Nepal: Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal has hinted of his readiness to form a parliamentary committee to investigate the embezzlement of depositors’ money by the operators of several cooperatives around the country.
photo:Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal
According
to a police probe, dozens of cooperative firms have embezzled and misused
billions of rupees from millions of depositors.
The
main opposition Nepali Congress has long been demanding such a parliamentary
panel to initiate a probe against Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Home
Affairs Rabi Lamichhane, who allegedly was involved in embezzling millions of
rupees, particularly from two cooperatives based in Butwal and Pokhara.
Addressing
a parliamentary party meeting of the CPN (Maoist Centre) on Saturday, the prime
minister said that the misuse of cooperatives deposits has become a serious and
complex issue. Discussions are underway to constitute a parliamentary committee
to comprehensively deal with the issue, he added.
The
proposed committee will study the problems faced by all cooperatives and will
explore ways to return the money of depositors, Devendra Poudel, a Maoist
lawmaker, told the Post.
A
Nepali Congress leader said the prime minister has communicated his plan to
party president Sher Bahadur Deuba. The committee will look into the issue in
totality rather than targeting a particular politician, the Congress leader
said. However, the largest party in the House of Representatives, which
obstructed its proceedings in the winter session of Parliament, is not
convinced by the prime minister’s proposal, according to the leader.
As
the government has called the budget session for May 10, the main opposition
says it will again raise the matter of constituting a parliamentary committee.
Ahead
of the house session, “we will call a meeting of the parliamentary committee on
Thursday”, Nepali Congress General Secretary Bishwa Prakash Sharma said. “The
formation of a parliamentary committee to probe [the issue of] cooperatives
[fund] embezzlement and the involvement of Home Minister Lamichhane and
investigating the property of all public office holders after 1991 will be our
main agenda,” Sharma said.
Some
Congress leaders including the other party general secretary Gagan Thapa have
proposed that properties of public office holders since 1991 be investigated by
an all powerful body in order to control corruption that has become rampant in
recent years.
Demanding
the committee, the Congress continuously protested in the House and did not
allow the government to present any bill. The budget session will start on
Friday.
“The
party has not changed its position on the cooperative issue and will disrupt
House proceedings if the government does not heed our demand,” said Ramesh
Lekhak, the Congress chief whip.
The
prime minister briefed his party leaders on the possibility of the Congress
giving continuity to the protests in the House. “It is not sure whether the
upcoming House session can do its regular business,” a Maoist lawmaker quoted
the prime minister as saying at the parliamentary party meeting. “There is
uncertainty if the House can run smoothly.”
“If
the House fails to resume its normal business, the government cannot present
its budget and hold discussion on it,” said Poudel. “This is why the prime
minister is serious about resolving the matter soon.”
The
prime minister told his party that he would call an all-party meeting soon to
discuss a way out.
In
the meeting, the prime minister also defended Home Minister Lamichhane. “We
know issues about cooperatives are serious but we should not blame one leader,”
said the prime minister. “As this is a serious and complex issue, we will seek
some kind of remedy from the Cabinet. Not just one leader, we have to look at
the problem in its totality and this is what we are trying to do now.”
However,
Lamichhane has been denying his involvement in the embezzlement of the
cooperatives’ fund. In the Maoist meeting, the prime minister reportedly said
that the main opposition might have linked the home minister with cooperative
scams in order to sow discord in the ruling coalition.
Congress
leader Shekhar Koirala, however, said they were not asking for the home minister’s
resignation but wanted a parliamentary committee to look into his alleged
involvement in the misuse of savings.
“But
why is the government reluctant to form the probe?” Koirala asked. “If
Lamichhane is clean and is not involved in the misuse of cooperative funds, he
wouldn’t stand against the parliamentary committee and would be sure about
continuing as home minister.”
On
the other hand, the prime minister accused Congress leaders of hatching a
conspiracy against the government immediately after they were forced to leave
the government.
Dahal
briefed Maoist lawmakers that the discontent expressed by Madhav Kumar Nepal,
chairman of the coalition partner CPN (Unified Socialist), was not serious but
is manageable.
“This
does not threaten the stability of the government,” said the prime minister,
according to another Maoist lawmaker. There are some technical issues at the
centre and in provincial governments, said the prime minister. “These are
manageable.”
The
prime minister also said that the government would increase the size of the
annual budget to address public aspirations.
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