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Panchayat (Nepal)

Panchayat (Nepali: पञ्चायत) was a partyless political system in Nepal that was in place from 1961 to 1990. It placed all governmental power, including the Cabinet and Parliament, under one authority, the King, effectively making Nepal an absolute monarchy. In addition, political parties were declared illegal.[1]

The Panchayat system was incepted by King Mahendra by side-lining the Nepali Congress government of B. P. Koirala on 15 December 1960 (1st Poush 2017 BS). He introduced the Panchayat system on 5 January 1961 (22nd Poush 2017 BS). Under his direct rule, King Mahendra introduced the four-tiered structure—village, town, district and national Panchayat—based on limited elected executive committees. Mahendra consolidated power by institutionalizing and invoking the three pillars of national identity—Hindu religion, Nepali language and monarchy—as a foundation of everyday social and religious life. Moreover, the system propagated the idea of Ek Raja, Ek Bhesh, Ek Bhasa, and Ek Desh (One King, One Dress, One Language, One Nation).[2]

However, there was growing popular discontent over the panchayat system. In 1990, the illegal Nepali Congress and the United Left Front, a coalition of left-wing Nepali parties, joined together to start a campaign to restore multiparty democracy. The Nepalese Revolution began on 18 February 1990 and aimed to end Panchayat. King Birendra eventually announced that he would restore multiparty democracy, and the party ban was lifted on 8 April 1990, ending the panchayat system that had dominated Nepal for almost 30 years.[3]

Background

In 1960, King Mahendra used his emergency powers. He took charge of the State's betterment once again, claiming that the Congress government had fostered corruption, promoted party above national interest, failed to maintain law and order and "encouraged anti-national elements". Political parties were outlawed, and all prominent political figures, including the Prime Minister, were put behind bars. Civil liberties were curtailed, and press freedom was muzzled. Then, through an "exercise of the sovereign power and prerogatives inherent in us," King Mahendra promulgated a new constitution in December 1959, introducing a party-less Panchayat system. This system was a "Guided democracy" in which the people could elect their representatives while real power remained in the hands of the monarch.[4] Dissenters were called anti-national elements.[5]

King Mahendra formulated the Panchayat System after overthrowing the first democratically elected government and dissolving the parliament in 1960. On 26 December 1961, King Mahendra appointed a council of five ministers to help run the administration. Several weeks later, political parties were declared illegal. At first, the Nepali Congress leadership propounded a non-violent struggle against the new order. It formed alliances with several political parties, including the Gorkha Parishad and the United Democratic Party. Early in 1961, however, the king set up a committee of four officials from the Central Secretariat to recommend changes in the constitution that would abolish political parties and substitute a "National Guidance" system based on local panchayat led directly by the king.[6]

Adopted on the second anniversary of the dissolution of the government, the new constitution of December 16, 1962, created a four-tier panchayat system. At the local level, there were 4,000 village assemblies (gaun sabha) electing nine village panchayat members, who in turn elected a mayor (sabhapati). Each village panchayat sent a member to sit on one of 75 districts (zilla) panchayat, representing from 40 to 70 villages; the town panchayat chose one-third of the members of these assemblies. District panchayat members elected representatives to fourteen zone assemblies (anchal sabha), functioning as electoral colleges for the National Panchayat, or Rashtriya Panchayat, in Kathmandu. In addition, there were class organizations at village, district, and zonal levels for peasants, youth, women, elders, labourers, and ex-soldiers, who elected their representatives to assemblies. The National Panchayat of about 90 members could not criticize the royal government[citation needed], debate the principles of party-less democracy, introduce budgetary bills without royal approval or enact bills without the king's approval. Mahendra was the supreme commander of the armed forces, appointed (and had the power to remove) members of the Supreme Court, appointed the Public Service Commission to oversee the civil service and could change any judicial decision or amend the constitution at any time. Within a span of ten years, the king had, in effect, reclaimed the sovereign power exercised by Prithvi Narayan Shah in the eighteenth century.

 
King Mahendra in 1967

The first elections to the National Panchayat took place in March–April 1963. Although political parties were officially banned and the major opposition parties publicly refused to participate, about one-third of the legislature members were associated with the Nepali Congress. Support of the king by the army and the government bureaucracy prevented opposition to his rule from developing within the panchayat system. The real power came from the king's secretariat. In the countryside, influence rested in the offices of zonal commissioners and their office staff or the parallel system of development officers.[7]

Founded on having a system "suitable to the soil" by King Mahendra, the Panchayat polity was marked by a party-less system emphasizing decentralization while class coordination was to be implemented "only through the active and dynamic leadership of the crown". Mahendra dismissed the first-ever democratically elected government of BP Koirala, and the Panchayat polity's legacy has had a lasting impact on Nepal's history. The Panchayat equated nationalism with the Nepali language, Daura-Suruwal and Hindu religion. It led to an aggressive campaign to mould a Nepali identity along these lines. However, the institutions and policies of Panchayat were riddled with contradictions.[8]

Reforms during Panchayat Regime

Under the direct leadership of the king, the government implemented some of the significant projects initiated under the previous regime and oversaw further steps toward the country's development. Land reforms led to the confiscation of large Rana estates. Rajya reform abolished the special privileges of some aristocratic elites in western Nepal. A new legal code promulgated in 1963 replaced the Muluki Ain of 1854. A major land reform program launched in 1964 essentially was a failure.[9] The new panchayat system managed to bring 50,000 to 60,000 people into a single system of representative government in a way that had been rendered impossible for the elite-based political parties. Nepal was able to carry out its second plan (1962–65) and third plan (1965-70) and to begin the Fourth Five-Year Plan (1970–75). Eradication of malaria, construction of the Mahendra Highway, or East-West Highway, along the southern foot of the hills, and land settlement programs contributed to a massive population movement from the mountains into the Terai, resulting in a significant increase in the area devoted to agriculture.

Due to these economic reforms, by 1986, 2,054 industrial establishments were employing about 125,000 workers nationwide.[10]

Amendments to the 1962 Panchayat Constitution

Back to the Village National Campaign (2023 B.S.), the first amendment to the 1962 Constitution was one of the significant rural development efforts of the Panchayat system to be launched in 1967. Later Politics for Development was another amendment to develop Nepal during the Panchayat Era (26 Mangsir, 2032 B.S.), making the "Back to Village National Campaign" a constitutional organ.

End of Panchayat Regime

There was resentment against the authoritarian regime and the curbs on the freedom of the political parties.[11] There was a widespread feeling of the Palace being non-representative of the masses, especially when the Marich Man Singh government faced political scandals on charges of misappropriation of funds allotted for the victims of the earthquake in August 1988 or when it reshuffled the Cabinet instead of investigating the deaths of the people in a stampede in the national sports complex in a hailstorm.[12] Also, the souring of the India-Nepal trade relations affected the popularity of the Singh government.

In April 1987, Nepal introduced the work permit for Indian workers in three districts. In early 1989, Nepal provided a 40% duty concession to Chinese goods and later withdrew duty concessions from Indian goods so that Chinese goods became cheaper than Indian goods. This led to the souring of relations already strained over Nepal's purchase of Chinese arms in 1988. India refused to renew two separate Treaties of Trade and Transit and insisted on a single treaty dealing with the two issues, which was unacceptable to Nepal. A deadlock ensued, and the Treaties of Trade and Transit expired on March 23, 1989. The lower classes in Nepal mainly faced the brunt of the closure of the trade and transit points due to the restricted supply of consumer goods and petroleum products like petrol, aviation fuel and kerosene. The industries suffered because they depended on India for resources, trade and transit. The Government of Nepal tried to deal with the situation by relying on foreign aid from the US, UK, Australia and China. However, the government's strategy to manage the crisis could not satisfy those people who desired negotiations with India rather than dependence on foreign aid as a solution.

Taking advantage of the uneasiness among some people against the government and the strained India-Nepal relations, the Nepali Congress (NC) and the left-wing parties blamed the government for perpetuating the crisis and not taking any serious measures to solve it. In December 1989, the NC tried to utilize B.P. Koirala's anniversary by launching a people's awareness program. The left-wing alliance known as the United Left Front (ULF) extended its support to the NC in its campaign for a party system. On January 18–19, 1990, the NC held a conference to which leaders from various countries and foreign press members were invited. Leaders from India attended the meeting; Germany, Japan, Spain, and Finland supported the movement, and the US and West Germany embassies were present on occasion. Inspired by the international support and the democratic movements occurring throughout the world after the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1989, the NC and the ULF launched a mass movement on February 18 to end the Panchayat regime and the installation of an interim government represented by various parties and people.

On April 6, the Marich Man Singh government was dismissed, and Lokendra Bahadur Chand became the Prime Minister on the same day. However, the agitating mob was not satisfied with the change of government as they were not against the Singh government per se but against the party-less system. The people became violent, and a few people were killed in an encounter with the Army. On April 16, the Chand government was also dismissed. A Royal Proclamation was issued the next day, which dissolved the National Panchayat, the Panchayat policy, the evaluation committee, and the class organizations. Instead, the proclamation declared the "functioning of the political parties". It maintained that "all political parties will always keep the national interest uppermost in organizing themselves according to their political ideology." [13]

References

  1. ^ "Panchayat System in Nepal Part-I - GKToday". www.gktoday.in. Retrieved 2023-02-28.
  2. ^ KC, Pranab Kharel & Gaurab. "Reassessing Panchayat". My Republica. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
  3. ^ "Nepalese force king to accept democratic reform, 'Jana Andolan' (People's Movement), 1990 | Global Nonviolent Action Database". nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu. Retrieved 2023-03-01.
  4. ^ Savada, Andrea Matles; Harris, George Lawrence. (1993). "Nepal and Bhutan Country Studies". Library of Congress Country Studies. Federal Research Division. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  5. ^ "The Koirala Complex". Republica. Retrieved 31 October 2013.
  6. ^ "conflict Tuesday, June 7, 2011". 2011-06-07.
  7. ^ "The Panchayat System under King Mahendra".
  8. ^ "Martin Chautari". www.martinchautari.org.np. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
  9. ^ Thapa, Ganga (2015). Peasant Movement with Special Reference to Agrarian Reform in Nepal (1950-1970). Lambert Academic Publishing. pp. 168–178. ISBN 978-3-659-76806-4.
  10. ^ Jha, Manish. "Waiting for an industrial revolution | Economic Class | Nepali Times". archive.nepalitimes.com. Retrieved 2022-06-30.
  11. ^ Raeper, William; Hoftun, Martin (1992). Spring Awakening: An Account of the 1990 Revolution in Nepal. Viking. pp. 51–74. ISBN 0-670-85181-7.
  12. ^ Thapliyal,Sangeeta. (2011). "Crisis of Democracy in Nepal". The Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  13. ^ Thapliyal,Sangeeta. (2011). "Crisis of Democracy in Nepal". The Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses. Retrieved 2 November 2015.

panchayat, nepal, other, uses, panchayat, disambiguation, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, december, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, panchayat, nepali, पञ, यत, partyless, poli. For other uses see Panchayat disambiguation This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Panchayat Nepali पञ च यत was a partyless political system in Nepal that was in place from 1961 to 1990 It placed all governmental power including the Cabinet and Parliament under one authority the King effectively making Nepal an absolute monarchy In addition political parties were declared illegal 1 The Panchayat system was incepted by King Mahendra by side lining the Nepali Congress government of B P Koirala on 15 December 1960 1st Poush 2017 BS He introduced the Panchayat system on 5 January 1961 22nd Poush 2017 BS Under his direct rule King Mahendra introduced the four tiered structure village town district and national Panchayat based on limited elected executive committees Mahendra consolidated power by institutionalizing and invoking the three pillars of national identity Hindu religion Nepali language and monarchy as a foundation of everyday social and religious life Moreover the system propagated the idea of Ek Raja Ek Bhesh Ek Bhasa and Ek Desh One King One Dress One Language One Nation 2 However there was growing popular discontent over the panchayat system In 1990 the illegal Nepali Congress and the United Left Front a coalition of left wing Nepali parties joined together to start a campaign to restore multiparty democracy The Nepalese Revolution began on 18 February 1990 and aimed to end Panchayat King Birendra eventually announced that he would restore multiparty democracy and the party ban was lifted on 8 April 1990 ending the panchayat system that had dominated Nepal for almost 30 years 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Reforms during Panchayat Regime 3 Amendments to the 1962 Panchayat Constitution 4 End of Panchayat Regime 5 ReferencesBackground EditMain article King Mahendra s Coup In 1960 King Mahendra used his emergency powers He took charge of the State s betterment once again claiming that the Congress government had fostered corruption promoted party above national interest failed to maintain law and order and encouraged anti national elements Political parties were outlawed and all prominent political figures including the Prime Minister were put behind bars Civil liberties were curtailed and press freedom was muzzled Then through an exercise of the sovereign power and prerogatives inherent in us King Mahendra promulgated a new constitution in December 1959 introducing a party less Panchayat system This system was a Guided democracy in which the people could elect their representatives while real power remained in the hands of the monarch 4 Dissenters were called anti national elements 5 King Mahendra formulated the Panchayat System after overthrowing the first democratically elected government and dissolving the parliament in 1960 On 26 December 1961 King Mahendra appointed a council of five ministers to help run the administration Several weeks later political parties were declared illegal At first the Nepali Congress leadership propounded a non violent struggle against the new order It formed alliances with several political parties including the Gorkha Parishad and the United Democratic Party Early in 1961 however the king set up a committee of four officials from the Central Secretariat to recommend changes in the constitution that would abolish political parties and substitute a National Guidance system based on local panchayat led directly by the king 6 Adopted on the second anniversary of the dissolution of the government the new constitution of December 16 1962 created a four tier panchayat system At the local level there were 4 000 village assemblies gaun sabha electing nine village panchayat members who in turn elected a mayor sabhapati Each village panchayat sent a member to sit on one of 75 districts zilla panchayat representing from 40 to 70 villages the town panchayat chose one third of the members of these assemblies District panchayat members elected representatives to fourteen zone assemblies anchal sabha functioning as electoral colleges for the National Panchayat or Rashtriya Panchayat in Kathmandu In addition there were class organizations at village district and zonal levels for peasants youth women elders labourers and ex soldiers who elected their representatives to assemblies The National Panchayat of about 90 members could not criticize the royal government citation needed debate the principles of party less democracy introduce budgetary bills without royal approval or enact bills without the king s approval Mahendra was the supreme commander of the armed forces appointed and had the power to remove members of the Supreme Court appointed the Public Service Commission to oversee the civil service and could change any judicial decision or amend the constitution at any time Within a span of ten years the king had in effect reclaimed the sovereign power exercised by Prithvi Narayan Shah in the eighteenth century King Mahendra in 1967 The first elections to the National Panchayat took place in March April 1963 Although political parties were officially banned and the major opposition parties publicly refused to participate about one third of the legislature members were associated with the Nepali Congress Support of the king by the army and the government bureaucracy prevented opposition to his rule from developing within the panchayat system The real power came from the king s secretariat In the countryside influence rested in the offices of zonal commissioners and their office staff or the parallel system of development officers 7 Founded on having a system suitable to the soil by King Mahendra the Panchayat polity was marked by a party less system emphasizing decentralization while class coordination was to be implemented only through the active and dynamic leadership of the crown Mahendra dismissed the first ever democratically elected government of BP Koirala and the Panchayat polity s legacy has had a lasting impact on Nepal s history The Panchayat equated nationalism with the Nepali language Daura Suruwal and Hindu religion It led to an aggressive campaign to mould a Nepali identity along these lines However the institutions and policies of Panchayat were riddled with contradictions 8 Reforms during Panchayat Regime EditUnder the direct leadership of the king the government implemented some of the significant projects initiated under the previous regime and oversaw further steps toward the country s development Land reforms led to the confiscation of large Rana estates Rajya reform abolished the special privileges of some aristocratic elites in western Nepal A new legal code promulgated in 1963 replaced the Muluki Ain of 1854 A major land reform program launched in 1964 essentially was a failure 9 The new panchayat system managed to bring 50 000 to 60 000 people into a single system of representative government in a way that had been rendered impossible for the elite based political parties Nepal was able to carry out its second plan 1962 65 and third plan 1965 70 and to begin the Fourth Five Year Plan 1970 75 Eradication of malaria construction of the Mahendra Highway or East West Highway along the southern foot of the hills and land settlement programs contributed to a massive population movement from the mountains into the Terai resulting in a significant increase in the area devoted to agriculture Due to these economic reforms by 1986 2 054 industrial establishments were employing about 125 000 workers nationwide 10 Amendments to the 1962 Panchayat Constitution EditBack to the Village National Campaign 2023 B S the first amendment to the 1962 Constitution was one of the significant rural development efforts of the Panchayat system to be launched in 1967 Later Politics for Development was another amendment to develop Nepal during the Panchayat Era 26 Mangsir 2032 B S making the Back to Village National Campaign a constitutional organ End of Panchayat Regime EditThere was resentment against the authoritarian regime and the curbs on the freedom of the political parties 11 There was a widespread feeling of the Palace being non representative of the masses especially when the Marich Man Singh government faced political scandals on charges of misappropriation of funds allotted for the victims of the earthquake in August 1988 or when it reshuffled the Cabinet instead of investigating the deaths of the people in a stampede in the national sports complex in a hailstorm 12 Also the souring of the India Nepal trade relations affected the popularity of the Singh government In April 1987 Nepal introduced the work permit for Indian workers in three districts In early 1989 Nepal provided a 40 duty concession to Chinese goods and later withdrew duty concessions from Indian goods so that Chinese goods became cheaper than Indian goods This led to the souring of relations already strained over Nepal s purchase of Chinese arms in 1988 India refused to renew two separate Treaties of Trade and Transit and insisted on a single treaty dealing with the two issues which was unacceptable to Nepal A deadlock ensued and the Treaties of Trade and Transit expired on March 23 1989 The lower classes in Nepal mainly faced the brunt of the closure of the trade and transit points due to the restricted supply of consumer goods and petroleum products like petrol aviation fuel and kerosene The industries suffered because they depended on India for resources trade and transit The Government of Nepal tried to deal with the situation by relying on foreign aid from the US UK Australia and China However the government s strategy to manage the crisis could not satisfy those people who desired negotiations with India rather than dependence on foreign aid as a solution Taking advantage of the uneasiness among some people against the government and the strained India Nepal relations the Nepali Congress NC and the left wing parties blamed the government for perpetuating the crisis and not taking any serious measures to solve it In December 1989 the NC tried to utilize B P Koirala s anniversary by launching a people s awareness program The left wing alliance known as the United Left Front ULF extended its support to the NC in its campaign for a party system On January 18 19 1990 the NC held a conference to which leaders from various countries and foreign press members were invited Leaders from India attended the meeting Germany Japan Spain and Finland supported the movement and the US and West Germany embassies were present on occasion Inspired by the international support and the democratic movements occurring throughout the world after the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1989 the NC and the ULF launched a mass movement on February 18 to end the Panchayat regime and the installation of an interim government represented by various parties and people On April 6 the Marich Man Singh government was dismissed and Lokendra Bahadur Chand became the Prime Minister on the same day However the agitating mob was not satisfied with the change of government as they were not against the Singh government per se but against the party less system The people became violent and a few people were killed in an encounter with the Army On April 16 the Chand government was also dismissed A Royal Proclamation was issued the next day which dissolved the National Panchayat the Panchayat policy the evaluation committee and the class organizations Instead the proclamation declared the functioning of the political parties It maintained that all political parties will always keep the national interest uppermost in organizing themselves according to their political ideology 13 References Edit Panchayat System in Nepal Part I GKToday www gktoday in Retrieved 2023 02 28 KC Pranab Kharel amp Gaurab Reassessing Panchayat My Republica Retrieved 2020 09 03 Nepalese force king to accept democratic reform Jana Andolan People s Movement 1990 Global Nonviolent Action Database nvdatabase swarthmore edu Retrieved 2023 03 01 Savada Andrea Matles Harris George Lawrence 1993 Nepal and Bhutan Country Studies Library of Congress Country Studies Federal Research Division Retrieved 2 November 2015 The Koirala Complex Republica Retrieved 31 October 2013 conflict Tuesday June 7 2011 2011 06 07 The Panchayat System under King Mahendra Martin Chautari www martinchautari org np Retrieved 2020 09 03 Thapa Ganga 2015 Peasant Movement with Special Reference to Agrarian Reform in Nepal 1950 1970 Lambert Academic Publishing pp 168 178 ISBN 978 3 659 76806 4 Jha Manish Waiting for an industrial revolution Economic Class Nepali Times archive nepalitimes com Retrieved 2022 06 30 Raeper William Hoftun Martin 1992 Spring Awakening An Account of the 1990 Revolution in Nepal Viking pp 51 74 ISBN 0 670 85181 7 Thapliyal Sangeeta 2011 Crisis of Democracy in Nepal The Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses Retrieved 2 November 2015 Thapliyal Sangeeta 2011 Crisis of Democracy in Nepal The Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses Retrieved 2 November 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panchayat Nepal amp oldid 1147458409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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