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India-Pakistan
Nepal disillusioned by top Maoists' taste for luxury
2013-11-14
[Pak Daily Times] When Nepal ousted the monarchy and voted in a Maoist-led government in 2008, few anticipated that, five years on, the former guerrillas would come under fire for living like kings.

Commentators and former rebels say the party's leadership has swapped its revolutionary ideals for corruption-fuelled luxury, with the strongest criticism reserved for chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal, better known by the nom-de-guerre Prachanda.

The Maoists came to power promising social change, economic growth and lasting peace for a country devastated by a decade-long civil war.

Since then, Nepal has seen several coalition governments come and go, with none able to agree on a constitution to finalise the grinding of the peace processor.

Meanwhile,
...back at the Council of Boskone, Helmuth had turned a paler shade of blue. Star-A-Star had struck again...
the Maoists have witnessed a mutiny, with a splinter group threatening to disrupt next week's national elections.

Former guerrilla Bishnu Pariyar took up arms aged 14. By the time he was 22, he had survived gunshot wounds to become one of Prachanda's personal aides.

"The rich used to treat us like dogs and I thought our war would liberate the poor," Pariyar said.

Soon after he began working for the Maoist chief, he noticed Prachanda's taste for luxury brands and imported whisky -- a fondness that has not escaped the attentions of local media.

"That family just loves to spend, whether it's Prachanda blowing money on hair gel or Rolex watches, his wife buying saris all the time or his son Prakash, obsessed with changing his mobile phone every two weeks," Pariyar told AFP.

Prachanda's lifestyle first attracted criticism when news emerged in January 2012 that he had rented a 15-room mansion in Kathmandu, a property he still occupies, despite promises to vacate it. The estate -- its gate decorated with Hindu religious motifs -- includes parking space for more than a dozen vehicles, a building to house 70 guards and a table tennis room.

The news rankled many in Nepal, one of the world's most unequal and impoverished countries, where nearly 25 percent of the population lives on less than $1.25 a day, according to the World Bank.

Two months later, another scandal erupted when the Maoist-led government acknowledged offering $250,000 to Prachanda's son Prakash Dahal to climb Mount Everest.

And, in April 2012, festivities broke out in a UN-monitored camp for former Maoist soldiers when troops accused the party of stealing funds owed to them.

By the end of the year, simmering discontent saw a former chef, Padam Kunwar turn into a hero when he slapped Prachanda in the face at a public function.

"I kept reading about him, his fancy lifestyle. Meanwhile,
...back at the pond, the radioactive tadpoles grown into frogs. Really big frogs, in fact...
my family lost everything in the war," Kunwar, whose siblings are former guerrillas, told AFP.

He was beaten up by furious Prachanda followers and enjugged
Drop the heater, Studs, or you're hist'try!
, but many Nepalese rallied behind him, launching Facebook fan pages and tweeting their support.

Nearly a year later, Kunwar will challenge his nemesis once more, this time at the ballot box in Prachanda's Kathmandu constituency.

"They promised us freedom from poverty. But they are the ones who got rich," he said.

Prachanda was the head of a coalition government from August 2008 to May 2009, largely made up of former rebel fighters who had no experience of governing. But he resigned after a clash with the army chief over plans to integrate former fighters into the military's ranks.
Posted by:Fred

#6  "When Nepal ousted the monarchy and voted in a Maoist-led government in 2008, few anticipated that, five years on, the former guerrillas would come under fire for living like kings."

That is some serious funny there. I would have bet money on it.
Posted by: Secret Asian Man   2013-11-14 15:09  

#5  "I won."
Posted by: tu3031   2013-11-14 14:02  

#4  See: Daniel Ortega (or the rest of the Sandinista leadership.)
Posted by: Pappy   2013-11-14 13:37  

#3  "Unexpectedly"
Posted by: charger   2013-11-14 11:49  

#2  swapped its revolutionary ideals for corruption-fuelled luxury,

That was no swap, it was just a change in the marketing. THIS IS THE WAY OF THE WORLD!!

Some animals are more equal.
Posted by: AlanC   2013-11-14 07:35  

#1  When Prachanda begins vacationing in Martha's Vineyard and his golf counter hits 125, they can bitch.
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-11-14 01:13  

00:00