Skip to main content

EDITORIAL: Stop Intimidating Citizens

EDITORIAL: Stop Intimidating Citizens

KATHMANDU (The Kathmandu Post/ANN) - Government’s action against Lenin Bista is a naked display of power.

Lenin Bista’s life took an unusual turn when, at a tender age of 12, he was recruited by the Maoists to fight against the Nepali state. He was one of the 2,972 children who lost their childhood to the insurgency.
Today, at 27, Bista is still fighting-but without a gun. He is now fighting against the social stigma associated with being a former Maoist child soldier. And he is fighting for justice and survival for his peers who are disillusioned with the dreams of a revolution filled in their minds more than a decade ago. Most of his former ‘child comrades’ are now either unemployed or have paid their way to the Gulf or Malaysia. Bista, on his part, heads an organisation that works towards securing reparation for the former child soldiers.
Now a full-time social campaigner, Bista was about to fly to Bangkok last week to attend a program when he was held at the Tribhuvan International Airport by immigration officials. Arbitrarily and instantly, his name was included in a temporary ‘blacklist’.
The fact that he was stopped after being issued a boarding pass and having cleared the immigration procedure speaks volumes of the ever-tightening grip of the Oli government on individual freedom in the country. More so in this case, because the former Maoist leadership that is now part of the government was anxious that Bista would raise the issue of war crimes at an international symposium-or even implicate senior Maoist leaders for recruiting children for their armed insurgency.
The ex-Maoist Centre is accused of committing a litany of atrocities during the bloody 10-year war in which more than 12,000 lives were lost and an estimated 1,200 were forcibly disappeared. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and the Commission of Investigation on Enforced Disappeared Persons (CIEDP) were set up to investigate conflict-era human rights violations and abuses, but the work of these commissions have been half-hearted and debilitated by weak legislation and a lack of political will. Now, by joining forces with the UML to form a single communist force, the former rebels are wielding their new-found political influence to hinder investigation into war crimes.
The government’s action against  Bista is a naked display of power authorities are wielding on outspoken voices, and the menacing network of surveillance the administration is keeping over citizens. Banking on its parliamentary majority, the government is experimenting with new levels of high-handedness each day, which is against the ethos of democracy. Rather than facilitating justice and rule of law, the government is turning its powers against citizens.
Today it is Lenin Bista, tomorrow it will be someone else. By silencing activists and dissenting voices, the government is creating servile, unquestioning citizens. Now more than ever, it is imperative that the citizens vehemently challenge the government’s tactics. Our future, and the future of this democracy, depends on it.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

About Me

Lenin Bista from Kavrepalanchok district was recruited as a child soldier in 2002 when he was 12 years old. He served the Communist Party of Nepal – Maoist’s ‘People’s War’ for seven years before the peace process started in November 2006. During the verification for integration into the Nepal Army by the United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN), Bista along with other 2,973 child soldiers were declared unfit and incapable. Since then, Bista has been leading the Discharged People’s Liberation Army Struggle Committee along with his friends demanding the fair treatment of the discharged child soldiers and remove the label of ‘unqualified’ given during the integration process. They have been further demanding rehabilitation of those child soldiers who are adult now with financial support and a dignified recognition for serving the liberation of people during the war. Despite various attempts of several Maoist's splinters to obstruct their movement, Bista and his colleagues have bee...

काँग्रेसको प्रश्नः ‘निराशा’लाई बदल्ने काम प्रधानमन्त्रीको कि प्रेसको ?

काँग्रेसको प्रश्नः ‘निराशा’लाई बदल्ने काम प्रधानमन्त्रीको कि प्रेसको ? explore काठमाडौं access_time भदौ १२, २०७५ chat_bubble_outline 0 रातोपाटी संवाददाता काठमाडौं– प्रमुख प्रतिपक्षी दल काँग्रेसले प्रेस र न्यायपालिकामाथि नियन्त्रण गरेर शासन चलाउने प्रयास नगर्न सरकारलाई चेतावनी दिएको छ ।  मंगलबारको राष्ट्रियसभा बैठकको विशेष समयमा बोल्दै राष्ट्रियसभा सदस्य राधेश्याम अधिकारीले प्रेस स्वतन्त्रता र स्वतन्त्र न्यायपालिका बिना हुकुमी शासन चलाउने कल्पना नगर्न सरकारलाई सचेत गराए ।  कानुनको शासनबाट मुलुक चलाउनका लागि स्वतन्त्र प्रेस र स्वतन्त्र न्यायापालिका हुनु जरुरी रहेको भन्दै उनले हुकुमी शैलीमा मुलुकको शासन प्रणाली सञ्चालन हुन नसक्ने बताए । उनले ७ सय ६१ वटा सरकारलाई हुकुमी शैली र तजबीचको आधारमा चलाउन खोजिए संघीयता नै असफल हुने दाबी गरे । कानुनको सहि पालना गरि त्यसैका आधारमा अघि बढ्न पनि अधिकारीको सुझाव थियो । हालै सामाजिक संञ्जालमा प्रधानमन्त्रीको अनुहारलाई विरुप बनाएर केही टांसेर...
Politics The Strategic Implications of Indian Corruption Risk Intelligence What Will the Chinese Navy’s Next Frigate Look Like? Diplomacy Behind Vietnam’s COVID-19 Response, Deep Distrust of China Society What Do the May 1998 Riots Mean for Young Chinese Indonesians? Society The Philippines’ Pandemic Response: A Tragedy of Errors Economy Thailand: The Coronavirus Suicides Diplomacy Absent Without Leave? Gauging US Commitment to the Indo-Pacific Society Kyrgyzstan’s Forgotten Role in World War II Security India Killed Kashmir’s Top Militant Commander. What Now? Risk Intelligence How Will COVID-19 Reshape Asia’s Energy Future? Diplomacy COVID-19: Trouble on the China-Russia Border Securit Hate Goes Viral in I Through the Lens: Life and Politics in Asia Nepal’s Ex-Maoist Child Soldier Shares Plight of His 3,000 Peers About 3,000 former child soldiers in Nepal remain jobless. ...