The constitutional process
Art therapy to heal wounds of July landslides in Gulmi
The four major political parties, including MJF (Loktantrik), which had earlier declared itself out of the ongoing constitutional process, have on Sunday agreed to give continuity to Constituent Assembly procedures. Accordingly, the dissenting parties have been given a week to table their desired amendments to the draft constitution. MJF (Loktantrik) has made it clear that the draft in its current form is unacceptable and significant amendments will have to be made to take Tharus and Madheshis into confidence. We believe one week is more than enough for this—if there is political will to work out a viable compromise. But for such compromise solutions to emerge the two sides in the constitutional debate will first have to start talking. Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, after his informal consultations with Madheshi and Tharu leaders, has said he is still 'positive'. During these consultations, the protesting Madheshi-Tharu alliance asked the prime minister to honor past agreements with the two communities. Another of their demands was that the Nepal Army 'deployed' in some troubled areas in Tarai be sent back to barracks.
It is now clear that some forces, both in and outside the country, want to foil the constitutional protest at any cost. They will stand firm against any viable federal model. Whatever their immediate political calculations, it will not be in the interest of any of the political parties that own up post-2006 changes to let these divisive forces prevail. This is why it's important to take the disgruntled forces into confidence and end the constitutional process without any further delay. The longer the process drags on, the greater the room to play for these destabilizing elements. Again, if Nepali people are to write their own constitution, there is absolutely no more time to waste. It's still possible.