Re-installation Monarchy back in Nepal 2014 At the base of the - TopicsExpress



          

Re-installation Monarchy back in Nepal 2014 At the base of the design a red scroll carries the national motto in Sanskrit: जननी जन्मभूमिश्च स्वर्गादपी गरीयसी which translates as The mother and the motherland are greater than heaven. Complete Sanskrit verse is Pravin Raj-Vaidya Germany 01.11.2014 Poverty rising and political power vacuum, for what it is now Urgent to Re-install Monarchy back in Nepal A significant amount of poverty and illiteracy resulting in a lack of knowledge and awareness of human rights and it suffers from a set of tightly bound values and traditions exemplified by submission and dependency. This clearly precludes any democratic process and stands in the way of creativity and free thought, thereby preventing improvement and development. There are many societal and cultural obstacles to human security (among them, the prevalence of tribal, ethnic and family allegiances), but the Government and its policies are the main political threat. Government authorities as political obstacles It is easy to identify government authorities as the main political obstacle to the human rights movement. Nepal has lived under a plethora of nationalistic slogans, most of which border on the chauvinistic and demagogical. These slogans are characterised by contradictory assertions, so that even during the worst eras of dependency and subordination, its regimes solemnly claimed to protect national independence and national sovereignty as the one and only existing Hindu Kingdom in the World. Most of the Parties have own problems for the power Chair adopted the adhesive logic, once they get the symptome.chair possibly not easily to get rid. In the best of cases there were various parties that struggled against the majority ruling party that had control over everything. The consequences today of these Parties and their logic are a clear lack of popular participation, the absence of freedom of thought and expression in all of its forms as well as the absence of the right to assembly and to form independent organisations and groups. This has weakened the ability of society and individuals to create and sustain both group and individual initiatives to the extent that society has become isolated and deprived of all tools and methods to participate in public and political affairs. Nepaleese are impotent when it comes to demanding democratic rights and freedoms under Constitutional Democratic Monachy as one and the only existing Hindu Kingdom and the old tradition all Nepalese know and have grown up from generation. Towards a conciliation-based reform Current Monarchy Supporters could easily make applying international human rights conventions possible as the Yelling of the Civil for final Peace and Freedom, Security and guarantee in daily Living and Jobs if Unity among Nepalese be representad. But due to the weaknesses and flaws in Nepalese constitutions, accompanied by the battery of Anti-democratic practices whose primary logic is to represent fake promises to internal security present another huge obstacle to any human rights movement. At the same time, in an effort to gain acceptability at the international level Anti-monarchy, Parties are working towards signing international conventions although they neither believe in them nor intend to apply them. Such moves are part of the Parties window-dressing, employed to give them the appearance of modern states that neither respect human rights nor practically they are gaining any supports from majority civilians than only efforts to fulfil own Aims . This proves the parties don’t even think of recently established human rights movements. poverty in nepalty, Social Divisions and CONFLICT in Nepal Executive Summary: More than 70 civil wars have occurred around the world since 1945. Understanding what causes such violent conflicts to begin and then fester is a topic of increasing research interest to economists. In Nepal the conflict known as the Peoples War began in 1996 and spread to all parts of the country, resulting in the deaths of more than 13,000 people. Do and Iyer considered a wide range of economic and social factors that they hypothesized could affect the likelihood of violent conflict, and econometrically examined their relationship with conflict intensity. These factors include geographic conditions (mountains and forests), economic development, social diversity including linguistic diversity, and government investment in infrastructure. Do and Iyers nuanced approach allowed them to examine the spread of a single conflict across different parts of the country and over time. Key concepts include: • In the initial stages of the conflict, total deaths caused by Maoist insurgents and government forces were higher in areas with greater poverty. Yet this relationship with poverty changed over time: As Maoists gained control of the poorest areas, the highest intensity of conflict shifted to places that were somewhat better off. • Conflict intensity was higher in areas with geographical characteristics that favor insurgents, such as mountains and forests. • There was no significant relationship between conflict intensity and linguistic diversity. The relationship with caste polarization was slight. • The changing relationship with poverty suggests that researchers need to consider a conflicts prior evolution in their broader analyses. • Abstract • We conduct an econometric analysis of the economic and social factors which contributed to the spread of violent conflict in Nepal. We find that conflict intensity is significantly higher in places with greater poverty and lower levels of economic development. Violence is higher in locations that favor insurgents, such as mountains and forests. We find weaker evidence that caste divisions in society are correlated with the intensity of civil conflict, while linguistic diversity has little impact. Poverty and social values The general trend in social values is still characterised by patriarchal principles exemplified in obedience and submission to authority. The vast majority Nepalese do not have the basics of reading and writing and of critical thinking skills and free expression. This leads to poor and ineffective participation in public affairs, and a serious lack of awareness, which are ultimately the result of abuse in the mechanisms of power and the disproportionate ownership of resources. The circle of corruption Nepal is experiencing a widening of the circle of corruption within the government apparatus and between the Government and the private sector. This has reached levels that threaten development and form a barrier around social and economic improvement and democratic reform. Participation as a triangle Participation, as defined implicitly above, is none other than the interlacing of three main complementary factors: the Government, civil society and the private sector. Their relationship is akin to the relationship between the sides of an equilateral triangle. The triangle symbolises the importance of balance and co-operation in the face of the conflict of interests that impede social integration and increase marginalisation and intolerance. Among the factors that constrain the balance of interests is a group of deficiencies that distort the sides of the triangle. The State is hegemonic and exercises complete control, depending on its bureaucratic apparatus to allow the Executive to interfere in the Legislative and Judicial realms. Civil society is caught between conceptual confusion, disorganisation, and the inability to fund itself. It continues to re-shape itself and find a role for itself as an effective and strategic partner in human development. The private sector does not recognise the concept of social capital, which sets the conditions and mechanisms of the internal market to guarantee its sustainability and its ability to compete. Building a civil society that provides for legal and political guarantees entails the following: • Constitutional Democracy and decentralisation for human development. • Effective popular participation in political decision-making and human development through ensuring the participation of weak and marginalised social groups and those most prone to poverty such as women and children. • Constitutional Development and amendment of laws that conflict with democratic concepts and the principles of participation and human rights. • The importance of allowing freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and the formation of parties and groups. NGO responsibilities In the process of civil society building and to achieve a just and balanced human development, NGOs carry important responsibilities, such as: • Starting up and executing both short term and long term projects in order to raise popular awareness among NGO members and society in general, and holding training courses on effective popular participation in social administration and political decision-making. • Motivating NGOs themselves and the State in all activities and projects that target social and human development. • Taking up a popular monitoring role in co-operation with government authorities over the State’s work and performance. • Directing efforts towards finding means of self-funding from the local community to obtain the highest degree of independence. • Providing exemplars of NGOs and initiating pioneering projects in the fields of combating poverty, unemployment, illiteracy, and in providing job opportunities. • Releasing NGOs’ creative energies and new initiatives by freeing them from bureaucracy. Focusing on grass-roots organisations and providing them with support. • Ensuring that the relationship between NGOs and donors is based on co-ordination and mutual co-operation built on equality and partnership, in which NGOs from developed countries do not have advantages over local NGOs. This assumes that social democracy and participation play a critical role in the process of development, and is achieved by giving priority to actual local requirements based on just and balanced development. Re-installation of the monarchy having the king holds free elections for Constitutional Democracy in Nepal which is today´s Urge of the Nation and its Citizens soon to be Held. Mass Mobilizations peaceful Demands to Re-Install Monarchy back in Nepal
Posted on: Fri, 31 Oct 2014 23:56:00 +0000

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