[Excerpt: "Right now, we do not see any possibility of talks with these
mediaeval and barbaric feudal autocrats," he told Reuters in an
interview by email received on Monday. "Right now, the possibility of a
cease-fire does not exist."]

http://64.236.16.116/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/04/18/nepal.talks.reut/index.html

Nepal rebels rule out peace talks

Monday, April 18, 2005 Posted: 7:02 AM EDT (1102 GMT)


NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) -- Nepal's elusive Maoist rebel leader
"Prachanda" has ruled out peace talks or a cease-fire with the
government, predicting that the nine-year-old war would see the Maoists
come to power soon.

"Right now, we do not see any possibility of talks with these mediaeval
and barbaric feudal autocrats," he told Reuters in an interview by email
received on Monday. "Right now, the possibility of a cease-fire does not
exist."

Prachanda's combative words come two months after Nepal's King Gyanendra
seized power, declared a state of emergency and vowed to bring peace to
the desperately poor Himalayan kingdom, where civil war has killed more
than 11,000 people since 1996.

The army, which backed the king's power grab, vowed in February to step
up its offensive against the Maoists, but has shown little sign of doing
so yet. Gyanendra's hand-picked government is against holding talks with
the Maoists, calling them "ghosts that need to be dealt with the stick".

Prachanda, whose nom de guerre roughly means "awesome," responded with
equal bitterness.

"The seizure of power by the widely hated regicidal and fratricidal king
is nothing else than the last and desperate attempt of feudal autocracy
against the democratic thrust and aspiration of the Nepalese masses," he
said.

Gyanendra came to the throne after the 2001 palace massacre, when his
elder brother, Birendra, was killed by his own son, the Crown Prince
Dipendra, who then turned the gun on himself.

The Maoists want to see Nepal's constitutional monarchy abolished and a
Communist republic established in its stead.
Political appeals

Prachanda said the Maoists would only consider talks if the king
withdrew his February 1 proclamation and seizure of power, and was
prepared to hand over "all power to the people" by allowing elections
for an assembly to draw up a new constitution.

That would represent nothing less than complete capitulation for the
king.

The press has been muzzled, protests banned and many politicians locked
up since the king declared a state of emergency. But the situation is
even worse in the countryside, where villagers live in fear of both the
Maoists and the army.

Both sides are accused of widespread human rights abuses. Last month,
the United Nations warned that Nepal is being pushed "towards the abyss
of a humanitarian crisis."

Prachanda renewed an appeal to Nepal's political parties, sidelined by
the king, to unite with the rebels "against this autocratic monarchy, on
the minimum program of Constituent Assembly and democratic republic".

He dismissed as "Goebble's (sic) propaganda" the army's claim that there
was a split in rebel ranks between moderates who favor peace talks and
hardliners who prefer a military solution.

And, in a nod to the theories of China's Communist leader Mao Zedong, he
said the People's War had entered its final phase, the so-called
"strategic offensive".

Prachanda's real name is Pushpa Kamal Dahal. Born to an upper caste
family of peasant farmers in Nepal's western mountains in 1954, the
bespectacled and bearded leader has not been seen in public since the
insurgency began.

"Now we believe that People's War will be victorious in the near
future," he said, adding that while the time frame was difficult to
predict, victory would come "not in a distant but in a foreseeable
future".

Most analysts say the war is unwinnable by either side. A few thousand
rebels can hardly hope to overcome an army of 80,000 men, but at the
same time they are almost undefeatable in their remote, narrow and steep
mountain valleys.

Copyright 2005 Reuters.
enditem


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