South Asia Analysis Group 


Paper no.279

16. 07. 2001

  

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NEXT KARGIL? PRAIRIE FIRE IN NEPAL

 by B.Raman

Coinciding with the general strike called by them on July 12, the Maoists of Nepal killed two policemen and abducted 70 others in an attack on a police outpost at Holkari village in the Rolpa district, about 650 kms north-west of Kathmandu.

The Maoists subsequently declared the abducted policemen as Prisoners of War (PsOW) and offered to release them if the Government released the Maoist detenus. They also demanded that all Maoist detenus should be treated as PsOW by the Government.

In its first direct intervention in the counter-insurgency operations against the Maoists, which were till now being handled exclusively by the Police with the Army's help confined to defusing explosive devices, the Royal Nepal Army (RNA) surrounded the Nuwa village of Rolpa district, where the Maoists are understood to be detaining the abducted policemen.

The Government has reportedly denied press speculation that an encounter between the Army and the Maoists has already taken place in which over 60 Maoists have been killed.  It has been stated that for the present the RNA is concentrating on building psychological pressure on the Maoists in order to persuade them to release the detained policemen and surrender their personal weapons in return for safe passage to their base. The encirclement has already lasted over 40 hours without any results so far.

Troops participating in the operation have come from Brigade No. 4 stationed in Nepalgunj and headed by Brigadier General Bajra Gurung.  The Brigade comprises two battalions - Gorakh Bahadur and 1st Rifles - with a total strength of about 1500.  They are assisted by the Chandi Prasad Company, an independent battalion reportedly of specially-trained commandos, with a strength of 235.  Some paratroopers from the Bhairavnath Battalion "Gha" have also been moved to Rolpa and another team of paratroopers from the same Battalion with helicopter gunships has reportedly been deployed at the capital�s Tribhuvan International Airport.  All RNA units all over Nepal have been put on red-alert.

The RNA presently has six large helicopters, MI-17 and Super Puma, with a capacity for 35 persons each and about 12 smaller ones, Indian Cheetak and Puma.  One of the MI-17s was grounded at Dang on July 13 after the Maoists partially damaged it through ground fire.

Even before this incident, the RNA was reported to have concluded negotiations with Kazakhstan for the purchase of two more Russian MI-17 helicopters with sophisticated night vision equipment.  It is stated that two of the existing bigger helicopters have night vision "scopes" that can survey the ground during the nights, but are not well equipped for take off and landing without light.

The RNA reportedly briefed diplomats posted at Kathmandu on July 14 on its operations against the Maoists.

The Maoists announced on July 13 that the Bangladesh Communist Party, two different factions of the Proletarian Party of East Bengal, the Ceylon Communist Party (Maoist), the Communist Party of India (Maoist), the Maoist Communist Centre of India, the Indian Revolutionary Communist Centre, and the Nepal Communist Party (Maoist) have formed a joint committee to promote their ideas across the region and "to consolidate and strengthen the Maoists' people's wars in the South Asian countries."  A statement issued in Kathmandu on behalf of the committee said: "The massacre in the Royal Palace is a well planned conspiracy of the American and Indian expansionists as well as the die hard Nepalese fascist elements.  The incident has inclined the Nepalese people to turn Nepal into a republic.  The people's wars in South Asia should be stepped up in coordination with ongoing struggles in Peru, the Philippines and Turkey."

It also accused India's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of converting the party into an American stooge and of indulging in aggressive behaviour against leftist movements.

Meanwhile, the Communist Party of Nepal (United Marxist Leninist) and the Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre) have appealed to the Maoists to release the abducted policemen and urged the Government not to use the Army against the Maoists, lest it leads to a civil war.

While the Nepalese Maoists have received ideological guidance from the Maoists groups of Peru, India and a number of other countries, their main sources of material support are the Maoists of India, the Communist Party of North Korea and the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan.  The ISI's assistance to them is part of its proxy war against India.  It hopes that if the Maoists capture power in Nepal, they would be better able to assist those of Bihar to intensify their activities, thereby forcing the Indian security forces to divert their attention from Kashmir.

How to arrest the spread of this prairie fire will be an important task for India's national security managers in the months to come.

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-Mail: [email protected] )

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