Janajati for at least 10 model states, if no 14-model
KATHMANDU, OCT 24 -
Janajati leaders have said that the country should be federated into at
least 10 states based on identity, as recommended by the State
Restructuring Commission of the previous Constituent Assembly ( CA
). They have also demanded that these states should be federated based
on one specific cultural and historical linkage of people living in the
region.
The model best represents the spirit of past agreement signed between
the government and indigenous nationalities, said the Janajati leaders,
who are spearheading a struggle for identity-based federalism under the
banner of "Adibasi Janajati Rastriya Andolan".
As many as 53 groups representing the Janajati communities in
political, social and academic sectors of the country have announced to
launch a stronger protest across the country after Tihar holidays to
press for ethnicity-based federalism.
Janajati leaders from the parties, including Barsha Man Pun of UCPN
(Maoist), Dev Gurung of CPN-Maoist, Ashok Rai of Federal Socialist Party
Nepal and Parshuram Tamang of Sanghiya Ganatantrik Samajbadi Party,
Pasang Sherpa of the Federal Democratic Party Nepal and Kumar Lingden of
Limbuwan Rastriya Party, are in the 40-member coordination committee of
the protest.
Leaders in the alliance said the federal model proposed by the ruling
Nepali Congress and the CPN-UML threaten to avert historical
achievements like federalism, identity, and secularism. NC and UML, the
two largest parties in the CA , have stood in favour of federating the country into a maximum of seven states based on capacity and identity.
Padma Ratna Tuladhar, the leader of the movement, said 10-state model
could be a point of compromise, if NC and UML do not want to settle for
14 states as proposed by the State Restructuring and Devolution of the
State Power Committee of the previous CA .
“There should not be any attempt to subvert the achievement of people’s
war, Janandolan and the movements launched by Janajatis and Dalits. If
that happens, it will only plant seed of discontent among the
suppressed,” said Tuladhar.
The alliance has demanded that the government give utmost priority to
bring the excluded and backward communities to the mainstream.
Prof Om Gurung, spokesperson of central coordination committee of the
movement, said the more the states the wider the platform for oppressed
people to participate in developmental process. “There should be a
provision of autonomous, protected and special areas for the people who
were always neglected by the state,” said Gurung. He said that the
earlier division of country was ‘highly ethnic’ and gave certain
communities an upper hands in state function.
“Some parties who desire old ways are blaming that we want to divide
people on ethic line. It is they who want ethnic states, not us,” said
Gurung, adding that the purpose of their protest is to unite the people
and make the country prosperous.
A number of Janajati organisations, including the Nepal Federation of
Indigenous Nationalities (Nefin), its women chapter and other sister
wings, have supported the protest. Parsuram Tamang, who is also in the
core team to draft the modalities of the protest, said this will be more
of a cultural protest like the one they staged in 2012. He said the
political allies in the alliance will continue parallel protest within
the 22-party alliance led by UCPN (Maoist) Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal.


