Posters Note: Would highly recommend any one with 'doubts' about the Revolution 
in Nepal to read this article from the current issue of 'Revolution', paper of 
the Revolutionary Communist Party (USA). The article refers to The DVD "Eight 
Glorious Years of Nepalese People's War" highlighted at footnote 3 or click 
http://www.rwor.org/a/007/nepal-refutation-harpers-article.htm#footnote3 . 
This 4 Hour DVD is available from Eight Glorious Years, BM BOX 7970, London, 
WC1N- 3XX, England or e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] for bookshop outlets and how to 
obtain via postal service. An essential DVD for public meetings / events and 
proving the Mass carachter of the Revolution in Nepal and exposing media lies!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
http://www.rwor.org/a/007/nepal-refutation-harpers-article.htm
 

A Refutation of Harper's Article on the Maoists in Nepal
Telling Lies in Kathmandu
Revolution #007, June 26, 2005, posted at revcom.us 

Eliza Griswold's article, "It's Not Easy Here in Kathmandu--Caught between the 
Maoist rebels and the king's army" appeared in the May 2005 issue of Harper's 
magazine. I have traveled into the guerrilla zones in Nepal and closely follow 
developments in this conflict, and I'm constantly angered by this kind of 
journalism which contributes to a growing mountain of harmful disinformation.
The Lie of "Caught in the Middle" 


People like Eliza Griswold are very disturbed by the reality that the Communist 
Party of Nepal (Maoist) now controls most of Nepal's countryside, their 
People's Liberation Army is able to mobilize thousands of guerrillas in battle 
against the Royal Nepalese Army (RNA), and in areas run by new revolutionary 
governments, they are radically changing the economic, political, and cultural 
life of millions of poor peasants.1 The Maoists began their People's War in 
1996 and, ever since, Nepal's ruling class has been in constant crisis over how 
to deal with this insurgency which is now threatening to seize power. But 
instead of a serious discussion about why the Maoists have grown so rapidly, 
Griswold's theme, indicated by her subtitle, is that the majority of people in 
Nepal are caught in the middle--between a brutal government guilty of 
horrendous human rights abuses, and Maoists who are even worse.

To paint this scenario, Griswold introduces: an 18-year-old girl in the RNA; an 
RNA Brigadier General trained at Fort Leavenworth; the editor of a conservative 
Kathmandu newspaper; the U.S. ambassador to Nepal; a doctor and several people 
at a center set up only for "victims of Maoist torture" (no victims of the 
RNA); villagers in a contested area in the Terai; two girls and the principal 
at Kathmandu Valley school who say they were "abducted by Maoists"; a human 
rights researcher who says "no one wants to abandon Nepal to the Maoists."

Almost all of these two dozen or so people are by definition hostile to the 
Maoists and were in cities or other areas under government control. Sweeping 
censorship and systematic disinformation by the Nepalese government2 have had a 
huge impact on people's opinions and what they know and don't know about the 
Maoists, not only internationally but within Nepal itself, and this is 
especially true among many of the people Griswold quotes.

Griswold talks to three Maoists--two rebels she arranges to meet along the 
roadside and a journalist who left the Maoists, was imprisoned and tortured by 
the government and now writes for a Maoist newspaper. There is a quote from a 
leader in the CPN(M). But other than this, there are no views from Maoist 
supporters and no conversations with people living in Maoist base areas.

In Griswold's "caught in the middle" scenario, Maoist supporters are simply 
written off as if they are not part of the people. But the People's Liberation 
Army is made up of tens of thousands of common peasants who are not "caught in 
the middle" but have joined the insurgency. And many more are participating in 
the new revolutionary governments.

In Nepal over 85% of the people are peasants in the countryside, desperately 
poor, malnourished, and exploited by corrupt officials, landlords, and 
moneylenders. Lower castes and oppressed ethnic groups face systematic 
discrimination under a rigid caste system. Women are intensely suppressed and 
treated as inferior in every facet of society. A king controls the army and an 
oppressive monarchy is deeply embedded in the ruling structures of society. The 
whole country is subordinate to, dependent on, and dominated by India and 
imperialist countries like the U.S.

The Maoist revolution aims to get rid of all this. The Nepalese regime rules 
over, enforces and is fighting to preserve all this. Are the masses of people, 
as Griswold argues, caught between these two fires? No! The Maoists are 
organizing and providing leadership to millions who are brutally and 
systematically oppressed by the system AND who are inspired by and support the 
Maoists' vision and concrete program for building a new liberating society.

Nepal's ruling class has not and cannot solve the basic problems of food, 
water, sanitation, and health care because this requires tearing up the 
existing economic, social, and political relationships within Nepalese society 
and between Nepal and other countries. While Griswold acknowledges the dire 
situation of the masses, she wants us to believe the Maoists are cynically 
"taking advantage" of and manipulating this. In truth, the Maoists have support 
in Nepal exactly because they are addressing the deeply embedded oppression 
people face. In areas they control real changes are taking place: 
redistribution of land, equal rights for women, end to the caste system, 
autonomy for oppressed ethnic groups, healthcare, education and the building of 
roads and bridges. Even a young woman in the government's army tells Griswold: 
"The Maoists have high principles.so they attract everyone who is interested in 
struggling for equality. Some of my friends from my village have joined them. 
If I lived
 in the village, I'd be a Maoist, too."

When I was in the guerrilla zones in 1999, I was very struck by the composition 
of the PLA squads and platoons. They were overwhelmingly made up of those on 
the very bottom of society--lower castes, ethnic minorities, peasant youth and 
many, many young women. This says a lot about the nature of this revolution.
Revolutionary Authority 


Let's get right down to it. People like Griswold may talk about government 
repression, deep poverty, and powerlessness among the poor. But they don't 
uphold the right of the people to really struggle against any of this. And what 
they hate a lot more than the oppressive status quo is revolutionary authority 
being exercised to actually transform the prevailing economic and social 
relations, as well as the culture and thinking that goes along with this 
oppressive setup. In effect, this is an argument that the people should just 
accept their horrible conditions and ends up justifying crushing the 
revolutionary struggle.

Griswold mentions that the Maoists hold power in 73 of the 75 political 
districts, but is content to stay in the disinformation zones and never goes 
into areas under Maoist control--which constitute most of Nepal! She doesn't 
even talk about what's happening in these areas. Instead, the view running 
through her article is that Maoist rule is a totalitarian and horrible thing.

But what is actually being accomplished under Maoist authority in Nepal? 
Another way to pose this is: What is the power the Maoists have achieved 
through armed struggle good for?

I could go into a lot of examples here. But just take the question of 
women--which revealingly Griswold doesn't talk about, even though the huge 
participation of women in this revolution is a fact widely acknowledged.

Feudal traditions like arranged marriages, dowries, and polygamy are enforced 
in many ways and under a mixture of feudal and capitalist rules; women's bodies 
are owned, controlled, and bargained over in everything from marriage to sex 
trafficking. Religious and cultural practices promote and perpetuate male 
domination. And everywhere a woman turns, her freedom and independence is 
policed and smothered. For women to be free of all this, the basic economic 
relations of land ownership in the countryside have to be upended. Control has 
to be taken out of the hands of the religious, political, and military forces 
which back up the tyranny of local landlords, corrupt politicians, and 
moneylenders. Social and cultural institutions which provide a foundation for 
the patriarchal control of fathers, brothers, and mother-in-laws have to be 
done away with. The whole education system has to be revolutionized.

And this is exactly what revolutionary authority and power is good for! In the 
Maoist base areas land is being redistributed, and for the first time women own 
land. Arranged marriages, polygamy, and other feudal traditions oppressive to 
women are no longer practiced. Wife beating and rape are severely punished by 
people's courts. Women are given the right to divorce, go to school, and fight 
in local militias as well as the People's Liberation Army. And women are equal 
participants in the new economic, political, and social life of the villages.

Extremely significant and liberating changes are taking place in the Maoist 
base areas, but Griswold cynically writes them off. When she sees men building 
the roof of a new school, her only response is to question why the Maoists 
charge a $3 tuition. For literally hundreds of millions of people around the 
world, life is dictated, ruined and suppressed by horrible caste distinctions. 
No amount of capitalist globalization and westernization has gotten rid of 
this. But Griswold doesn't even comment when she hears that in the Maoist areas 
caste distinctions have been abolished and intercaste marriages are common.

The Nepalese people need revolutionary change--not a "solution" within the 
present order which has as its foundation exploitative economic relations and 
intense social inequality, as well as an entrenched dependence on foreign 
powers. Daily life for the majority of people concretely and repeatedly 
demonstrates this--which is why the Maoists have real support.
Tales of Coercion and Terror 


Griswold's analysis includes quoting a man who tells her, "99 percent of the 
country don't like the Maoists"--a ridiculous claim given the growth of the 
insurgency, which even those unsympathetic to the guerrillas admit. But this 
goes along with Griswold's claim that the Maoists only get support through 
coercion and terror. She says: "The Maoists have begun to demand that every 
family sacrifice one person to their cause."

A reporter in Nepal for the Maoist newspaper Janadesh responded to Griswold's 
charge, saying, 

"The Maoists do not force anybody to fight. How can anyone force a man or woman 
to fire a gun? You need courage, dedication and spirit of sacrifice to become a 
fighter in the People's Liberation Army. It's not like playing video war games 
on a computer. It's a life and death struggle. Only the most courageous men and 
women can prepare themselves to fight for revolution. There is a saying in 
Nepal that 'a carried dog cannot hunt a deer.'"

Think for a moment. The guerrillas started off small and up against the brutal 
coercion of a regime backed by India and the U.S. How could the Maoists have 
achieved their current military and political strength without the genuine 
support and participation of thousands who believe in the goals of the 
revolution and on this basis are willing to go into battle and risk their lives?

There is video, photographs, and reports of massive Maoist rallies in the 
countryside.3 Reporters who have been in Maoist-controlled areas have written 
about the guerrillas organizing people to build roads, bridges, and schools.4 
During the 2003 negotiations 30,000 people attended a Maoist rally in 
Kathmandu.5And the RNA has engaged in battles where they faced thousands of 
guerrilla fighters. Can anyone seriously explain this as just "coercion"?

Most of the poor peasants in Nepal's countryside are illiterate and 
uneducated-- but they are not stupid and childishly na‹ve. They have 
experienced one system and are now beginning to see and live under another, 
revolutionary, system and are siding with it. The tens of thousands fighting 
against the government and the millions living under Maoist control are 
fundamentally NOT doing this because they are "intimidated and coerced."
Tortured Arguments 


Griswold quotes someone saying, "The Maoists torture roughly 60 percent of 
those in their custody, but the army tortures 80 percent."6 She talks with a 
doctor at a center for "victims of Maoist torture" who claims torture is 
increasing on both sides. She then writes, "His theory was that local Maoists 
and government forces were engaged in a game of one-upmanship over who could be 
more brutal. He cited the now familiar torture statistics for the Maoists and 
the government." (Note how Griswold gives a "now familiar" adjective to an 
unsubstantiated statistic.) This passes for "theory" about a serious conflict-- 
that the Maoists and RNA are having a contest over who can torture more?!

The Maoist guerrillas, unlike the RNA, do not believe "the ends justify the 
means." Their actions reflect their goal of bringing into being a new 
consciousness among the people that will lead to building a society aimed at 
getting rid of oppression and inequality.

One way this comes out is in how the Maoists treat prisoners of war in a humane 
manner along the lines of the Geneva Convention. The PLA has released many 
captured POWs in good health to the Red Cross or other human rights 
organizations.7 RNA soldiers and police captured by the Maoists have told 
reporters that while they had to listen to propaganda and were asked to join 
the revolution, they were not harmed. They were warned that if they were 
captured again, they would be severely punished, but they were given money and 
food so that they could go back to their village instead of returning to the 
RNA. This reflects the Maoists' policy of politically struggling with even 
those who are working with the government. I have heard numerous stories about 
the rebels giving such people at least three warnings, asking them to stop 
their counter-revolutionary activity, before administering any punishment.

The Kathmandu Post , reporting on 18 captured police, said, "Their release has 
a human ring about it. In fact the rebels had set them free only after handing 
out sums ranging from Rs 800 and Rs 1500 as expenses for their return 
journey... The freed hostages have said that the rebels did not misbehave with 
them throughout the period they were under their control. 'Don't involve in 
vile deeds. You would certainly have killed had you taken us under your 
control,' rebels have been quoted as saying. They also had sent two of their 
cadre to guide the cops out safely."8 

Griswold paints a picture where "both sides" are killing innocent people. But 
let's compare the policy and practice of the RNA and the PLA. The vast majority 
of the 12,000 killed since the start of the war have been civilians murdered by 
the Royal Army, along with suspected revolutionaries also tortured and 
murdered. And like the U.S. policy, from Vietnam to Fallujah, of "destroying 
the village to save the village," the U.S.-trained RNA has carried out human 
rights abuses against a wide swath of the population, killing thousands 
suspected of "supporting the Maoists," which could mean simply providing food 
and shelter for the guerrillas. Human rights organizations have documented how 
the police and RNA have burned whole villages and rounded up, tortured, 
murdered and jailed thousands of people. In 2003 and 2004, Nepal recorded the 
highest number of new cases of disappearances by security forces in the world.9 

On the other hand, the vast majority of people killed by the Maoists have been 
police and soldiers in combat. When others, like informants, have been 
targeted, this is because their actions have directly led to Maoists and others 
being jailed or killed.

The CPN(M) is leading a mass armed revolution which is unleashing thousands of 
poor, angry peasants. Their families were suffering and dying under "normal 
times." And now, the RNA and police are carrying out horrendous crimes against 
the people. When the people rise up against their oppression it isn't "nice and 
neat" and leadership is necessary for the struggle to go beyond bitter revenge. 
This is exactly what the CPN(M) is providing. On several occasions, the Maoists 
have issued criticisms of actions they felt were wrong and have even changed 
some policies after being criticized.10 
An Argument for More Blood, More U.S. Intervention 


Griswold quotes James Moriarty, the U.S. ambassador to Nepal, saying he is 
"appalled by how easily they [the Maoists] move through the country, how much 
terror they spread." And Griswold notes that "The United States has placed the 
Maoists on the State Department's terrorist watch list, one step below those 
groups that, in the ambassador's words, belong to 'The Great War on Terrorism.' 
" Moriarty says, 

"It's not Islamic fundamentalism, obviously. but it is a very fervent brand of 
Maoism that could cause great trouble in this area. They've said they're going 
to invade the United States. I'm not too worried about that, but you ignore 
what they say at your own peril. You can't pooh-pooh the Maoists and the threat 
that they represent."

I find it ludicrous that I even have to refute this ridiculous claim that the 
Maoists in Nepal have said they are going to invade the U.S. And I actually 
think Moriarty and probably Griswold know this is a lie. But this little lie is 
part of a bigger lie--that the Maoists in Nepal are terrorists, so backing the 
regime in Nepal is part of the "war on terror."

In 2002, Michael Malinowski, then U.S. ambassador to Nepal, stated that the 
Maoists in Nepal are "fundamentally the same as the globally recognized 
terrorists."11 And the 2002 proposal by Bush for $20 million in economic and 
military aid to Nepal said, "We currently do not have direct evidence of an 
al-Qaida presence in Nepal, but weak governance has already proved inviting to 
terrorists, criminals and intelligence services from surrounding countries."12 
The Maoists in Nepal have nothing in common with groups like al-Qaida, but this 
has not stopped the U.S. from trying to fabricate some kind of comparison or 
arguing that if the "terrorists" are not stopped in Nepal, the country will 
become a "safe haven" for other terrorists.

Griswold goes on to fuel an argument for more U.S. military aid and 
intervention. She interviews an RNA General and writes, "Peace, the general 
thinks, will be forged only through more military spending, particularly by the 
United States. 'More troops and better weapons will reduce the loss of human 
life,' he said. 'If we're weak, the Maoists will keep fighting. Unless our 
American friends help us, the Maoist problem may not be solved. Whether it's in 
the name of politics or religion, terrorism is terrorism whether you like it or 
not.' "

Here sits Griswold, talking to a general of an incredibly vicious army, and she 
is not only totally uncritical of what he says, but actually provides a forum 
for him to argue his case for even more weapons of murder and torture!



*****

So now, in the page of liberal Harper's, we've come to this: From an article 
that begins with a premise that "the masses are caught in the middle" between 
"two evil" forces, we come to the conclusion: one side should be crushed--the 
Maoists. These arguments in Griswold's article are hardly original. They aim to 
convince people--including those who might support such a liberation 
struggle--that while the government may be bad, the Maoists are worse, so there 
is no other choice but to support the regime. And they are an outright apology 
and justification for the bloody U.S.-backed war against a genuine, mass 
struggle for liberation in Nepal.

Li Onesto traveled deep into the guerrilla zones of Nepal in 1999 and is the 
author of the book, Dispatches from the People's War in Nepal (Pluto Press and 
Insight Press 2005), available from: Pluto Press, www.plutobooks.com; 
University of Michigan Press, www.press.umich.edu; Insight Press, 
insight-press.com; amazon.com; Revolution Books stores and outlets. Go to 
lionesto.net for photos, updates on news, reviews, and speaking engagements. 

---------------------------------

NOTES:

1. See: "The people's War in Nepal: Taking the Strategic Offensive," A World To 
Win , #31, 2005

[Return to article]

2. Under a state of emergency declared in November 2001, Maoist newspapers were 
raided and closed down, their staffs arrested. Editors and writers in the 
mainstream press were interrogated for simply quoting Maoist leaders in their 
publications. In the first nine months, 130 journalists were taken into 
custody. When King Gyanendra suspended parliament and grabbed total power again 
on February 1, 2005, soldiers were literally sent into newspaper offices to 
"edit" articles before they went to press.

[Return to article]

3. The DVD "Eight Glorious Years of Nepalese People's War" is available from BM 
BOX 7970, London, WC1N- 3XX, England or e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]

[Return to article]

4. Reuters News Service, "Amid war, Nepal rebels build road to win hearts," 
March 2005.

[Return to article]

5. BBC News, April 3, 2003.

[Return to article]

6. An article in the Kathmandu Post (September 20, 2004) on the report by the 
Center for Victims of Torture reported different statistics saying, said, "In 
recent years, almost 60 percent of the people detained by the state, and 40 
percent of those abducted by the Maoists have been physically tortured, 
inflicting a serious psychological blow on them besides causing them physical 
damage."

[Return to article]

7. See International Committee of the Red Cross Web page http://icrc.org/eng

[Return to article]

8. Kathmandu Post , November 26, 2002, "Freed cops say weapons let them down."

[Return to article]

9. Human Rights Watch report: "Clear Culpability --Disappearances by Security 
Forces in Nepal" available at: hrw.org/reports/2005/nepal0205

[Return to article]

10. See: "Nepal Rebels 'regret' bus deaths, launch probe," Reuters, June 7, 
2005; "Nepal: Maoists offer self criticism after bus bombing," AWTWNS, June 13, 
2005; and Dispatches from the People's War in Nepal by Li Onesto, the section 
on "Revolutionary Policies," pages 121-124.

[Return to article]

11. Indiatimes news online, February 26, 2002.

[Return to article]

12. FY 2002 Foreign Operations Emergency Supplemental Funding justifications 
available at http://www.fas.org/asmp/profiles/aid/aidindex.htm

[Return to article]




---------------------------------
This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolution Online
http://revcom.us
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 773-227-4066 Fax: 773-227-4497





                
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