Asia

Nepal

  • North Korea
    Friday Asia Update: Top Five Stories for the Week of April 4, 2014
    Lauren Dickey, Darcie Draudt, Charles McClean, Will Piekos, and Sharone Tobias look at the top stories in Asia today. 1. Tensions rise on the Korean Peninsula. South and North Korea exchanged artillery fire across a disputed martime border off the peninsula’s western coast on March 31. Neither side aimed at land or military installations, but 100 of the 500 rounds from North Korea fell south of the boundary, followed by 300 South Korean artillery shells shot into the northern side of the boundary. The incident occurred not far from Baengnyeong Island, where in March 2010 North Korean torpedoes sunk the South Korean warship Cheonan. The artillery barrages follow increased protests and heightened rhetoric from Pyongyang in response to annual joint U.S.-ROK military drills.On April 1, South Korea discovered a small unidentified drone, which Seoul alleges came from North Korea, shortly after the exchange of fire on Monday on Baengneyong Island. Following these events and amid rising tension, South Korea announced on April 4, that it successfully tested a ballistic missile capable of reaching most of North Korea, which has been test-firing short- and mid-range missiles of its own in throughout March. 2. Philippines seeks UN arbitration over South China Sea dispute with China. Manila has submitted its claim to the tribunal that arbitrates maritime disputes under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Under its ‘nine-dash line,’ Beijing’s territorial claims encompass much of the South China Sea and overlap with the exclusive economic zones (EEZs) of Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, and the Philippines. Manila would lose 80 percent of its EEZ in the waters off the western Philippines if it accepted Beijing’s line. Chinese media have been dismissive of the claim and have thus far chosen to unilaterally reject UN arbitration of the dispute. 3. Environmental protests in China lead to arrests; four rumored to be killed. Thousands of residents in the southern Chinese city of Maoming protested a petrochemical plant this past week. One post on microblogging site Weibo claimed that four teenagers had been killed in the clashes, and many pictures showed paramilitary police throughout the city. Eighteen protesters have been detained, according to state media. Protests have also spread to other cities in the area, including Shenzhen and Guangzhou. The plant would produce paraxylene, or PX, a chemical used to produce plastic and polyester. Protesters have taken to the streets over PX plants before; citizens of Xiamen were able to get a plant moved to another city in 2007, and mass protests in Dalian in 2011 and Kunming in 2013 elicited similar promises. An opinion poll by Jiao Tong University in Shanghai found that 77 percent of respondents believe that environmental protection is now more important than economic growth. 4. UN court orders Japan to halt Arctic whaling. The UN’s International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled that the Japanese government must halt its whaling program in the waters around Antarctica.  The ruling ends a program that has captured more than ten thousand whales since 1988 in the name of biological research. The Japanese government has agreed to abide by the ruling, despite the central role of whaling in the Japanese culture. While the ICJ ruling is a whale of a win for environmental organizations, questions remain over whether Japan will find a way to keep hunting the mammals of the sea. 5. Human rights group finds Tibetans repressed in Nepal. Human Rights Watch released a report Tuesday documenting repression faced by Tibetans in Nepal, which they claim is a result of political pressure from China. Many of the 20,000 Tibetans in Nepal entered the country illegally from China, and at times are forcibly returned, in violation of an agreement between Nepal and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. China has become a top foreign direct investor in Nepal in recent years, which Tibetans say has led to a crackdown by the Nepalese government on their community. The report claims a de facto ban on political protests against China in Nepal and that Tibetans have less freedom to promote their culture. Since 2009, more than 120 Tibetans in China have set themselves on fire to protest the government’s policies. BONUS: North Korea reveals logo for its new space agency. North Korea’s National Aerospace Development Administration (NADA) revealed its new logo on Monday: a retro blue circle that is reminiscent of NASA’s earlier logo, though with a Joseon twist. Here, the Big Dipper “reflects the will of the space scientists of the DPRK to glorify Kim Il Sung’s and Kim Jong Il’s Korea as a space power,” according to North Korean state media agency KCNA [Korean]. The agency is overseen by the Korean Committee of Space Technology, which was reportedly founded in the 1980s. The pessimistically named NADA has had only one successful launch of a since-failing Earth-orbiting satellite in December 2012 that was promptly condemned by the UN Security Council.
  • India
    Top 10 South Asia Stories of 2013
    In a year of many tumultuous events, these ten developments stood out—in my personal view—as the most consequential stories for India and South Asia. It was a year of many elections, of protests, and of change. Herewith the list, with a few links for further reading: Indian women stand up for change: It was a year of extraordinary attention to women’s rights in India, spurred first by mass outrage at the December 2012 gang-rape of Nirbhaya in Delhi. Parliament passed a new, more comprehensive law on rape with dispatch; fast-track courts fulfilled their name, bringing justice quickly; a new sexual harassment law was implemented; and more than ever before, women stood up for their rights. Nawaz Sharif’s return: Nawaz Sharif, twice prime minister of Pakistan in the 1990s,  successfully defeated the Pakistan People’s Party in the May national elections. This first peaceful transition of power from one elected civilian government to another marked an historic benchmark for a country that has oscillated between civilian and military governments throughout its history. Narendra Modi’s definitive rise: Though his political rise had been chronicled in the press for several years, it was 2013 that witnessed the scale of Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi’s mass appeal across numerous states in India. His formal anointment in September as the Bharatiya Janata Party’s prime ministerial candidate for the 2014 elections put an end to speculation of intra-party rivalries, and fueled endless polls and speculation about a NaMo versus RaGa showdown in India. Largest accident in garment industry history: The April 24 collapse of the Rana Plaza building in Bangladesh led to the garment industry’s worst tragedy in history, with more than 1,100 dead and a heartbreaking, more than a week- long rescue operation to search for survivors. [This haunting photograph went viral, symbolizing the heartbreak of this senseless catastrophe.] The collapse led to action from European and U.S. brands and retailers, as well as action from the government of Bangladesh and the Bangladesh garment industry associations, to focus on workplace safety and labor rights to strengthen this industry which employs more than 4 million, primarily women. Region wary of troop drawdown in Afghanistan in 2014:  In 2014 the troop drawdown in Afghanistan will likely rank as the region’s top story, but throughout 2013 it remained the big unknown turning point of the future. CFR released a special report in November which recommended close attention to the regional dynamics as essential to Afghan stability. It also recommended relying less on Pakistan, and encouraging greater regional economic integration. Slowing economic growth in India: In 2013 an even sharper slowdown in India’s economic growth led some analysts to ask tougher questions about India’s economic future amidst numerous political economy challenges. A June 2013 report from Standard & Poor’s asked whether India might become the first of the BRICs to lose its investment grade rating. Indian citizens vote for governance (rise of the Aam Aadmi Party): The surprise result of the Delhi state-level election in India was the second-place showing of a barely year-old party, the Aam Aadmi (Ordinary Person) Party, which had campaigned explicitly on an anti-corruption platform. Even more surprising has been the unfolding process through which the AAP has sought to form the Delhi government, as no party gained a simple majority. As AAP seeks to extend its reach nationally, many will be looking to see what effect it might have on the national level. Nepal holds elections after five years, votes against Maoists: On November 19, Nepalis at last were able to vote for a new Constituent Assembly. The previous Assembly’s mandate had expired in May 2012, so Nepalis were without elected representatives for a year and a half. Voters had a firm message for the Maoists (they were not returned to power), and the Nepali Congress won 105 of 240 seats. The Assembly will have to get to work completing a new Constitution—the single most important and divisive task leftover from the previous Assembly. Sri Lanka’s struggle with legacy of conflict: In 2013, a second UN Human Rights Council resolution passed urging Sri Lanka to fulfill the recommendations of its own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission report following the 2009 end of the country’s civil war. While much has been done on reconstruction and return of the displaced, and this year the Northern Provincial Council at last elected its own local government,  substantial international concern about human rights and accountability questions overshadowed the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting hosted in Sri Lanka this year. Maldives votes in half-brother of former autocrat: Following more than a year and a half of extreme political polarization in Maldives, and a very complicated election process with a first round vote, a delayed run-off, an annulment of the September first round and November re-do, and then a final run-off, Maldivians elected the more conservative Abdulla Yameen, half-brother of former president Gayoom, over the internationally known former president Mohamed Nasheed. Mr. Nasheed conceded graciously.
  • Politics and Government
    Nepal: Back on the Political Track
    There have been a lot of elections in South Asia in recent days. On November 16 a run-off election produced a surprise result in Maldives, where Abdulla Yameen—the half-brother of former President Gayoom—narrowly succeeded over Mohamed Nasheed, who had led the previous two first-round elections. The Indian state of Chhattisgarh (the size of a small country, with about 25 million people) had its first phase of state-level polls on November 11. And on Tuesday, November 19, there will be two elections underway in the region—the second phase in India’s Chhattisgarh, as well as the long-overdue national Constituent Assembly elections in Nepal. India will count the results from five different state elections on December 8, so we’ll all have to wait to find out who wins. Nepal’s elections mark an opportunity for the country to get back to business politically. This country of 30 million people has been without elected representatives since the expiration of the last Constituent Assembly on May 27, 2012. The Assembly, comprised of 601 representatives, was created in April 2008 initially as a two-year body at the end of Nepal’s long decade of internal conflict, tasked with seeing through the peace process and drafting a new constitution for a country that has moved from monarchy to constitutional monarchy to insurgency to democracy. On management of the peace process, the former Assembly did quite well. Nepal has successfully dealt with the enormously difficult post-conflict question of how to demobilize former combatants, integrating some into the Nepali Army, and helping others move into retirement or new livelihoods. Many countries would do well by learning from Nepal’s experience here. But it was the constitution drafting exercise where the former Assembly foundered. Despite four extensions, in the end members could not reach agreement on federalism-related issues (like the number of provinces, on what basis they might be formed, what they would be named, among others) and the Assembly lapsed. Since then, Nepal has been in an interim state of government—not a crisis, but not proactively advancing the important developmental agenda that its citizens want. For a country long held out as one of great hydropower and tourism potential (but a potential unrealized), the ongoing political instability has not facilitated needed investment, to quote the head of the Non-Resident Nepali association. Current press coverage has focused on voter disappointment “by the bickering among parties and a flailing economy,” with the “euphoria” of the 2008 national elections decidedly missing. There does not appear to be a clear front runner, and with more than 120 parties registered, “fractured” best describes the electorate. The party with the single largest number of seats in the previous Assembly, the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), headed by Pushpa Kamal Dahal (known for years by his nom de guerre, Prachanda), is seen as vying for votes with the Nepali Congress, headed by Sushil Koirala, in part due to a split in the Maoists. But there are so many smaller parties, and the general consensus is that no single party will have a definitive victory, so coalition formation will be the important thing to watch.