As youths they were idealistic Maoist soldiers fighting to bring revolution to Nepal but now that their leaders are in power, many say the party has abandoned its faithful.
Among a class of 12 students on an engineering course designed to help them rejoin civilian life after the war ended in 2006, there is deep resentment and a sense of betrayal that the sacrifices they made have been forgotten.
“Party cadres and supporters have begun to question what the party has achieved. What have we got?” said Ratna Kumar Century, a stocky 28-year-old, as he fumbled with a computer mouse.
“The establishment faction has betrayed the people,” he said. “They said we will create a new Nepal which will be inclusive and reformative. But they seem content with the status quo.”
The former rebels at the Jiri Technical Institute in northeast Nepal are among thousands of Maoists offered a new start after living in UN-monitored camps for five years when peace was declared.
They are being taught to design the roads, buildings and canals that will form the future of a state they waged a guerrilla war against for a decade, but it is not a future they look forward to with much hope.
Instead they see their leaders talking politics in mansions in Kathmandu, and they complain that they are an ignored and inconvenient part of the past.
Pushpa Kamal Dahal, the Maoist chief known as Prachanda (“the fierce one"), once inspired devotion among his fighters as they brought the government to a standstill in a civil war that claimed 16,000 lives.
He became prime minister for eight months after the Maoists won elections in 2008 and his party oversaw the abolition of the monarchy, but is now held in little esteem.
“People placed their hopes on Prachanda. But he drifted from his path,” said Century, who was attracted to Maoism’s aim to destroy elite hierarchies such as Nepal’s Hindu caste system.
“If the sacrifices and struggles were just for elevating leaders to power, was it worth it?” he said.
Century was among 19,000 Maoists confined to cantonments because of disagreements between Nepal’s political parties over the future of the former fighters after the war finished.
A deal was reached last year that 6,500 fighters would be integrated into the national army while the rest would be given money or vocational training courses like the one in Jiri.
Their 15-month course, funded by German aid agency GIZ, is divided between on-the-job experience and classroom sessions designed to help them find jobs, but many find it hard to look past their brutal wartime experiences.
Mahesh Bogati was born into a family of poor subsistence farmers in Nepal’s remote Karnali region and spent five years fighting government troops as part of the Maoist “people’s war.”
The 28-year-old traded his textbooks for guns when he was just 17.
“I spent several years as a fighter in the war. During those years, all I learned is how to lay an ambush and make bombs and improvised devices. Because of the war I also missed my studies,” Bogati told AFP.
“My comrades and I are facing the challenge of civilian life. But our leaders are more concerned about remaining in power. They have forgotten us.
“They are enjoying their luxurious life in Kathmandu while we are worried about our future.”
The growing distrust among grassroots activists was fueled in January when it emerged that Prachanda had moved into a lavish mansion in the capital, a property he has since said he intends to give up.
Two months later party officials were accused of corruption after it was revealed they had offered Prachanda’s son $ 250,000 to climb Mount Everest.
The Maoists are currently running the country as a “caretaker” government with no parliament and no real mandate after the legislature was dissolved when it failed to agree on a new peacetime constitution.
Worsening the political turmoil, last month a hard-line faction of the party broke away, a move that some students suggest could inspire former rebels to take up arms again if another insurgency is launched.
The party leaders insist Nepal is in a “transitional” phase toward achieving social justice and rejects claims that the insurgency achieved little.
“There is no reason to regret the time spent fighting the people’s war,” party spokesman Shakti Basnet told AFP.
With Nepal’s post-war development bogged down and most of the country still desperately impoverished, the difficult task of fostering a more positive attitude among the Jiri students falls to the principal, Ram Hari Khanal.
“There were doubts over this program. We were not sure whether it would be successful or not. But I am optimistic about their future,” he told AFP.
3rd META Cinema Forum to screen at Vox Cinemas
Now in its 3rd edition, META Cinema Forum is the biggest cinema convention covering the Middle East and African markets. After signing an agreement with the Pan African Film Consortium, the MENA Cinema Forum is now rebranded as META Cinema Forum, inclusive of the Middle East and the entire African continent.
The forum takes place on Oct. 27 and 28 and is set to be one of the only annual events for the cinema industry in 2020 as most global conventions were canceled as a result of the pandemic and will be executed in a hybrid format. The forum will give delegates the option between attending physically at Vox Cinemas, Mall of the Emirates and Sheraton Hotel, Mall of the Emirates, Dubai, or alternatively delegates can attend virtually from the comfort of their home or offices across the globe via video conferencing technology.
“The cinema industry has been among the most impacted sectors by the pandemic, but if the $54 million box office sales of Tenet, the first blockbuster release since the pandemic, in its opening week at select international markets has proven anything, is that moviegoing is a habit we do not wish to kick, and that passion for movies and cinema as a form of accessible entertainment is here to stay,” said Leila Masinaei, META Cinema Forum Conference director and managing partner of Great Minds Event Management.
“Therefore, in close coordination with the major global stakeholders, we came up with a true hybrid event, the first of its kind in the world for the cinema industry, to facilitate collaborations that are required to help with the recovery. The event will highlight the plan for projects in the region, the recovery phase for the cinema industry, and content diversification as key critical elements.”
The forum includes a one-day, knowledge-packed conference, select slate presentations of upcoming content and films from leading Hollywood and international studios, a live META Cinema Projects Insight session with the most senior cinema leaders in the region and rounded off with a networking after-event reception.
Cameron Mitchell, CEO of Majid Al-Futtaim Cinemas and Majid Al-Futtaim Leisure and Entertainment, said: “At Vox Cinemas, we remain fundamentally confident about the future and resilience of the cinema industry, which has weathered many societal storms and survived more than a century of challenges ... We have witnessed a significant increase in our box office following the first wave of new releases and, with a backlog of blockbusters about to light up our screens regionally, cinema is set for a major comeback.”
The third edition is officially supported by some of the biggest cinema operators in the Middle East including Vox Cinemas, Novo Cinemas, Cinépolis Cinemas, and AMC Cinemas.
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