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Vague Civil Society advocacy in Nepal: a context of under-cared peace process

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Mohan Nepali
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What does CA dissolution mean?

The dissolution of the CA does not mean the end of everything. It can be considered a lesson; it can be attributed to various factors, the political intentions or the motives of the major political forces in the main. All of them did pay the greatest amount of time and attention to government formation or dissolution. None of them separated from this wrong process. The former Maoist rebels misled their own cadres and supporters by sticking to the wrong process of government formation and dissolution. The Maoist leadership, through it had a special responsibility of interpreting and institutionalizing change agenda, highly superficialized its role--something quite unexpected from the former rebels. Since the former rebels themselves spent the six invaluable years of the peace process in training people to tolerate all the evil tendencies against which they had militarily and ideologically fought for 10 years, the adolescent generation--so emotionally curious to learn--had a chance to learn almost nothing regarding the political change process, its long-term impact on the future of the coming generations, the rationale of the people's movement, and the barriers to be removed.

What is more frustrating in this context is that the young generation was forced to believe that all parties in Nepal were given to undemocratic culture--a psychology insensitive to people's sufferings, heavily concentrated on catering to their own personal and factional interests. The creation and widespread escalation of this belief among the majority of people is definitely not conducive to the nurturing of genuine democracy. It rather leads even future generations to the   do-whatever-you-like-and-can   path of thinking and behavior--a self-destructive psychological structure. Under this emerging nuissant psychological structure, the politically, economically and socially inaccessible and vulnerable will be further victimized.

To prevent or at least minimize the victimization of people, the peace process stakeholders must take lessons from the CA dissolution. They now must make use of every hour in internalizing the change agenda by themselves and interpreting them honestly to people. To help the major peace process stakeholders do so, the Civil Society members should produce and disseminate critical and independent analysis on the causes and effects of the CA dissolution and the possible future courses of action. 

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