or the country itself neither the usurped Tyrants- Kingdumbs- for not including Modern American History in the course syllabus. It would be silly unless if the teachers never bothered to relate those events and teach critical analysis.

Having elaborated about all unnecessary analyses of my own, I escaped the major issue of concern here, the ones circling the facts- The News! But I guess, it is elementary and even our neighbors’ kids give Nepal Bandhs as reasons for not going to school. I guess, no one needs news now, everyone knows. Since there isn’t much making the headlines except the bandh, and every event transpiring from Bandh- protests, road blocks, vandalism of vehicles, shops, businesses, man-handling and much more. They are all news for now, how entertaining!

-          Written By: Romeo Maskey (रोमियो मास्के)
Date- May 21, 2012

Transparency in Governmental and Bureaucratic Activities


 
A few days back, I had a small discussion with my mom and she came up with an idea which at that moment sounded brilliant to say the least. It is about having transparency in the government's activities and reports which will be done by youth groups at youth's initiative.

Asking myself a question, "Is it not my right to know where all the tax money, we pay goes, and how all activities that government plans every year are carried out?" Then I realized it is every citizen's right to know about government's activities.

As a matter of fact it is the essence of the time that the country is passing through. We ought to know where all the money allocated for development activities in the budget are spent, whether or not they are spent the right way at all.

Can CIAA assure that all of their staffs are fair and that they do not befall prey to the temptation of big bucks these corrupt current and ex-minister, the bureaucrats and the rest are willing to pay? Is their morality priceless or one that doesn't bow down to hard cash? The answer is: NO.

So what is the answer to all these loop holes and the flaws in governmental assurance to the public that they have everything covered. The answer could be youth and one new youth initiative out of many recently.

Let's form a committee of the youth, with some one from within these youth initiatives who are born leaders to lead this activity. The youth led committee will ask the government bodies for all records of activities of the government. The committee will then see the credibility of these documents and overview all government activities and prepare a report.

It doesn't have to be in a large scale, as big as the government bodies doing these jobs. It can be a small committee with groups assigned task to check the credibility of particular department of the government. They can exercise all their rights in the jurisdiction vested upon by the people- we.

This initiative can take shape even before the constitution making process is over. It can look at the wrongs hindering the peace process. This is just an idea which can be an trigger to an avalanche of other ideas. This idea is very raw, so it could be with the wisdom of the elite group heading such youth groups like Gari Khana Deu, Die Nepal Bandh DIE and Entrepreneurs for Nepal.

So please ponder upon this idea and come up with a solid plan one that can assure full transparency in Nepal's governmental and bureaucratic activities. Peace.


Jai Nepal!!!!


Romeo Maskey

Monday, May 21, 2012

What after the caste based state structuring?


 
The very foundation of Maoist’s decade long insurgency and the ominous victory of the so called, People’s War, is now haunting the very visionaries and thrusting them into the very grave they dug up with the inception of this caste-ethnicity based state structuring. The rebels are no longer mere puppets of the masters enslaved under the gullible manipulation. Now that the slaves have developed their own thought process; they have learned from their masters that voicing vociferously against the state and creating civil unrest, political strife and bandhs will self create a solution out of thin air, hindering nothing except may be creating some economic imbalance, some inconvenience to the timidly resilient public and the imminent food shortages in the country. But the people are resilient to such food crisis as well since half of the population has learned to live off single meal.
The only chant you hum to is Jatiya Pradesh! (It is human psychology to repeat/hum everything you hear monotonously for a long time) Everyone wants a state for him/herself. In the recent future, a situation may surface out from this current event that when siblings grow up into individuals, each with different middle names-for instance, Hari, Man, Lal, Bahadur, Jung and so forth, might as well think about claiming for a state of their own- The Man Rajya, The Lal Rajya, the Bahadur Rajya, The Jung Rajya. (A lame sarcasm I heard from someone mocking the current situation) But at the rate stranger events are emerging today, which were previously nonexistent or unthinkable, who knows this write up might as well incept an idea into some hideous young mind.

So what now from all the unrest that this social turmoil is causing? The only solution would be on the political front. The major constitution-making parties have to promise them something substantive, something that will satiate their urges for collateral damages and total annihilation of the sentiment of Nepali Unity (Bhratritwa). So say, they met the protestors’ demands for caste and ethnicity based segregation of the country, then what? What is it that the protestors want to do with the state?-Reward for their egos?

I guess, I am the only blind person who doesn’t know what purpose it is going to serve my Newar ethnicity if I get a Newar Rajya in the valley. Can I build a fortress out of all the bricks produced in the kiln in the valley and the strong cement imported from the Terrai employing the emigrant workers from other states (different Rajyas) with different ethnicity and belligerently drive away all people from other castes and ethnicities from the capital and party to think that I will not have to go beyond the hills circling the valley of Kathmandu? Can I have Newar substitutes for my friends from all ethnicities? I mean also for the 700 facebook friends- a Newar substitute for each non-newar. I don’t know why these ideas do not appease me.

May be my analysis is wrong and this isn’t what we want from our Newar Rajya. May be we want to discriminate on all imports and exports from the state, locally consumed or otherwise. I mean pay higher perks to local workers and employees, lower taxes for local business owners, higher business mark ups for local businesses, or may be lower prices on daily necessity goods for instate residents and vice versa for everyone else. Well, this is a very good idea to earn some intrinsic benefits for ego satisfaction and extrinsic benefits on consumer goods since we will have an upper hand economically owing to the large influx of out of state non-resident migrants from all over the country. Can we live in seclusion and sustain on our own without cooperation and coordination from all Nepali? Does the prevalent economy discriminate Newars from Brahmins, Chhetris, Magarats, Tharus, Tamangs, Tamuans and the likes? I guess, it may be a new possibility in the future in the form of state segregation we believe in. Unlike the visionary protestors, I simply cannot seem to be able to map the road ahead after such segregation of the country. May be this is the answer to all our woes so far we’ve been subject to since eons. This will probably bring peace, harmony, progress and prosperity in all of our hearts not just our nation.

Amidst all these selfish demands and egotistic protests, we might have forgotten a pretty valid analysis which I have come up with, something I don’t want to be true in the heart against what I hear in the mind. I have questioned myself many times, but my query is still left unanswered. Is it because this is out of context from everything happening around us that we’re dumbstruck by such naïve question or is it the other way round that everyone else is prone to naivety?

Well, I don't know how the Genes in the youngsters growing up today, seeing all the events in Nepal right now, will change their pattern and mold their behaviors, characteristics, emotions, and many more aspects associated to human nature?

The current events in Nepal will only foster violence and addiction, famine and obesity, as per the genetic theory that says, for instance, "A pregnant woman living during a famine or violent uprising will develop a body mechanism that changes the pattern of genes in the unborn and will make the unborn child prone to health diseases like blood pressure, diabetes and obesity, as the genes of that child will develop patterns that guide the body to store all kinds of nutrients without fully utilizing or foster a pattern in the child to be prone to addictions, violence and crimes to name a few.

This trend of conflict and political strife will never end. The minds of the youth, grooming up in this state of the country will have a permanently damaged IMPLICIT MEMORY (study this) and these experiences aid in the performance of similar violent conduct without conscious awareness of those previous experiences. This is what explains why countries who are victims of years of violence, internal conflict and wars will always be trapped in this vicious never ending cycle.

Nepal's future will be doomed, and Nepali leaders' "disdainful" visions of changing Nepal into Switzerland/USA in 20 years will be delayed by another 2 centuries.

This is where I see us being led to by the current culture and if we don’t change our perception of everything around us, we will be enlisted as a failed country. It will be the biggest disgrace for all Nepalese, local and emigrants, and this is a warning call for us and an ominous prelude to the ultimate failure of humanity beckons in the futures.
I hope we don’t fail the beauty of humanity. We are humans because we have emotions and Nepalese have more empathy than anyone I have met from around the world. Have we transmuted from what we used to be and faltered under the contagious disease of the mind called myopia something which is discernibly loud in our visionaries? I bet not!


-        Written By: Romeo Maskey (रोमियो मास्के)
Date- May 20, 2012

Friday, March 30, 2012

Is Nepal Ready for Change?

A question that raised doubts over my belief, something that had me, for once and for the first time, contemplating migration to a place where people actually understand, a question that is easier to read than to understand analytically: Is Nepal ready for change? Are Nepalese ready to bear the responsibility? Are they really up for the challenges for the road ahead?

Well, I have been talking about quite a few things in the last few months and this piece comes to you as no surprise and you probably are already thinking, “Oh! Here we go again. Here comes another critical analysis of the recent turn of events in the Nepalese political scene.” Well, I am sorry to disappoint you all who think this is the same thing done in a different way and I would like to iterate that we can get tired of eating food, even if it could be presented with a different course with a different zing and a different garnishing. After all we’re all ordinary humans, we do run out of patience from the persistent monotonousness; if we had that extra little patience, we’d all be successful and should not be since there can be no utopia; it is all but a fallacy.

So before I begin, let me clear out on a few issues about the education system of Nepal, the shrine for every student where the fundamental principle states: Ignorance is Bliss, that will put the scrutinizing eyes of a political party’s disciple under the radar who are, but bulls on a parade, running havoc after every red print they see, like the disciples do, obliterating every obstacle that stands in the streets in front of campuses on every little technically tough economic paradoxical event that transpires in Nepal, for instance fuel price hike, that is not taught to them in class to understand, which is: Campuses and Colleges are not places to be for the faint-of-hearts; you’ve got be ready to pelt a few stones, may be a few large bricks and pour some fuel over government official’s vehicle and try to burn it down without caring much about who is inside and if it is a life-form that crawls and is left at the helm to run for its (and not his or her) dear life to stay safe from the fire that could catch on to its (his/her) fuel dripping shirt.

Who could blame them that they don’t understand. After all the education system’s policies and the courses were designed by people who didn’t understand them in the first place; they just copied and pasted from the libraries of Ivy League universities around the world, more prominently from USA. After all who cares about the thing called Education; it is for the ones who want to study in campuses/colleges, which for most is a place to sharpen their political skills and network to strengthen their nepotism skills and PRs, and then graduate to be disappointed at the government’s inability to provide jobs to satiate their daily needs.

Well, this outlines another incompetence of the government- to provide sufficient jobs to all of us. But then can we not create jobs? But why should we? Why should all of us innovate and be entrepreneurs only to toil too hard and to struggle more than our parents without guarantee of the state’s security for the wealth we could earn. Why work hard on our own, when we can relax and work at our convenience in government provided jobs? Well, isn’t it the bureaucratic jobs that the politically inclined students and the likes are demanding- be created? Or else what more can the state do than to encourage the people to take initiatives privately to create more jobs? But why would we even bother what the policies are made for; policies are for the makers to understand and use; we just want to demand for more jobs because demanding is our right because it is our basic citizen right; that is the current cult that our beloved forefathers showed us and paved similar paths for our destiny.

Well these are just secondary analyses; the primary issue is something that I had set out with to present to you before writing this, a question, that raised a few eyebrows of the karma-guides inside me, the voices that guide me through all my mortal karmas: Do Nepalese know what they are doing or are they just doing because that’s what they grew up seeing but have no real clue as to why they are doing and if it is really what is the absolute necessity of the hour to resolve the current political-economic stalemate; a state of the country where economic and political welfare has been ensnared to halt the progress? Are Nepalese like Bulls on Parade, who have herd mentality but have gone wild, only because the first one saw a cult that it didn’t like, more like the red print that triggers the bull’s rampaging run towards anything that moves; it is not the red colored cloth held by the Matador that snaps the bull’s temper but the hours long incarceration inside a small box like space, where the drunk bull has absolutely no mobility, that enrages the bull to go rampaging after anything that moves and red obviously catches its eyes/attention.

Similar is the situation here in Nepal; people feel confined and so they have been, as they have been kept away from the elusive education for so many years, something that provokes, encourages and enables expression. How frustrated would I be if I couldn’t write all that I felt and feel free while expressing like this, the way I am writing right now? It is obvious that my frustration would be boundless and it could protrude out in the form of absolute violence or even erupt, annihilating everything around me and all that I would require is a cause, a reason, to be mad at something. And that is exactly what the people of Nepal are going through. Nepalese are enslaved by their inability to express, what one could do through education, the education that could teach every one of us ways to learn to do things that would define what we are, how we are, where we are and more importantly what we want.

But there, obviously, is something that our educational system finds itself short on. It has not been able to quench our educational thirst, our thirst for knowledge and skills enhancement. Well, our educational system teaches us theories but leaves us in oblivion, from where we see no practical use of the theories that we’re taught in class. We are not taught skills to learn, but skills to mug up theories without reasoning the very existence and emanation of those theories. We are taught to take what we are given but not take what we want. This is where it all starts going wrong; if only we were taught to take what we want, we would know what we want, in the first place, then learn that we have to earn to achieve what we want, then learn to learn and develop skills that we want to use to earn what we want. That way, we would be self sufficient and not too demanding like a spoilt brat of rich parents. In turn, we would be less demanding saying it is not our inherent right but rather teach us to fight the right fight the right way to earn our right to earn what we really want from everything, life is the least in that regard of wanting out of.

Well instead of implanting such analytical desires and thoughts, we’re taught to seek shorter ways out from this political, economic, geographical, societal, and in so many more ways oblivious nation that have held our free mind hostage, captivating our imaginative minds into thoughts that show that education simply doesn’t suffice, it needs the backing of public relation skills and political link ups for sheer need of nepotism to have a very good job placement which could earn us enough to satiate our daily family necessities which is but unhindered by the imminent inflation. The figure of the inflation simply awes most lower-middle to middle class people and gives Goosebumps at the thought of falling victims to that ghost-of-a-thing called poverty. It is a recently revealed fact that the 10% inflation in the economy of Nepal last year left 6 Lakh Nepalese into that trap, that grip of a monster called poverty, something that staves off families from proper healthy food and nutrition, and gives diseases, something that the affluent class people aren’t quite aware of, and certainly not aware of the horrendous ill-effects stemming from that alien thing called poverty.

And so emanates an absolute necessity to have political linkages and be the political disciples of different political affiliations without understanding the core values of those theologies. What is more inexorably disturbing is the fact that you wouldn’t get admission to a college without a political reference, thrusting politics into the mind of every free soul that may or may not be there for sheer education. This is less of a political distortion compared to the renowned fact that campus chiefs are chosen by students who lobby for the chiefs, evidently proving that all systems are run by the students who didn’t devise the system, rather they are the puppets, the byproducts of the disorganized unethical system called politics. Well that’s what politics is to all, who don’t want to have to do anything with it. But still they will vote and choose people, running for campaigns, to run the system yet they will stay afloat from the dirt and filth of politics and later complain about the very policy-and-implementation level incompetency of their chosen representatives. Well why would we try to delve into these issues of politics? Let the manipulators do it; we will all but complain about them among ourselves in our social gatherings and parties. Well that’s one share of beliefs of the self-considered intellects of Nepal who would just witness all malady that transpire around them yet stay timidly in the comfort of their upper middle bungalow and higher class mansions watching/reading the news, belittling every low life who dwindles around such political fuss, saying nothing is okay but still they don’t care, since they have higher things to contemplate and advocate issues that require their immediate attention. Yet, change they can’t even if they wanted to, if only they understood the root causes underlying every theatrical upheaval stirred up by all unethical political assemblages. They are higher beings in their self-belief, yet could be enlisted in a different set of books for human douches.

So it is pretty evident that politics is not a luxury for students and the people seeking political asylum or affiliation but an absolute necessity. And like they say necessity is the mother of all inventions and innovations, new political wings emerge from absolute void, without a firm core theological values but just a modification based on needs of the needy; needy in this case are the people seeking political backing and not the people in dire need for change.

Now I slowly draw you upon a malady that shaped up outside a campus right under my nose, a theatrical scene that could shake up even the firm heart ones let alone the faint of hearts, and with this scene shook my belief on the people for whom I believed I could do a little, if anything at all, to change lives and touch lives. The more prominent questions that oozed out of my conscience were, will they understand who did what for them and for what and the sacrifices made for them. Can they discrete between their well-wishers and their nemeses, the masquerading friends who stab them on their back, the very back that gave them the lift, a support to rise beyond human reach to the status of stars, upon whom, they bestow all faith to carry forth the torch of radical progression through trusted leadership? Can one be absolutely sure that the very mass, he/she propelled forward will not overwhelm with brute force to quench their insatiable desire for self proficiency and self development? More importantly, I asked myself, “Is Nepal ready for change; are Nepalese ready to bear the burden of responsibility of running their country?”

Okay avoiding further bewilderment, let me portray the scene in front of Tri Chandra campus in the Jamal passage where tempos and micro buses stop to queue to off load passengers en route to the Tourism Board lane, which still is picturesquely Ratna Park as per the ticketing staff at the micros and the bus drivers. How ironically convenient to call that place Ratna Park and for the passengers to still say they’re going to getting off/on at Ratna Park?

As I looked exuberantly in hopes that there was no turmoil around that area from a slowly running micro, I was onboard, offloading the passengers, the ticketing staff asked everyone onboard to get off at Jamal, since, to my disappointment, there was a traffic blockade caused by mass student protest shaping up outside T.C campus area and all micros were going off course to take a different route back to transporting commuters and travelers alike. I had to be at Koteshwor before my watch hit 9:30 am, which was showing 9:15 am when I peeked in to my watch, and I started walking towards Ratna Park area, ironically for me as well, since it is the old bus park area, and not actually Ratna Park, to catch another micro. Amidst the traffic chaos that was shaping around that area, I was struggling to cross the road to the T.C campus wall side as I stopped to give way to a sedan in front of me when I heard a rollicking smash, unaware that it was the sedan’s rear window that two students had smashed with bricks, since it was a bureaucratic car that was transporting a government bureaucrat, and they are the ones who suffer the wrath of the outrage of politically motivated students for the only recently obvious reason- the fuel prices were hiked unrelenting to the fact that fuel prices rose globally, more advertently in India, I tried to cross the road.

(Here also, knowledge of economics beyond class room theories is required which is not spoon fed to students who question a rather harmless question, “why did the government raise price of fuels since that will contribute to inflation,” still unaware that knowledge cannot be completely assimilated in a book taught in school in a period of 3 very long years till graduation which less than abroad where all they do is waste their 4 precious years without getting to practice political nepotism skills according to our compatriot students. For them, this question is still elementary; why would you study 1 extra year when you learn everything that you need to learn in those 3 long years in college. They must be illiterates to not understand the economic value of 1 year in job market or nepotism as compared to an extra year in school.)

As I walked ahead, two other students ran right across me with what looked like petrol to me, at that instant, in a mineral water bottle and smeared the whole bottle inside the car from the open space in the rear window left by the crushed glass, thoughtlessly callous about the fact that there was a man, a human before he was a government bureaucrat, inside the car, who desperately reached out to the door knob, opened it hurriedly, and rushed out to safety to save his dear life, as the third student torched the vehicle without second thoughts about the repercussions of his/their act. As quick as the government official ran away to safety, I ran away from the scene fearing any accident that the situation was prone to witnessing and got on another random bus that was leaving the scene, frantically too, to avoid any confrontation. Thankfully, that bus was Nepal Yatayat destined for Koteshwor, lucky enough for even though it was certain that it would not take me to my destination on time. Yet I was glad that I had escaped any injury but left very disturbed at being as hapless as any individual would be caught up in an impromptu ambush by the vociferous students chanting anti government slogans on top of their lungs.

That disturbed conscience of mine was drawn deep into thoughts and then for the first time, I questioned myself about my determination, “Do I even want to pursue my dreams and future to help create something that could help shape up the economy with many people able drawing inferences from what I do and how I do?” Then stirred up another set of questions: could migration be a better option for me, now? This was the first time ever that such doubt had crept inside my rather sturdy-willed mind and I hoped, after recoup to my old resilient self, that it hadn’t sowed a seed of doubts over the nation and with it the people.

As the day progressed, more questions formulated inside my mind like, “Am I not part of this country? I should support the people’s cause since that’s what we are- compatriots.” But then, what have we done on our part to question authorities about their deeds being right or wrong? Do we even understand how we're being bewildered by a phenomenon called herd mentality where we do things we don't even know why we are doing it right now, or continue doing it anymore?? I was absolutely livid with every darn thing that was transpiring in Nepal and what I witnessed on the street, in front of T.C triggered it with more ferocity.

So here’s an inference I drew from this incident: In the name of protest and fight against tyrannical government, we, the people, have become monsters who're being devoured by our thirst for violence and our fumed, enraged wrath befalls the innocent, who are left at the helm to run away for their dear life, like today itself, for being part of what the people consider are the tyrants- the government and the bureaucrats. So do I run on helm away from this madness and run away unable to tolerate the suffocation of this raging conflict between two groups which fabricate, but more importantly, complement each other and in Nepalese context are irrevocable parts of the eminent system? And I say, “What irony!!!!”


- Written By: Romeo Maskey (रोमियो मास्के)

Monday, February 20, 2012

An Analysis Opened by the Let There be Light Initiative in Nepal on Feb 18, 2012

“Hamro pala ma ta yasto loadshedding ta kehi thiyena, desh bikash bhanya yehi raichha.” When I heard my friends grandfather say this in my presence, I was drawn into a long pause and a deep contemplation trying to analyze the situation, but my 3 year less mature brain did not send millions of cognitively organized thought waves as it is doing after a sudden epiphany triggered by current avalanche of youth led initiatives and events to disapprove of the current woes of 14 hours of ever eminent load shedding we have to bear with every year during the regular dry season. It seems customary to associate winter and spring with dark days in Nepal, at most times insecure urban streets at night time prone to kidnapping, extortion, theft, and robbery, and at times higher pregnancy rates during the autumn- funny but undeniably silly fact associated with boredom during load-shedding.

My relatively disjoint thoughts could fail to stimulate the comprehensive part of the brain of many readers, yet some of you may have even formulated some well devised plan of action in regards to where you will try to carve out a few weaknesses in my argument and slam a strong word of criticism. Great, if you’re a few steps ahead of me! But for the majority, I merely ask for some patience as they say patience is the virtue; it opens the door to wisdom even to the fullest and the brightest of people. I may have drawn a little attention here with this statement but it is not an issue of seeking attention and being happy with recruiting an audience for this write up, it is more about getting drawn into the idea and understanding the gravity of the issue, requiring in depth analysis, than merely provoking the audience into some audacious acts of ingenuity.

Okay before losing the reader’s attention, I would like to bring into lime light this current issue of energy crisis and how there has been abrasive criticism by the recently effervescent and fired vocal youths, who are aware of the dire situation of the country that could lead each one of us to fall into pits of economic predicament from where there is no retrenchment from woes and humiliation of failed state and people.

Youths, like myself and millions occupying the streets protesting the current events unfolding in the nation; unlike thousands who sway away with a cult of emigration for better opportunities like education and higher paid jobs towards the west; who are strong in the mind and heart, with determination of a hyena and the will of a jackal to fight and take a firm stance for their rights and a cause for the nation- willing to fight the devil for this if need be- have recently started a zero tolerance policy here in Nepal. They have developed an attitude that discards something our ancestors and our predecessors did so gleefully and easily- compromise pompously; the youths don’t compromise even on a nine in any test on a scale of ten; they demand absolute clarity in policy and implementation, nothing short suffices to them on counts of luxuries, economics, politics, constitution, basic necessity and issues of the likes.

Thus, they have totally revolutionized the way youths intervened in the authoritative directives and planning through a contemporary initiative on the social platforms, like facebook and twitter, to summon the youth and urge everyone here in Nepal to stand up against State monopoly or incompetency of authority figures to resolve issues such as policy irregularities at political or bureaucratic level, or formulate a plan of action for progressive changes in favor of people, democracy and peace.

Today was one such day when the youth had organized a musical event, a concert to be precise at Lainchaur, to protest the prevalent power outage woes that has blind folded the nation and with it, its leaders to imperialize power deals with other nations, and keep spreading the wings of NEA (Nepal Electricity Authority)’s monopoly by distributing feeder lines of power supply in the name of glistening Nepal; totally disregarding the consequences evidently in the form of longer power outage in the urban areas which didn’t have the current stretch of load-shed hours for a long time before and the public have be bewildered to think otherwise. No wonder we’re left to spend more time of a day in darkness than my friend’s grandfather did in his time in the then Kathmandu.

Yet, there seems to be something missing and these events have taken back seat to be back-headlined in some small time news media and not even, as much as, cause a little tremor in the stance of such sturdy, reckless, and visionless, yet reluctant to let go of power, leaders of the nation. So what is it that we need now, if this doesn’t work in our favor, or are we on the right track to make way for some positive changes in the energy policy of Nepal? Most don’t have an opinion on this and rest will not dare to differ on a different proposition that the youths have brought up to fight off this energy stalemate; after all an initiative is an initiative and no one can counter that unless otherwise proven and given enough time to prove anything and to comment on.

Yet I dare to differ on this on grounds that our approach is still dependent on the authority figures. We still believe, it is only the government’s and the bureaucrats’ responsibility to initiate development activities and we only demand solutions and grade their performance which could be a wrong attitude to bear within us. We have to believe that the government can merely form policies to ease and promote involvement of private sector in the energy sector to come up with projects to resolve this energy crisis, which they have been trying to do. But what are we doing on our part in the name of initiatives; what have we done with our savings and investments? Should we only demand for results and be unforgiving on this or should we also take initiatives, get more involved in problem solving and contemplate new ways of producing energy?

These questions may be a little too vague, but then, they open a new dimension to a new set of solutions that emerge with critical enormity in substance and effectiveness. Don’t you see that these social groups and events to express outrage and dissatisfaction could be used to form platform for all youths to converge on a big project idea or even more. The idea here is to form single unanimous group or multiple groups who could start energy companies by collecting funds from everyone and then invest in a big idea for alternate energy solution.

There are so many alternate energy projects that could make way or, if we choose, we could even opt for the orthodox hydro power projects to start up; the banks could get involved, too, in these public projects- the public equity could be in the form of stocks or bonds, with bonds being a more secure and favorable option of the two.

Yet there is something new in the proposition. People, I know, have been contemplating starting a solar powered thermal power plant after some feasibility assessment for technical feasibility, financial feasibility and location feasibility to choose the optimum scale to start the project in the best location. It is high time we get involved ourselves to do research into optimum ways of resolving this energy crisis.

Enough of this blame-game; it is not always appropriate to question without bothering to find the solution if the answer reveals an underlying problem in a situation. We have to stop blaming the authorities for all things we don’t have. We have to ask ourselves- do we want to keep shoving the unrelenting firemen to put off the fire in our house when we can take a million buckets of water with joint effort and put off the fire ourselves given that the firemen have taught us firefighting skills. Well, this is a simple analogy which even the elementary will understand.

Are we even noticing the new changes in policy taking place that the government has put into effect after full-fledged lobbing by two giants: TeliaSonera and Surya Group's Sipradi, Nepal. I guess we are so focused on blaming the authorities that our eyes are blinded by this lust for blame. Has anyone even heard of the solar valley concept where solar power plants are being conceived in the capital for start up and to spread across the nation. If not then to make you all aware about this, let me stress that it is a concept of flexing the muscles of the solar energy with each house getting solar lit system and probably getting to even distribute the phase lines to neighbors given that they have installed powerful system and are capable of distributing to locals in nearby areas. Well, to put this prospect into perspective let me again stress that NEA which is the soles distributor of electricity isn't all that selfish to not let big players make changes to their monopoly policy and suppress the emergence of bigger players with bigger ideas.

Yet the question is did we do anything about this? Do we even know about these changes taking place in a place we call home and earn our livelihoods? If we are unaware about these and are sitting in the comfort of our couches reading this and at times hit the hit with all zeal to protest the government's flaws, do we think we are in position to question the authorities? Are we the proponents of change that we so long to thrive for. Mere wanting and shouting doesn't earn the rights; we have to even act and think big to make the difference and have the rightful ways of questioning the authorities, if we see that even after all our die hard effort, no changes are visible and that the implementation is a total failure. But still we have to question ourselves did we try to implement it ourselves; as aware as we are about the dire energy crisis in the nation, do we contribute to energy efficiency and energy saving as excess energy consumption also contributes to global warming causing green house effects. Just because we can and we have, doesn't mean we should and we do. Think, Analyze, Cognize and then Act after which assess the effectiveness of the consequences. It is high time we rethink our strategy and ask ourselves are we treading upon the right grass or are we right on the wrong grass.

Yet there is no denying to fact that this is the attitude that will win over many wars for the youth, given they choose the right weapons and new fighting techniques to scare off the ubiquitous monster called oblivion of the older generation to progressive ideas and contemporary development issues. Not many of the older generation have the exuberance and the enthusiasm that baby boomer brings with him or her with outrageous ideas of political upheaval or mass protest through technology, at his or her disposal, like social networking sites. The issue here is getting the right idea and finding the right pressure points to relieve the anxiety. And it could be in not only analyzing the issues to bare the problem and dissect the anatomy of the problem but also to come up with good solutions to those problems.

We need such energy and enthusiasm to lead us into the right way but it is totally upon us to pave a better path to righteousness. So are we on the right track or have we tread on the wrong grass where a wrong step could contribute to a slip that could put an end to the total investment of time, effort and energy into one mass global upheaval, not starting and not ending in Nepal.

The first step towards Socialism: Will the Road Widening Lead to Path of Righteousness or State Failure?

“The government’s stance on removing the tramps from the Bagmati banks to be reversed says Prachanda.” A news paper headline on a local newspaper had caught my eyes on a casual afternoon bask in the sun. I just breezed through it without drawing much inference from it to what was going on around in the city and for that matter, had very little time to delve into the issue that had drawn the government’s vocal critic to pelt an avalanche of stones with dire abuse of authoritarian accusations.

I was aloof to the current situation in the nation much alike the majority of the Nepalese crowd who need to wake up to the alarming sounds of changes in the state’s plan of action- a move that very few could coin with the first prominent step towards socialism. This analysis of mine could come to many as a surprise but what will follow about my analysis from what I had witnessed, transpire here in the nation over the last few months could raise a few critical eyebrows and some concerning looks in speculative capitalists’ faces.

Don’t be surprised, you’re in for a treat a lullaby for many of you to go back to sleep after reading this as you or should I say, we, Nepalese, have been over the last few decades being only moved by a political storm of outcry to take a stance against coup or autonomy and letting our visionary politicians lead us through so many cuts and bruises that saw us almost lead from the bottom in GDP, HDI and many more ranking of countries in the world.

Avoiding further bewilderment let me converge on the issue at hand and take you to a scene from a few days back that had me bemused and rethink my future here in Nepal. Okay, the scene was from Thursday when I was walking past the Lainchaur- Lazimpat section of the city’s road reaching the Ambassador Hotel area, where a mob had been summoned, thanks largely to the agitating irate protestors against the demolition, the employees and the management of Ambassador Hotel, victims to the recent government move to widen the road citing traffic congestion, to witness the scene that had dramatized the theatrical stage surrounding the road blockage and an ever eminent road strife, strike.

I then thought about the hundreds of people/families who would see their houses bulldozed to mere trash, that the municipality would clean up in a few days but the picture we fail to see there, that the victims fail to portray, is that of their dreams and years of yearning come crumbling down in a matter of few hours at the name of development. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t oppose this noble act of development. After all, we do live in a day and age of fast changing progressive economy where our works and plans, even great ideas can’t be stalled by a mere traffic. I definitely second this cause and the initiative of the state, to ease our daily woes. Yet I cannot shy away from any indiscretion in the authorities’ decision which I saw in this act.

Okay, then my journey to the Office of Internal Affairs and Revenues to register for the PAN for a NGO, that I founded as the Secretary at Board, started becoming less of a journey for my foot and more so for my mind to seek answers to a wave of questions that have oozed out from a mere scene and a flashback to the random news in a local newspaper from a few days ago during my sun bask.

Then my analytical cognitive mind started weaving a wave of analytic reasoning, of which one was: Why would the government even think about the people who reside in the sides of the road; they are nothing short of affluent and have other alternative places/houses to seek asylum into? The compensation that the government are giving which is Rs 2000 per square feet is way less than their market rate and not even a hair’s strand to satiate those people’s appetite for capitalistic thoughts of multiplying the hundreds of millions in rupees in monetary value that could be brood from the sale of those land and buildings. But who cares? The state doesn’t; the state has big plans to cash in on the multibillion rupees road construction project and proliferate from the eased off traffic that could earn a trillion in returns for every minute of a road passerby’s invaluable time saved that was always wasted in the prolonged road mileage that had for ages deferred, and in most cases, hindered the state’s plan to pave way for economic acceleration.

Yes, we are talking about big bucks involved here. The nation could be in for a treat and the road widening projects could see a new wave of construction vacancies being announced in local newspapers, and we could hope for the less fortunate labor society of the nation to be bred in Nepal, and not resort to seeking restitution in some Arab or South East Asian country for some hard earned penny that is the backbone of the nation’s GDP and a filling factor of the nation’s trade deficit, without the imminent nepotism. These are projects that could yield high labor absorption in the newly created job market, and not employment programs of longevity, but who cares? Do we live for centuries or even 70 or 80 years more from today in to witness what happens in Nepal? No! So why bother about longevity? We live in the present and so should our main focus and goals be.

Apart from the hundreds and thousands of jobs that will be created here, we’re in for absolute treat at the sight of smooth highways and cars screeching across the wide highways making way for more luxurious cars, some that will belong to the very affluent class and rest to expats, diplomats, bureaucrats, and politicians. So, see even here, the affluent class proliferates from the sacrifice they make right now. They could see the vehicle taxes, currently being paid, to be lowered and make way for some new hot deals in classy sedans and sleek SUVs.

After all their loss is their victory in the long run, only if the state treats them to better offers of socialistic policies. Well, that’s what the socialistic political proponents: the government, envisages to offer according to what our Numero Uno once said in a statement, where he said, there will be special arrangements for some special treats and facilities to be offered to the affluent people of Nepal if they willingly depose off their wealth in the government’s trust in the name of individual social responsibility. This indeed would be the highest level of achievement for the riches of the nation: an act of altruism for attainment of absolute nirvana when they are still in their flesh and blood. Yes, they would then be at the top most level of Maslow’s Need Hierarchy theory, something of an achievement for the state that not even the riches of the first world countries could brag about.

We are different and we’re proving it right here. We caress our less fortunate and write off our affluent class, as we have to move to a state of the working class, where the laborers matter and not the labor creators because the government will create more jobs than what the capitalistic affluence has been able to do so far. Who would stand up and protest against a socialist government run business? No one! Hence there will be smoother functioning daily chores for the people to focus on and not indulge in the ever-present imminent issues of strikes and agitations. Even the people are pro socialism or so it seems or better put: that’s what they are asking for- someone to thrush them through economic progression and development with a whiplash.

That will then see a rise of the tramps to stardom- an absolute stature of pioneers, who could have foretold the future with a pinch of reality about what is happening and the path of socialistic culture we’re treading on had we been awake to witness and analyze the happenings around us, but instead ended up being pioneers who, in the nurture and shade of socialist leaders, promote a culture of vagrancy. They could well be starlets who are proponents of minimalism far away from the charisma of capitalists.

So are we awake and seeing the events unfolding around us and even analyzing what could, would and will be the after math of the present journey towards socialism, our so called visionary leaders have quested as the nation’s destiny? Or are we just so discordantly disapproving of the wrong doings that affect our personal and to some extent professional lives and are aloof about the situation; then may be in a wide awake trauma of the nation’s political party led stir and agitation, seek restitution for all the rights that are so wrong, the ones that we saw and could resist, yet we choose to just quietly concede to these unwelcome changes and later bemoan our imperceptibility.

The issue, here, is evidently not of critiquing the development plan or pelting stones of sharp words at the eyes that envisage a new Nepal, but of seeking impartiality in judgment. What we need now is an eye that envisions a path towards economic prosperity that doesn’t discriminate between its citizens on political prowess or on bureaucratic nepotistic reach or on affluence and disgruntled physiological needs? We need a mind that cognizes a need for the affluent class to prosper and create more jobs, a working environment where all involved thrive and a nation that walks with all its citizens hand in hand. My mind just drew an analogy between this metaphor and the story of “perish for the haves and cherish for the haves-not” which is about equal treatment. If the vagrants can’t be removed without proper recuperation, then so be it even with the comparatively affluent ones; their silence can’t be taken for granted as a conceit out of wealth and power, and their far cries also need to be addressed by the state and the so-called visionaries.

Yet, we should still ask ourselves, “Are we treading into a path of righteousness of one of self destruction where the nation could be a failure?”