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A
Kingdom
Under Siege
by Deepak Thapa
with Bandita Sijapati
2003, pp. iv+236,
the printhouse
(paperback)
ISBN 99933 59 07 6
Price: Nepal Rs 350, South Asia $ 12, Elsewhere,
$ 20 |
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Nepal’s
Maoist insurgency began on 13 February 1996
when members of the Communist Party of Nepal
(Maoist) carried out simultaneous raids
on government offices, police posts and
private businesses. The often-violent campaign
that followed embroiled the government,
the political parties, the king, the police,
and the army in a conflict against a group
of highly motivated guerilla fighters. By
January 2003, the rebel’s campaign
had come to threaten the central institutions
of the Nepali state.
A Kingdom under Siege: Nepal’s Maoist
Insurgency, 1996-2003 is an authoritative
and comprehensive overview of Nepal’s
Maoist insurgency. It describes how the
state’s neglect of many of its people
combined with political instability and
the growth of radical left politics in the
Maoist heartlands of mid-western Nepal led
to a build up of the tensions that were
unleashed in February 1996. The insurgency
quickly grew and gained favour with many
of Nepal’s poor and disadvantaged
people as the rebels held out the promise
of a more just and equitable society. The
government’s failure to tackle the
causes of the rebellion and to engage the
Maoists’ agenda led to thousands of
deaths and widespread destruction of infrastructure
that peaked in 2001 and 2002.
This book is being published during the
second ceasefire of a conflict that has
shaken Nepal’s political, social and
economic structures to the core. The authors
conclude that the only way to bring about
a lasting peace and prevent more insurgencies
rising up in the future is to build a state
that attends equally to the interests of
all of Nepal’s diverse population
groups.
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