Nepal: Prime Minister and CPN-UML Chairman KP Sharma Oli has said that his government needs to do more towards ensuring better service delivery, while claiming that the alliance with Nepali Congress is moving ahead satisfactorily.
While
presenting his political document at the party’s secretariat meeting on
Thursday, Oli stated that some elements are trying to promote “anarchy” in the
society and take the country towards political instability. He urged the
party’s rank and file to counter those efforts.
A
meeting of the party’s secretariat on Thursday approved Oli’s political
document, which will later be presented in the party's central committee
meeting scheduled to take place on January 5 and 6.
Oli’s
paper also assesses the latest political situation of the country. In the
meeting, Oli clarified why the country’s two largest parties–Nepali Congress
and UML–joined hands to form the current government.
He
elaborated why the present government should continue until next elections,
said the UML leaders who were present at the meeting. “The government of two
big parties has opened new prospects of opportunity,” states Oli’s document,
which also analyses the international situation.
Contrary
to Oli’s claims, however, the main opposition, CPN (Maoist Centre), has
concluded that the government has totally failed and it is headed in the wrong
direction.
“We
have concluded that] the government has failed,” Maoist Centre spokesperson
Agni Sapkota said after the meeting. “It is headed in the wrong direction and
has failed to promote good governance as it has protected the corrupt, mafias
and middlemen.”
In
the Maoist meeting, party chair and former prime minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal
predicted that the present government does not have much life left.
“The
government has failed on both domestic and external fronts,” a standing
committee member quoted Dahal as saying. “The external forces do not trust this
government while there is massive dissatisfaction within the Nepali Congress
and UML regarding the performance of the government.”
The
UML secretariat meeting also discussed and reviewed the performance of the Oli
government. Members expressed that the government needs to do more and speed up
its performance, said Pradeep Gyawali, deputy general secretary of the UML.
However,
the members said that in the last six months, the government has carried out
some remarkable work, Gyawali added.
“In
order to complete other works and improve its performance, the government
should focus on delivery, development and construction and economic
development,” Gyawali said.
In
the meeting, Prime Minister Oli and other UML leaders said that relations with
coalition partner Nepali Congress are smooth and formation of different
mechanisms between the two parties to help the government perform better are
also making progress.
The
ruling parties have formed political mechanisms that include senior leaders from
both parties and also a task force to look into ways to create a conducive
environment for doing business, facilitating investment and improving service
delivery. They are also tasked with looking into the status of pending bills in
Parliament. A third task force to look into the issues related to constitution
amendment is yet to be formed.
The
task forces are mandated to look into and suggest the government in nine
different areas including constitution amendment, implementation of federalism,
and settling down the bills that are pending in the house, among others,
Gyawali said. “These issues have created trust between Congress and us and
given the sense of political stability,” he said.
In
the meeting, UML leaders also asserted that after the formation of the
government, economic indicators are heading towards stabilisation as revenue
collection has increased, and foreign investment and foreign aid and assistance
is growing.
“The
government has concluded some notable works in these six months,” Gyawali said.
“The bill related to transitional justice has been approved, over six thousand
individuals have got back their deposit from the cooperatives, and some eight
thousand depositors have got back half of their half deposits.”
But
the government has to do a lot to ensure more effective service delivery to the
general people, speed up development works and improve the economy, Gyawali
added.
On
the other hand, one of the highlights of the Maoist meeting was the presence of
former vice president Nanda Bahadur Pun. The repeated presence of the former
vice president in the party’s meeting has raised serious ethical questions.
“We
were surprised to see his presence in the meeting,” a standing committee member
said. “Though he did not speak in the meeting, one can easily understand that
it was the party chair’s design to bring him back into party politics.”
Some
Maoist leaders suspect that Pun will probably be given the role of party’s vice
president as Dahal attempts to curtail the political ambitions of two other
leaders Barsha Man Pun and Janardan Sharma.
“After
he didn’t make much headway into bringing back other senior leaders like Netra
Bikram Chand, Dahal is now attempting to establish the former vice president in
party politics” .
Moreover,
the Maoist party has decided to launch a six-month long campaign across the
Postal Highway in Tarai and Madan Bhandari Highway in the hilly region, Sapkota
said. “We will listen to the people, what they are looking for, and what they
want,” he said.
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