Was Nepal’s Parliament Dissolved At Beijing’s Behest? – Analysis

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By Lt Gen Prakash Katoch (retd)*

Nepal’s President Bidya Devi Bhandari has dissolved the parliament on the recommendation of Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli though Constitution has no such provision. In a parliamentary democracy like Nepal, the prime minister has the real power, not the president, and not many presidents refuse unconstitutional recommendations.

Nepal’s next general elections were due in 2022, however, the President’s Office has announced that mid-term polls will be held in two phases during 2021 –   April 30 and May 10.   

Dissolving parliament is unprecedented

Oli was under pressure to withdraw an ordinance related to the Constitutional Council Act increasing his own powers that he had issued and got endorsed by the president. Following the dissolving of parliament, seven ministers in Oli’s cabinet have resigned.

There is speculation that the issue may be taken up in the Supreme Court but the latter may likely rule in Oli’s favor. Apparently, Oli is in no danger and will be ‘king’ for the next six months. What happens after the mid-term polls next year is hard to predict because Nepal’s opposition is in disarray, much like in India. Even the opposition Nepali Congress has leadership problems.  

Dissent within Nepal’s Communist Party (NCP) was brewing for a long time but dissolving parliament without a provision in the Constitution is unprecedented. China has invested too much in Nepal to let go of control of Nepalese politics.

In Beijing’s eyes, Oli is perhaps the best PM Nepal ever had because he took up territorial cudgels against India coinciding with Chinese aggression in Eastern Ladakh; issued a new map showing three areas of India as part of Nepal; deployed army troops first time along the border with India; denied China occupied  Nepalese territory at Limi Lapcha area of Namkha Gaupalika (rural municipality) of Humla despite Nepal’s survey department of agriculture ministry reporting China has cumulatively encroached 33 hectares of Nepalese land in 10 places and has been diverting rivers to increase its territory; opened all sectors of Nepal to Chinese investments; allowed consolidation of Chinese and Pakistani intelligence agencies in Nepal, and introduced Mandarin in all schools. 

Nepal: ‘Palm’ of China

Mao Zhedong considered Nepal as one of the five fingers of Tibet which he called the “palm” of China. The Maoists insurgency was initiated for the same reason, royals massacred and the communist regime brought in. China has been topping foreign direct investment in Nepal consecutively for the past four fiscal years.

According to Nepal’s Department of Industry, Nepal received over 90 percent of total FDI commitment from China during the first quarter of the current fiscal year 2019-20 that began in mid-July.  Besides, China has always had a hold over the leaders of NCP.  Oli and former prime minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, popularly known as Prachanda, were leaders during the Maoists insurgency. Madhav Kumar Nepal, belonging to the United Left Front, is also aligned with communist ideology. Beijing has been in touch with these politicians and is said to wield influence over them. 

Oli had a telephonic conversation with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in August. India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) chief Samant Goel, Indian Army Chief Gen M M Naravane and Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla visited Nepal this year in that order. Nepal’s Foreign Minister Pradeep Kumar Gyawali is to visit India shortly for what Indian media describes as “to restore ties.” But all this in no way reduces China’s influence over Nepal as long as Nepal is under communist rule. Armies of India and Nepal enjoy excellent relations, but the Nepalese Army has to abide by what the prime minister wants.

Beijing’s growing influence

Beijing is making massive investments in Lumbini to assume the patronship of Buddhism in Nepal and influence the Buddhism circuit. China’s Defence Minister Gen. Wei Fenghe, leading a 21-member delegation, recently visited Nepal to further enhance military-to-military relations. Issues discussed by him included the resumption of training and student exchange programs impacted by the pandemic.

True that China has not been able to curb the dissent within the NCP even after communicating with President Bidya Devi Bhandari and PM Oli. But the option of dissolving parliament may have been discussed by Oli with China in case matters came to a head.

This is what probably happened. It gives Beijing another six months to try and stitch the NCP together and work out power-sharing. Oli too will get six months to ingratiate himself more to Beijing. Finally, Oli maybe Beijing’s favorite but any other communist leader as prime minister of Nepal will be equally welcome by China as long as its strategic interests are served. 

*About the author: The author is an Indian Army veteran. The views expressed are personal

Source: This article was published by South Asia Monitor

South Asia Monitor

To create a more credible and empathetic knowledge bank on the South Asian region, SPS curates the South Asia Monitor (www.southasiamonitor.org), an independent web journal and online resource dealing with strategic, political, security, cultural and economic issues about, pertaining to and of consequence to South Asia and the Indo-Pacific region. Developed for South Asia watchers across the globe or those looking for in-depth knowledge, reliable resource and documentation on this region, the site features exclusive commentaries, insightful analyses, interviews and reviews contributed by strategic experts, diplomats, journalists, analysts, researchers and students from not only this region but all over the world. It also aggregates news, views commentary content related to the region and the extended neighbourhood.

2 thoughts on “Was Nepal’s Parliament Dissolved At Beijing’s Behest? – Analysis

  • December 27, 2020 at 4:07 am
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    It is naive to believe Nepal’s parliament being dissolved at the behest of China. Both factions of PM Oli and Prachand-Nepal are accusing each other for creating instability, primarily boosted by by Nepal’s Southern neighbor while India has, so far, admitted political turmoil to be an “internal” matter. The local media is rife with news reporting on the activism shown by the Chinese Ambassador in Nepal to prevent possible split in Nepal Communist Party. As a special representative of the Chinese President, a team is poised to visit Kathmandu. The Chinese interest is that, no matter who comes to power, NCP should remain intact and strong. Therefore, it is stupidity to assume China behind the dissolution of the parliament. Moreover, India has expressed that it is concerned over growing Chinese interest in Nepal. In the past, PM Oli may have taken a strong anti-India stand, as an expression of nationalistic stand, recently, he has tone down or soften his stand. It is near impossible to hold elections in Nepal without green signals from India. There is rumor that he is soon visiting India. Definitely, Nepal’s successful foreign policy rests on carefully balancing the interests of India and China. Inability to do may invite discard from both sides. Both India and China may treat Nepal as their backyard for dumping wastes and discarded items like Tibetan refugees, contraband items, ground for espionage activities. This is what Nepal should be worried about than China or India interfering into Nepal’s politics.

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  • December 28, 2020 at 11:04 pm
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    Surprised to see such an one sided article written by Rtd. Gen. As an army, how come he do not see how India is also playing various role in Nepal? Who was pushing Dahal and Nepal against Oli? Why there are 7 raw employees still in Nepal who came with Goel? What are they doing?
    I am not saying China or Oli are clean. They are also the player of these dirty games. But as an General, we would like see a balanced thought in regards of Nepal. Please do so.

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