Who’ll do the dirty work if not the electorate?
- Devendra Gautam
This year’s festive cacophony is well past
us. Finally, you can read, write, think or take a walk under the influence of
thoughts, without worrying as to when another cracker blast would shake you
from within.
What a relief, isn’t it?
Looking back, one can hardly forget the
peaceful and environment-friendly manner in which the nation used to celebrate
festivals. With the imported cacophony getting louder and louder, gone are the
days, especially in mega cities, of Deusi, Bhailo, Maruni
naach (dance), Sorathi, swings
of different types like Charkhe (shaped like the Charkha, the spinning wheel) and Rote (round) and many other traditional
features of our festivals. The rapid fading of our soothing Maalshri and
other features amid thunderous blasts does not augur well.
The environment and public health are what
suffer the most during festivals of different hues and shades.
This festive season too, the tidings were not
that encouraging in terms of the above-mentioned factors.
Indian media outlets reported about worsening
air quality in major cities like New Delhi, Mumbai and Lucknow, thanks to
celebratory firecracker blasts mainly during Tihar/Deepawali (Diwali
in their parlance). Our own mega cities hardly slept, with cracker blasts every
now and then, despite a ‘blanket ban’ on the import of these explosive
materials, as if pollution bound to enter the country from the neighbourhood
were not enough, apart from ‘homegrown’ pollution.
Did these blasts, which took place despite
the ‘draconian measure in place against cracker imports’, give our law
enforcement a tough time? Perhaps they did, or they didn’t. With provincial and
federal elections around the corner, law enforcement has its hands full anyway;
it has more important things to attend to rather than bothering about
celebratory blasts and their impact on the environment as well as public
health.
Who cares about the quality of air we all
breathe? Who cares about the deafening noise? Who cares about the poor old
environment and our lives, in their totality?
The Indian government did its precious bit by
releasing air quality index regularly, but what did our government do? Let the
government speak for itself.
After these blasts came what is, most
probably, the world’s largest manmade fire event. Air quality was bound to
deteriorate further in Nepal as well, with farmers in Punjab and Haryana
burning stubble post-harvest in large swathes to provide ‘nutrients’ to the
soil, even as the Indian government looked on instead of intervening. Isn’t it
some relief that our farmers have yet to learn this ingenious way of ‘keeping’
the soil fertile?
Interestingly, all this was happening amid
the Climate Change Conference 2022 in Shram El-Sheikh, Egypt.
On the heels of it came the season of election
campaigns riding on the wheels. Streets and neighbourhoods reverberated with
patriotic songs blared through loudspeakers mounted on campaign vehicles of
different political parties and independent candidates.
Wonder of wonders, cities and rural areas of
the country reported the sighting of the rarest of the rare breed of homo
sapiens – the political leaders, especially the repeat offenders (in reference
to the leaders’ repeated failure to keep their promises to the electorate) with
their henchmen in tow along with some new, some old promises.
Thanks to upcoming elections, a former prime
minister is busy canvassing in his constituency in Gorkha after crossing a
brook riding piggyback on a lesser mortal (where’s the bridge, comrade?), while
another former PM is at his rhetorical best while campaigning, firing
counter-salvos at a journalist-turned-politician. Will his salvos translate
into gains for the political party he leads? Citing the last election, some
reports have pointed that the party in question lost in constituencies where the
party chief had addressed campaign rallies! Ironic if these reports are true,
isn’t it?
Still, other candidates – new and old – are trying
to reach out to local communities with whom they have a disconnect of about
five years or so, in a desperate bid to win hearts and minds. These days, you
can find these candidates doing things like playing cards, harvesting paddy, ploughing
the fields, having tea and chit-chat with local communities, making up for
years of growing apart.
So much so, even the head of the government has found time to visit his
constituency in Dadeldhura in the Far-Western Province, days after a
12-year-old died on the banks of the Mahakali river. The boy died when one of
those shrapnel-like stones flying from an Indian contractor-operated site hit
him in course of work meant to develop a road link between Uttaranchal and
Tibet via Lipulek. Remember? Lipulek forms part of the 400-sq km
Limpiadhura-Lipulek-Kalapani region that Nepal says belongs to her.
This came barely a year after a local youth
from Darchula district in the same province, Jaysingh Dhami, went missing into
the Mahakali river as Indian security personnel allegedly untied the metal twine
despite desperate SOS from the people waiting to cross the river via the same
thing. Talking about the Lipulek-Kalapani-Limpiadhura region, Mahesh Singh
Dhami, a young engineer and independent candidate for the Provincial Assembly from
Dadeldhura constituency-3(A), said in a recent interview with this journalist that
border disputes fester on because Nepal’s rulers raise the issue only when untoward
incidents take place instead of bothering to resolve the disputes through
sustained talks.
Amid the rising election fever, media outlets
showed the prime minister clad in Daura
Suruwal walking along a dirt road stretch in his constituency with the
security detail and the first lady, with much difficulty, in a reminder that
time wounds all heels as Groucho Marx rightly said. While the incumbent is
intensifying his election campaign, a rival candidate, Sagar Dhakal, has
levelled serious allegations against the incumbent government. In a recent
social media post, the engineer-turned-politician accused government
authorities of not allowing him to campaign. On its part, the district
administration office has refuted the charges.
For obvious reasons, Dadeldhura is the
epicenter of federal and provincial elections. Distress calls coming from the
epicenter may have a bearing on the credibility of the elections, so the Nepali
state should probe them with due seriousness and address genuine grievances.
The country as a whole is faring no better
than the road in question. The road is a powerful satire on political leaders,
who got the popular mandate time and time again to transform the country for
the better but ended up making the country and the people more and more
miserable.
In the novel Gone with the Wind that centres on
the American Civil War (April 12, 1861-April 9, 1865), Rhett Butler explains to
Scarlett O’Hara, the heroine: “I told you once before that there were two times for
making big money, one in the up-building of a country and the other in its
destruction. Slow money on the up-building, fast money in the crack-up.
Remember my words. Perhaps they may be of use to you some day.”
Our leaders, baring a few exceptions, have
put the Carpetbaggers of the civil war to shame, prospering while pushing the
country on a downward spiral for decades on end.
This time around, though, there are signs of
the electorate awakening, if media reports and social media posts are any
indication. In course of the above-mentioned interview, Dhami, the
Darchula-3(A) candidate, had expressed confidence about his victory. This gives
us hope, albeit faint, that untried, un-tested and uncorrupted crop of leaders
will get a fair chance this time.
Our political system is rotting, thanks to our
decades-old political leadership that is rotting from the head, bothered, as it
is, only about partisan, familial and individual interests. The system needs a
through cleansing; spring cleaning won’t be enough.
Who will do the dirty work if not the electorate?
Published in Annapurna Express. Click the link: https://theannapurnaexpress.com/news/wholl-do-the-dirty-work-if-not-the-electorate-33912
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