KATHMANDU, MAY 07 -
The rift in the UCPN (Maoist) reached tipping point on Tuesday after
senior leader Baburam Bhattarai rejected the newly announced Central
Committee (CC) charging that Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal imposed his
“unilateral” decisions.
Leaders from both Dahal and Bhattarai factions rule out an immediate
split in the party. They say the party will possibly remain one until
the promulgation of a new constitution but are not sure of its fate
thereafter.

Leaders say the dispute is ideological as well as organisational and is
difficult to settle. “We haven’t yet taken extreme measures such as
splitting the party. We are ready to join the CC if Dahal meets our
demands,” said Devendra Poudel, a leader close to Bhattarai. With
Bhattarai’s revolt, the convention failed to elect the office
bearers—vice-chairman, general secretary, secretary, treasurer—except
the party chairman, Dahal.
Relation between Dahal and Bhattarai, who are known as uneasy partners,
was troubled after the party’s poor show in the second Constituent
Assembly election. Bhattarai wanted Dahal to step down as the chairman
and a new ideology formulated to reinvent the party. He was not in
favour of holding the national convention but Dahal insisted on it.
Despite his dissatisfaction, leaders say, Bhattarai will not leave the
party owing to a crucial role he has got in the constitution-drafting
process. He was elected the chairperson of the Political Dialogue and
Consensus Committee of the CA two weeks ago. Owing to the dispute, the
national convention scheduled to end on Monday ran into Tuesday. On
Satur-day, commenting on Dahal’s political paper, Bhattarai said the
chairman had failed to bring a concrete ideological view to reinvent the
party. He had said the document failed to instill new hope in the party
rank and file.
Bhattarai had protested possible unification with the CPN-Maoist saying
that Dahal’s position on peace and constitution was shaky and needed
correction.
In his concluding remarks on Tuesday, Bhattarai said Dahal prohibited
opposing views in the party and refused to give any responsibility to
leaders close to him. “A practice of prohibition has been established in
our party and opposing ideology and views are suppressed,” Poudel
quoted Bhattarai as saying.
Bhattarai supporters Top Bahadur Rayamajhi, Navaraj Subdei, Hisila
Yami, Khimlal Devkota, Devendra Poudel, Prabhu Sah, Ganga Shrestha,
Kumar Poudel, Devi Khadka, Balawati Sharma and Hemraj Bhandari, among
others, also rejected a seat on the party’s central committee. They said
they will devise a future strategy after discussion in the faction.
Leaders close to Dahal said it is too early to conclude that Bhattarai
is set to split the party but his decision not to be on the CC had made
them serious. “We will hold talks with Baburamji and address his
concerns,” said Haribol Gajurel. “But we are worried about Bhattarai’s
true intentions and the fate of the party after the general convention.”
A meeting of the central committee has been called next week over the crisis.
Shrestha with Dahal Another senior leader Narayan Kaji Shrestha, who
criticised Dahal’s political paper during the convention, has backed the
recently announced CC.
As Bhattarai has distanced himself from the committee, Shrestha gets
closer to Dahal. Analysts say Shrestha will have greater influence in
the CC with Bhattarai walking out.
Will face challenges: Chairman Dahal
Pushpa Kamal Dahal, who was re-elected the party chief, has said he is
ready to face the challenge posed by the decision of leaders including
Baburam Bhattarai to opt out of the Central Committee. Concluding the
national convention on Tuesday, Dahal expressed his confidence that
Bhattarai and other protesting leaders would return to the CC soon.
“We have some difficulties owing to the absence of Baburamji in the
central committee. I am ready to face the challenge,” said Dahal. He
stated that the Bhattarai faction had refused to go to polls to elect
central members. Dahal added that the party would move keeping in view
the sentiments of the disgruntled leaders. (PR)
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