Sri Ravi Raj Thapajee has made a very pertinent and succinct
observation about the problems and prospects of sending political
volunteers to the quake stricken villages. While all major parties are
in mutual competitions for marshalling their own volunteer corps of a
few hundred each--for which some of them are known to have unleashed
donation terror on the business community--Thapaji has his own
apprehensions that after all, these young politicians--who are there
in the parties in quest of shortcut to power, pelf and position--just
may not have the needed proficiency and motivation to be of help to
the quake victims such as skills in carpentry, masonry, and so on.
Instead, given their history of having acted merely as their party's
"storm troopers" quite often in the past--Comrade Biplab's cadres
beating up a person in the audience who had the temerity to ask a
question in their New Road meeting recently is the latest proof--the
most likely scenario is that they would just end up doing what they
know best, showing off with the already exhausted CDO and other local
officials, thus acting as another unwelcome distraction in the midst
of the misery that has overwhelmed them. But then, our parties are
only trying to do what they know best, hoodwinking people, that is
sure to further alienate them from the people. But they don't care,
because they have never cared. After all, in our form of democracy,
they are the ones from among whom we have to choose "our
representatives" in the next election.
If the parties really cared, they should realise that there are eight
lakh houses that need to be rebuilt, and rebuilt real fast. For this,
the only way would be to empower the villagers themselves with
unfettered access to resources, technical support and material supply.
The villages, all of them, have the tradition of parima, i.e a
traditional system of labour exchange under which they put together
the critical mass of labour needed for house building as they do
annually for paddy planting too. Therefore, as a precondition for
effective earthquake rehabilitation, the authority needs to be
devolved to the local communities themselves as fast as possible. But
then, these political animals are always there with their bhagbande
politics that would surely ruin things all over again in the
communities. Therefore, as suggested by Kedar Neupanejee from
Switzerland recently, Nepal now should emulate Pakistan during the
2005 earthquake in PoK when the then President, General Pervej
Musharraf took over the reign of control directly, put the army in
command, kept the politicians off-limit and made an exemplary work of
the rescue, relief and rebuilding operation. So, our President, the
cabinet, the army and the political parties too should put their heads
together, and decide to make the earthquake rebuilding an a-political
and professional work by entrusting the army with the support
operation in all the quake-affected districts even as the task of
rebuilding at the grassroots is devolved to the user groups of quake
victims themselves. Any other approach would be less than optimal in
its efficiency and effectiveness and to that extent, the betrayal of
the nation once again for mundane political gains and individual
profits.
Bihari Krishna Shrestha
On 5/25/15, rabi raj thapa <thapa.rabiraj@gmail.com> wrote:
> I am happy to see that so many of us are so seriously taking this issue
> that is very encouraging to think that finally our political cadres have
> got something to do that is constructive and positive other than holding
> street protest, mass meeting and rallies. But sending party cadres, youth
> volunteers without proper orientation and training to help and educate
> earthquake victims should not be like a blind person trying to lead another
> blind person. There is no spec of doubt that the volunteer cadres, who have
> always been taken as apple of the eyes to all ruling governments and
> political leaders who have so much faith and confidence in their political
> cadres and volunteers, they must be able to do what a marginalized Nepal
> fails to do.
>
> 1. It is good that political cadres are going to the needy, hungry
> and miserable people who want to rebuild and recover their shattered mind
> body and spirit, who want to build something out of their leftovers ,
> broken home, injured and helpless family members. If they see political
> RAMBOs IN MASSES, VISITING WITH FANFARE AND HIGH SPIRIT, with banners of
> different political parties, that must give a great boost-up to unfortunate
> and down-heartened poor people in the remote villages. *A James Bond sent
> from the Capital, well briefed and fully committed to do something without
> knowing what is it! P*olitical cadres are indoctrinated folk who may know
> more of their political ideology than the empathy and hard work. Developing
> villages at this stage is not like holding a political mass rally or mass
> meeting. If we really look at our political cadres, how much are they good
> in education, building skills, to live with the poor (because many of them
> must have taken political short-cuts to get away from poverty, unemployment
> and hardship of life. If you ask them they may say that they did not join
> politics to work hard and study well and to serve the country; they have
> joined politics to come closer to the power centers, to learn and imitate
> political leaders that is nothing but a *FAST TRACK to PERKS, POWER and
> POSITION. *We may have heard all our leaders have only one mantra "जोगी
> cadres with a great speech from* political suprimo* may work like a magic
> touch. Therefore, I better leave it to all who have a golden dream that
> political cadres are the angles of modern Nepal and they can do wonders
> like what the youth volunteers of Comrade Mao Ze Dong had done and achieved
> during their *Cultural Revolution in China.*
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