Nepal PM quits in hope to end crisis with Maoists

KATHMANDU, June 30 (Reuters) – Nepali Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal resigned on Wednesday in a move aimed at resolving a political crisis and saving the peace process more than three years after the end of a decade-long Maoist civil war.

“I have decided to resign with effect from today to clear the way for a political consensus,” Nepal said in a televised address.

The country’s Maoists insisted on returning to power at the head of a unity government to oversee the preparation of Nepal’s first constitution after it turned into a republic two years ago.

The moderate communist Nepal succeeded Maoist leader Prachanda as prime minister in May last year after the former warlord quit in a conflict over the control of the national army.

Since then, the Maoists, who won the 2008 election for a special constituent assembly tasked to prepare a new constitution, had been pressing for Nepal’s resignation to pave the way for a national unity government headed by them.

The former rebels called the resignation a “positive” step to end the deadlock.

“We will make efforts for a national unity government with the consensus of all political parties,” Maoist spokesman Dinanath Sharma said.

But other political parties say the Maoists, who are the biggest political group in the assembly but lack the working majority, must dismantle their army camps before they are allowed to form a new coalition.

Maoists have so far refused to do so and the standoff forced the extension of the assembly deadline delaying the preparation of the charter until May next year. They had threatened to disrupt the budget session of parliament beginning next week if the leader did not resign.

Analysts said if the new government also kept the Maoists out it was unlikely to end the turmoil, sparking fresh bouts of street protests and general shutdowns.

The crisis has hit the aid-and-tourism dependent economy already facing long hours of power outages and a double digit inflation, raising popular frustration with the government. (Editing by Krittivas Mukherjee and Miral Fahmy)

Chidambaram reviews anti-Maoist operations in Jharkhand

Ranchi (Jharkhand) June 11 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram held a detailed review of the ongoing anti-Maoist operations in Jharkhand on Friday.

Chidambaram also held consultations with senior officials and newly appointed advisors to the Jharkhand Government and discussed measures to tackle the Maoists activities in the State.

The two-hour long meeting held at the Raj Bhawan in Ranchi was attended by top officials of the state, including Chief Secretary AK Singh, Home Secretary JB Tubid and Director General of Police (DGP) Neyaj Ahmad.

Chidambaram also reviewed the Centrally sponsored special development scheme implemented in the ten Maoist-affected districts of the state.

This was Chidambaram”s first visit to Jharkhand after the imposition of the President”s rule on June 1. (ANI)

Maoists drop guns, take deep breath at Sri Sri ashram

Bangalore, June 5 — Spiritual guru Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, who has mesmerised millions in India and abroad, now has some unexpected followers – the Maoists.

Seventeen rebels visited his ashram near Bangalore on Friday to seek his help in removing negative emotions and shunning violence, the founder of the Art of Living Foundation said on Saturday.

The Maoists came from Jharkhand, Bengal, Bihar and Chhattisgarh and participated in several yogic sessions, said Ravi Shankar, who escaped unhurt when a gunman fired at his convoy last week. The guru said he was helping the Maoists get off the path of violence and accept the olive branch offered by Home Minister P. Chidambaram.

The Maoists are believed to have got in touch with the Art of Living Movement through peace and meditation camps organised by the foundation to motivate ultras to quit violence.

The foundation, however, did not disclose if these Maoists had given up arms before participating in the yoga sessions.

Naxal operation is on: CRPF DG

New Delhi, June 5 — There is no let up in the offensive against the Naxals in the country, especially Chhattisgarh, and those who think the morale of the force is down be warned, CRPF Director General Vikram Srivastava said. “The operations are continuing as usual and we’ve killed several Naxals in Bijapur and Dantewada (in Bastar) in the past one month,” he told HT. The operations, however, are largely based on the intelligence collected by the state police.

Allaying apprehensions that the CRPF had taken a backseat in Chhattisgarh after the killing of its 75 personnel by the Maoists in Dantewada on April 6, Srivastava said the central forces were extending all possible support to the state police in carrying out the operations. “We are there to fight a decisive battle,” he said.

Whether the force is prepared to take on the Naxals, he said the CRPF had vast experience of handling internal security problems and the Naxal menace would also be contained effectively. “No one should forget our role in Kashmir and the Northeast,” he reminded.

Besides 50 battalions in the Naxal areas in seven states of India, the CRPF has deployed 70 battalions in Jammu & Kashmir and 40 battalions in the Northeast to fight against the insurgents. The government is also upgrading infrastructural facilities for the forces on the ground after identifying the shortcomings.

The DG informed that the force received an overwhelming 1.13 lakh applications from the Naxal strongholds in seven states. These applicants were considered against 4,400 vacancies and their training has already begun.

“The people are fed up with the Naxals and want to join the CRPF to stamp them out,” Srivastava added. This year, the CRPF planned to raise another eight battalions (8,000 personnel) that would be largely deployed in the Naxal belts.

“Undoubtedly, all Naxal-infested areas would be secured by assisting the state police and a conducive atmosphere created for development programmes,” he added.

PCAPA members ransack houses in Jhargram

Kolkata, June 6 (IANS) Suspected members of a pro-Maoist tribal organisation early Sunday ransacked a few houses near Jhargram town in West Midnapore district of West Bengal and fired shots in the air, police said.

Superintendent of Police Praveen Tripathi said that members of the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) were behind the incident that occurred three km from Jhargram.

‘PCAPA members ransacked some houses. We have unconfirmed reports that a few shots have been fired as we have recovered used cartridges from the spot,’ Tripathi said.

The PCAPA is considered a frontal organisation of the Maoists. Their posters were also recovered from the site of the accident of the Howrah-Kurla Gyaneshwari Express in which at least 150 people were killed and over 200 injured.

Jhargram is 155 km from Kolkata.

BJP slams Mamata, CPM for spat, seeks PM intervention

Taking a strong exception to the political war of words between the Trinamool Congress and CPM over the Jnaneswari Express disaster, the Opposition BJP on Sunday came down heavily on Railways Minister and Trinamool chief Mamata Banerjee and sought Prime Minister’s intervention in the matter.

The BJP criticised the slug fest between Trinamool and CPM to score political brownie points with West Bengal elections in mind.

“Both Trinamool Congress’s Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee and CPM, which is heading the state government, have failed in providing quick relief to the train disaster victims. Both of them are engaged in a political match over the issue with an eye on the Assembly elections in the state,” BJP spokesperson Prakash Javdekar said, adding, “We condemn the carelessness towards the relief and rescue work that is being seen there even after 72 hours after the incident.”

Javdekar came down particularly against the Railways Minister for jumping to conclusions in an apparent attempt the counter the Left charge against her. “The Railway Minister has forgotten Railway security and appears more inclined to give a clean chit to Maoists, which is highly irresponsible. When the probe is yet to happen, how could she come to know that there is no Maoist hand into the incident,” he said. “If UPA ministers work like this, it will be a betrayal of the mandate. This will only embolden Maoists. Prime Minister should see that this does not happen.”

Mystery over track, CM okay with CBI probe

West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee has verbally conveyed to the Centre his approval for a CBI inquiry into the Jnaneswari Express carnage after no explosives were discovered at the site of the mishap. Investigations are needed to ascertain how a nearly foot-long chunk of the rail track was cut by suspected Maoists in a matter of 27 minutes.

Government sources told The Indian Express that while police and security agencies have been asked to trace the vital missing rail track, the Research Design Standards Organisation (RDSO) of Indian Railways has been handed over a portion of the remaining rail track to find out how it was cut by suspected Maoists.

While Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee has called the entire incident a “political conspiracy” before the state civic polls, the Centre is also intrigued by intercepts received from the Maoist communication network. These indicate that Maoist leaders initially wanted to take responsibility for the attack after they heard of a goods train being targeted at Sardiha. However, they decided to deny any hand after they heard that the attack was on the Jnaneswari Express and scores of innocents lives had been lost.

Contrary to reports, the Central agencies have not found evidence of any explosives or gas cutters and are trying to determine how a portion made of toughened steel was removed in just 27 minutes — the time between passage of the last train (12.43 am) on the track and the collision between the derailed Jnaneswari Express (1.10 am) and the goods train. According to top government officials, a total of five trains passed on that track an hour before the incident.

One possibility being explored is the use of a chemical to systematically corrode the track.

The Home Ministry is expected to formally write to the state government on Monday for the inquiry. The Department of Personnel and Training will be asked to issue the notification after a formal approval has been obtained.

Tracks clear, first goods train passes

Nearly 50 hours after the Jnaneswari Express was derailed, first goods train passed the accident site at 3.45 on Sunday morning.

“We are keeping the speed of trains which are passing at 15 km per hour. Slowly, the speed will be increased to 100 km per hours — the usual speed of trains — at this spot in the next seven days,” said Dinesh Kumar, Additional Divisional Railway Manager, Kharagpur zone, who is overseeing the rescue operations at the accident site.

Kumar said for the next two days, no passenger train would pass from this route owing to the black week called by the Maoists in this area.

While the railway tracks were repaired at 1.50 am and the overhead wire was fixed at 2.30 am, the first train arrived at 3.15 am, but it was allowed to pass only at 3.45 am.

Although the injured and dead have been removed from the site, an uneasy silence prevailed in the area on Sunday afternoon, with a foul smell emanating from the bogies and CRPF personnel encircling the entire area — even the road from NH-6 leading to the accident site.

The mangled S5 and S6 bogies and the scattered belongings of the passengers narrated the horror of the accident as a CID team, headed by Additional Director General Raj Kanojia, visited the site. “The inquiry is being headed by an officer of the rank of Special IG, but we are in our initial stage of investigations,” Kanojia said. “It is a case of sabotage. Planned attacks on the Railways have been going on in this area for quite some time. The railway line was cut and the pandrol clips were opened. But without a forensic report, we cannot say whether there was an explosion or not.”

An investigation into the incident leading to derailment will be conducted by Commissioner, Railway Safety, Sudhayk Nayak from Monday. According to the railway authorities, he will investigate how much damage was caused to the tracks, which led to the derailment. He will also assess the rescue operations and whether there were any lapses on the part of the local railway authorities.

Action replay: Soren out, Prez rule looms

Jharkahnd is set for yet another spell of President’s Rule with Chief Minister Shibu Soren resigning on the eve of Monday’s trust vote that he looked set to lose.

The Congress is not inclined to be a part of any alternative coalition government at this stage and the BJP remained firm on its decision not to support Soren. While the JMM in a last-ditch attempt offered support to the BJP, the latter said it wouldn’t accept the same.

According to sources, the UPA government at the Centre would prefer to have a brief spell of President’s Rule to put the house in order in the state that is witnessing increasing Naxal menace.

AICC in charge of Jharkhand

K Keshava Rao refused to spell out

the Congress’s stance. “It is for the Governor to decide now,” he told The Indian Express.

On Sunday night Soren called on Governor M O H Farooq to submit his resignation. Farooq asked him to continue as caretaker CM till further orders. “I will continue to work for the people,” said Soren.

Although the Congress reportedly did explore the possibility of forming an alternative coalition consisting of Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (Prajatantrik) of Babulal Marandi and Soren’s JMM, it made no headway as the Congress refused to have a JMM chief minister or give Soren any Cabinet berth at the Centre. The Congress was, however, willing to consider giving Soren’s son the Deputy CM’s post and to also consider a gubernatorial assignment for the JMM chief. Given Soren’s alleged softness for Maoists, the UPA crisis managers did not want him to have any say in running the state. Soren was reportedly not prepared to accept these terms.

Trying to save his government, Soren was learnt to have reached out to BJP president Nitin Gadkari, urging him to “forget my U-turns”, and even signing a letter of support to the party.

During a meeting held at the CM’s official residence on Sunday morning, JMM and All Jharkhand Students’ Union (AJSU) MLAs unanimously resolved to convey their offer to the BJP to revive the deal and to let Soren seek the vote of confidence on the floor of the Assembly on Monday.

“We appeal to all parties and members of the Assembly to rise above party lines and vote in favour of the motion of confidence,” said Hemlal Murmu, a JMM MLA. “We were with the BJP, we are with the BJP, and we will remain with the BJP.”

The JMM chief apparently banked on the fact that most of the BJP MLAs were inclined to accept his offer.

However, the BJP stuck to its stand of not having any truck with Soren. Dealt one embarrassing blow by Soren after another since the cut motion vote in Parliament, it had decided that enough was enough. The Left and Jharkhand Vikas Morcha too decided to oppose the trust vote.

According to Congress sources, after a brief spell of President’s Rule, fresh efforts would be made to cobble up an alternative coalition arrangement. “By that time, Shibu will also have done his loss-benefit analysis,” said a senior Congress leader.

President’s Rule had been lifted in Jharkhand only five months ago, nearly a year after it was imposed in December 2009 to pave the way for formation of a JMM-BJP government.

Soren’s son Hemant, however, remained confident of a JMM-backed government: “With his (Soren’s) resignation, the prospect of formation of a new JMM-supported government has brightened because no party or MLA is in favour of President’s Rule, followed by Assembly polls.”

Trinamool MP hits on WB police over train tragedy

The Trinamool Congress hit out at the West Bengal police over the Gyaneswari Express derailment, which claimed 148 lives, with a party MP saying he did not believe in the DGP’s statement holding the Maoists responsible for the train tragedy.

Asked to comment on the DGP Bhupinder Singh’s statement that Maoists were behind the mishap, party MP Kalyan Banerjee told a TV channel “the DGP is a very foolish person. I don’t believe in his statement at all.”

Banerjee claimed the CBI was being asked to inquire into the disaster. “Unless and until the probe is complete any comment on it would be premature and a foolish opinion,” Banerjee, also a senior lawyer, he said.

The DGP could not be contacted for his comments.

Maoists to use 19 tonnes explosives before 2010 expiry, warns expert

Raipur, May 31 (IANS) The country should be prepared for more deadly blasts by Maoists as the guerrillas are planning to use some 19 tonnes of explosives before they expire by the end of this year, a senior de-mining expert of the Chhattisgarh Police claimed Monday.

In February 2006, Maoists had stormed into an explosives depot of public enterprise NMDC Ltd. at Bailadila hills in Dantewada district and walked away with 20 tonnes of high-powered explosives after killing eight Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel, guarding the stock meant to blast rocks for mining iron ore.

‘We have definite information that guerrillas have used nearly one tonne of the NMDC explosives loot so far and they are in a hurry to use the remaining 19 tonnes before they expire by the fag end of 2010,’ the expert told IANS requesting anonymity.

The officer advised that policemen and paramilitary troopers deployed in the Maoist strongholds in states hit-by leftist insurgency must carry sufficient number of de-mining experts as well as sniffer dogs while going on combing operations, particularly in jungles and hilly stretches.

A de-mining expert clears the stretches of landmines.

The officer, who is based in Chhattisgarh’s Bastar region — the nerve-centre of Maoist militancy, claimed that NMDC explosives were used by Maoists for all major attacks in recent months, including the attack by rebels April 6 in Dantewada district in which 76 security personnel were killed.

Winning hearts in Kanker to beat back Maoists

New Delhi/Raipur, May 31 (IANS) Maoists hold sway over parts of eastern and central India, but Kanker – once a stronghold of the rebels in Chhattisgarh’s Bastar region – is a success story of how civil administration can be restored and years of neglect done away with.

After living without basic amenities for years, villagers today have access to a dispensary, foodgrain shops, public transport, a river bridge and weekly markets.

Home Secretary G.K. Pillai says the Border Security Force (BSF) has been successful in reclaiming these villages from Maoist dominance and ‘development works are slowly picking up’.

‘This is a small achievement, I know, but the beginning has been great as far as a long-term solution to tackling Maoist insurgency and winning back the confidence of tribal people goes,’ Pillai told IANS.

For the authorities fighting to reclaim large swathes of tribal area from Maoists, these are ‘positive indicators’.

Residents of Kodapakha village earlier had to travel 15 km for subsidised rice and rations because the shop was in Durgukondal tehsil. And the Maoists wouldn’t allow one to be opened in the hamlet. But not any more.

‘The PDS (public distribution system) shop of Kodapakha village which was functioning about 15 km away has now been operating in the village itself since Feb 17,’ says a letter from Raman Srivastava, BSF director general, to Home Secretary Pillai.

Five battalions of the BSF have been deployed in Kanker since November 2009 at 27 locations of the district, which has a population of around 700,000 people.

The BSF has been conducting anti-Maoist operations and has been successful to a large extent in weeding out the rebels and making way for the civil administration, the document says.

Villages like Kodapakha, Antagarh, Kolibeda and Jadekurse where Maoists once used to run a parallel government, like they still do in large parts of Bastar, have completely slipped away from rebel control.

Another PDS shop in a nearby village that was blown up in 2004 by the Maoists has become operational since March this year.

The document says medical care is also within the reach of Kodapakha villagers. Before a dispensary was established there, people in need of medical assistance would have to walk 15 km to Durgukondal. But the dispensary sanctioned years ago has become operational since Feb 14.

Public transport that had been off the roads of Kanker for years is slowly being restored ‘with the presence of the BSF’, the letter claims.

‘Four buses, seven jeeps are plying from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.’ connecting Bhanupartappur, Kolibeda, Antagarh and Udanpur villages, it says. And to ensure security for the passenger, BSF troopers travel with them.

A weekly market at Irikbuta village was suspended in 2004 due to the fear of Maoists. But it has now ‘commenced again on a regular basis since March’, says the letter.

Construction of the Kotan bridge sanctioned in 2003 has been under way since April 6 and is expected to be finished by the end of this year.

A tribal girls hostel in Kanker, which was disallowed by the Maoists, ‘has been completed in all respects after the induction of BSF in the area’, the letter says.

(Sarwar Kashani can be contacted at s.kashani@ians.in)

Tough road ahead for Nepal

Kathmandu, May 29 — Nepal heaved a sigh of relief at 1:25 am on Saturday when the country’s leaders temporarily buried their differences and amended the interim constitution to give a one year breather to the constituent assembly. The extension prevented a constitutional crisis and gave lawmakers 12 more months to prepare the new constitution.

But the road ahead for the Himalayan nation is tough and fraught with problems. Formation of the next government as part of the deal reached on Friday night would be the biggest bone of contention among parties.

There is also doubt on when Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal will resign. Sources say that he will leave his post within five days.

Once that happens there would be hectic lobbying over the next few weeks both within the major parties and among them to grab the prime minister’s post. “As the biggest party, Maoists would want to head the government.

But since UCPN (Maoist) chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ is not acceptable to most parties, his deputy Baburam Bhattarai could get the post,” said political commentator Prashant Jha. Nepali Congress too wants to head the next government and Ram Chandra Poudel and Sher Bahadur Deuba are the front-runners from this camp.

Chairman of CPN (UML) Jhalanath Khanal is also in the reckoning. Once the government is formed, parties would have to get busy with the task of constitution drafting and completing the peace process that started in 2006 at the end of the civil war.

This too won’t be a cakewalk. Integration of nearly 15,000 former rebels into security forces, return of property seized by Maoists and restructuring the para-military structure of the Maoist youth wing would pose problems.

“The peace process must come to an end within the next month or two if we are to have a credible democratic constitution in the truest sense,” said eminent journalist Kanakmani Dixit. Serious differences among the major parties on federalism, restructuring of the country into states, type of government and judiciary can take several months to get addressed.

“These are big problems and if the parties don’t show willingness to address them earnestly, the constitution may not get drafted in the extended period,” said Jha adding that the country can’t afford more delay. Political analysts say that India was “deeply involved” in what transpired on Friday night, but Nepal’s southern neighbour kept its options open.

“India didn’t want extension of the CA tenure as it would give legitimacy to the Maoists. But it was willing to go along with the general mood on extending the tenure,” Jha said.

Nepal’s leaders battle to avert political crisis

Kathmandu, May 29 — Nepal continued to wait with baited breath as ruling parties and opposition Maoists remained deadlocked on extending the Constituent Assembly’s tenure to enable drafting of the new constitution. The CA tenure ends on Friday midnight.

And if it doesn’t get extended within that deadline the country will plunge into constitutional and political crisis. Hectic parleys and last minute lobbying continued since morning to find a way out of the impending crisis but both the ruling parties and the opposition Maoists refused to budge from their stands.

Maoists refused to support the motion to extend the CA tenure till Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal was removed and the ruling parties refused to accede to such pre-conditions. Maoist leadership issued a whip to its members asking them to vote against the motion if their demand was not met.

“We will prefer to stay outside than bow down,” said Maoist spokesperson Dinanath Sharma. Support of Maoists who have 40 percent representation in CA is crucial as a two-third majority vote is needed to amend the interim constitution and extend its tenure to speed up constitution drafting.

“If it doesn’t happen CA ceases to exist from Friday midnight and the government becomes non-functional. An interim government is likely to take over till the next election,” said CA Chairman Subhash Nemwang.

House term extended, Nepal PM to quit soon

In a day dominated by hectic discussions, the Constituent Assembly (CA) extended its own tenure by a year.

The Unified Communist Party of Nepal-Maoits (UCPN-M) supported the government’s proposal for a year’s extension after Prime Minister Madhav Nepal declared that he would quit as soon as possible to pave the way for a national unity government. However, he made it clear that Maoists must honour their commitment to return property confiscated during the years of insurgency to rightful owners, and transform Young Communist League into a civilian structure.

The proposal for extension of the House tenure was approved with a overwhelming majority after chiefs of three major political parties — The UCPN-M, Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) — endorsed an agreement extending the deadline of the CA.

The Rastriya Prajatantra Party-Nepal (RPP-N), with four members in the House was the only dissenting party. Its leader C B Gurung said the House has lost its mandate, and “we have failed to deliver Constiutution within the stipulated time. The only course left is to go for a fresh poll.”

The House assembled at 11. 42 pm exactly 18 minutes before the House was to cease to exist. Maoist leader Prachanda had specified that his party would only support the Bill for the extension of the CA’s term if the Prime Minister resigned. However, Baburam Bhattarai, deputy leader of the UCPN-M managed to rally his party members to support the Bill even after the party chief whip had issued directive for members to oppose the Bill.

Prime Minister Madhav Nepal, when he called on the President around 9 pm, asserted that he was not going to resign under pressure from the Maoists, but added that he would not come in the way of the formation of a national unity governmnt. Within an hour, however, he changed his mind under pressure from his own party heavy weights including Party chief Jhalnath Khanal who asked him to quit or pave the way for the return of a “dictatorial regime”.

The extension of the House has triggered sharp response from the legal community which says it is uncontitutional. “How can the tenure be extended by the CA itself,” said lawyer Sambhu Thapa. Television channels have said that from the time of the creation of the Constituent Assembly to the preparation of a partial draft of the Constitution, a whopping Rs 13. 5 billion has been spent.

Nepal averts crisis but chaos remains

Kathmandu, May 29 (IANS) Though the nascent republic of Nepal managed to stave off an unprecedented constitutional crisis by a hair’s breadth Friday midnight, public anger and confusion still remained, turning the celebration of Republic Day Saturday into a travesty.

The interim parliament, which has also been mandated to write a new constitution, was saved from the jaws of death at midnight after the opposition Maoist party agreed to bail out the government and supported its bid to give the house a new lease of life.

Now, Nepal’s 601 lawmakers have been given a second chance to complete the new constitution by May 27, 2011.

However, going by the past performance of the house, which was repeatedly held hostage by the major parties as they squabbled for power, it is doubtful if it would be able to draft the new constitution within the extended deadline.

‘Following my party’s diktat I voted to prolong the interim parliament,’ said Anil Kumar Jha, an MP from the Sadbhavana Party, a minor partner in the ruling coalition. ‘However, I do not think a new constitution will be ready in one year.’

Earlier, the chief of the main opposition party had expressed the same doubt.

‘The ruling parties do not want a new constitution,’ former revolutionary and chief of the Maoist party Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda had said at a public meeting in Kathmandu.

‘They will not be able to write a new constitution even if they are given four more years to do so.’

The Maoists, the most fierce opponents of extending the term of parliament, however capitulated near midnight Friday, minutes before the house was going to expire, and supported the government bid to extend its life by a year.

Once the Maoists threw their weight behind the government, 580 of the 585 MPs present at the late-night session of the house voted for the motion.

Only an individual MP from the southern Terai plains, once regarded as a wanted bandit, and four members of Nepal’s only openly royalist party in parliament opposed the bid ineffectually.

Now as a reciprocal gesture, embattled Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal is expected to step down, though it is not clear when.

The Maoists Saturday claimed Nepal would quit in five days’ time to make way for a new government that would also have their participation.

However, the transition may not be so smooth. Even on Friday, hours before the midnight deadline, Nepal had refused to quit, saying that he was supported by 22 of the 25 parties in parliament.

Friday’s midnight drama has tarnished the images of the top three leaders of the three largest parties with the public condemning them for frittering away the sacrifices made by people, time and money from the state exchequer to promote petty party and personal interests.

There is also doubt about the clandestine last-minute understanding forged between the ruling parties and the Maoists.

One of the MPs, Sarita Giri, commented on that in the house Friday. Giri said there was no transparency about the deal. She also said the parties had the responsibility of informing the people why they could not write the new constitution by May 28, 2010 but had not done so.

CPI-M snubs Mamata Banerjee”s allegations over West Bengal train mishap

New Delhi/Kolkata, May 29 (ANI): Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) Polit Bureau member Sitaram Yechury on Saturday rubbished Railway Minister Mamata Banrejee”s charges against CPI-M with regard to Friday”s Gyaneshwari Express train mishap, asserting that she is covering up the lapses of her ministry into the incident.

Yechury said it is the duty of the Railway Minister to inform about the preliminary observations on the cause of the derailment.

“She has rather chosen to shield the actual culprits by suggesting that Maoists may not be behind the sabotage. It is clear that the Railway Minister is seeking to cover up the serious lapses of her leadership in the ministry and its failings in this tragic episode,” said Yechury.

“Banerjee is focusing on the civic elections in West Bengal, instead of the train mishap,” he added.

Earlier today, Banerjee demanded a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe into the mishap, and said the mishap was part of a political conspiracy hatched against her.

The CPM should not indulge in politics, let the state government speed up the probe,” she had said.

Banerjee also informed that the Railways would also investigate the incident independently.

“Let the investigation be complete, whoever is found guilty will be punished severely,” Banerjee said.

Attacking the ruling CPI-M in West Bengal , she alleged that the state government did not co-operate during rescue operations.

Banerjee said many questions still remained unanswered over the incident, but maintained that an explosion caused the sabotage of the rail tracks.

“This is an heinous crime,” she said.

Meanwhile, the death toll has risen to 120, as more bodies were pulled out from the wreckage of the mangled coaches.

Over 3000 security force personnel were reported to be involved in the rescue operations.

“It will take eight to ten hours more to clean up the track as the tracks are broken. The coaches of the train are lying beside the track but the tracks are damaged,” said Jaladhar Shastri, railway worker. (ANI)

Nepal averts crisis by hair’s breadth

Kathmandu, May 29 (IANS) The nascent republic of Nepal averted an unprecedented constitutional crisis by a hair’s breadth Friday midnight after the opposition Maoist party agreed to bail the coalition government out and extend the term of the interim parliament by a year.

In return, embattled Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal is expected to step down, though it was not immediately clear when.

Only 17 minutes before midnight, Nepal’s endangered parliament, that was to have convened at 8 a.m., sat to decide the fate of the country.

After nearly 15 hours of last-minute negotiations, the opposition Maoist party decided to withdraw its objection to the government’s proposal to extend the term of interim parliament and the proposal was passed unanimously.

AS per a peace agreement, Nepal was to have promulgated a new constitution by Friday midnight. However, the statute could not be unveiled due to protracted disputes between the ruling parties and the Maoists for over a year.

The impasse triggered fears that in the absence of a new constitution, parliament would be dissolved automatically at Friday midnight along with the government, unleashing an unprecedented crisis and vacuum.

But now, the house has been given a new lease of life for a year. The new constitution will have to be tabled within that.

Suspected sabotage derails train in India; 71 dead, 12th Ld-Writethru, AS

SARDIHA, India (AP) Rescuers scoured the wreckage of a passenger express train that derailed and collided with a cargo train in eastern India, killing at least 71 people and injuring hundreds. The government accused Maoist rebels of sabotaging the tracks.

As night fell Friday, railway workers and paramilitary soldiers were using two cranes to lift and pry apart train cars in search of survivors from the Jnaneswari Express, which was heading from Calcutta to suburban Mumbai when it derailed about 1:30 a.m.

Friday. Railway officials said they expected the death toll to rise because bodies were still trapped between the engines of the two trains, which collided along a rural stretch of track near the small town of Sardiha, about 90 miles (150 kilometers) west of Calcutta in West Bengal state.

The area is a stronghold of India’s Maoist rebels, known as Naxalites, who had called for a four-day general strike in the area starting Friday. The Naxalites have launched repeated and often-audacious attacks in recent months despite government claims that it was launching its own crackdown.

Just 11 days ago, the rebels ambushed a bus in central India, killing 31 police officers and civilians. A few weeks before that, 76 soldiers were killed in a rebel ambush the deadliest attack by the rebels against government forces in the 43-year insurgency.

There also have been dozens of smaller attacks. On Friday, the government vowed once again to crush the Naxalites.

“The Maoists have done this work,” West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee told reporters in Calcutta. “All-out efforts will be made to free the state and the country from this danger.

” But analysts say the government is hobbled by vacillating policies, poorly trained and ill-armed security forces and vast tracts of India where the government has little influence and where poverty has brought considerable support to the Naxalites, who claim to be fighting on behalf of the rural poor. The rebels, who have tapped into the poor’s anger at being left out of the country’s economic gains, are now present in 20 of the country’s 28 states and have an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 fighters, according to the Home Ministry.

“There is an absence of government, there is an absence of competence in government, there is an absence of coherence in response,” said Ajai Sahni, a New Delhi-based analyst with close ties to India’s security establishment. “The purpose of the Maoists is not to resolve grievances but to harvest them, and there are numerous grievances in the country to harvest.

” In Sardiha, officials said the train tracks had been sabotaged but disagreed about exactly what had happened, with some saying it was caused by an explosion and others blaming cut rail lines. Bhupinder Singh, the top police official in West Bengal, said posters from the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities, a group local officials believe is closely tied to the Maoists, had been found at the scene taking responsibility for the attack.

However, a spokesman for the group, Asit Mahato, denied any role, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. The Maoists seldom claim credit for their attacks.

Survivors described a night of screaming and chaos after the derailment, and said it took rescuers more than three hours to reach the scene, where the blue passenger train and red cargo train were knotted together in mangled metal. Sher Ali, a 25-year-old Mumbai factory worker, was traveling with his wife, two children and his brother’s family when they were jerked awake by a loud thud.

A moment later, their car was tossed from the track, he said. “My sister-in-law was crushed when the coach overturned.

We saw her dying, but we couldn’t do anything to help her,” said Ali, who had cuts on his head and arms. The rest of the family survived, though a 10-year-old nephew was badly injured and hospitalized.

Ali was unable to go to the hospital, though, because all his money was in his luggage inside the wreckage and he was afraid it would be stolen unless he kept watch. Soumitra Majumdar, a railway spokesman said 71 people were confirmed dead and nearly 200 people were injured.

Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee said the Saridha area had been the scene of earlier Naxalite attacks, and that trains were under orders to travel slowly through the region in part so the drivers can keep watch for sabotaged tracks or bombs, and in part so the effects of a crash are lessened if a train does derail. ___ Associated Press writers Tim Sullivan, Ashok Sharma and Muneeza Naqvi contributed to this report from New Delhi.

Busy with Bengal politics, her ministry off Mamata’s track

Days after the BJP hit out at railway minister Mamata Banerjee for her prolonged absence in New Delhi, the Trinamul Congress leader on Friday faced sharp criticism again from her former allies and the Left Front after the Jnaneshwari superfast express derailed near Jhargram. The critics say she had put rail safety on hold for Bengal politics.

As 81 municipalities of the state are going for civic polls, Banerjee had been busy throughout the month attending more than a hundred rallies in different parts of the state. Banerjee was present in New Delhi only for one day this month to attend the anniversary of the UPA-II. “We have been receiving requests for holding a rally from supporters from every district. Local leaders have been pressing her to attend the rallies ” said a TMC leader.

Sudip Bandyopadhyay, the leader of party in Parliament, declined to comment on the issue. “I have not spoken to Mamata Banerjee on the issue, so I will not comment on it,” he said. Union minister of state for shipping Mukul Roy also avoided phone calls. There have been three more attacks by the Maoists in just one month. While two of them were in West Midnapore, one was in Bihar.

Banerjee said a patrol engine had passed through the area half-an-hour earlier, but that the blast timing was disastrous and blew off a portion of the track. BJP chief spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad demanded that Banerjee devote ‘full attention’ to her ministry.