A month since
its formation, and four months after the election, the government has finally
outlined its objectives for constitution-writing and governance. While the
agenda set by the government seems impressive, it is naturally not likely that
most of the objectives will be met.
Some of the
key points are in the Common Minimum Programme (CMP) only because it would be
wrong for them to not be there. For instance, the government has stated that it
will look to end load-shedding in three years. Other ambitious targets have
been mentioned, which will also likely not be achieved anytime soon.
However, the
setting of the agenda for the government is still a start, and that is good
news. These may only be baby steps, but for a country with no functioning
government for more than a year now, these are steps in the right direction.
The
government aims to get the constitution drafted within a year and to announce
dates to local elections at the earliest. While the former is essential, this
column believes time and resources should not be wasted on local elections at
the moment. It is a question of priority. In order to conduct local elections,
the government must get other stakeholders on board, and this will be a
time-consuming exercise. This column does not believe the government has the
bandwidth to take on the challenges of constitution writing and the conducting
of local elections simultaneously.
Nepal will
be better served if the government, for the moment, solely focused on getting
all stakeholders on board for the new constitution. There are enough challenges
as it is, and there is no need to welcome another set. Moreover, the
expenditure on the elections may prove to be wasteful because we do not know
what form of state or governance the new constitution is going to give us. Local
elections should be made to wait until after the constitution is ready.
That
notwithstanding, some of the other aspects of the CMP are particularly
encouraging. This is the first time a Nepalese government has laid out a code
of conduct for its own ministers – one that aims to make governance smooth. The
government has also undertaken to reduce wasteful government expenditure and to
adopt a zero tolerance policy towards corruption. Whether this happens or not
is another matter, but at least there is an acknowledgement of what is going
wrong and what the electorate is unhappy about. The government is saying it
wants to be more accountable to the public, and in a country where the lack of
accountability has been frustrating, this is at least heartening.
One of the
things the government wants to do, for instance, is to curb unnecessary
domestic and foreign visits by ministers, bureaucrats and other government
officials. This is another good step taken by the government, for it at least
shows that the cabinet understands the rationale for austerity and the benefits
it brings.
These are
minor and fairly obvious aspirations of any government, some would argue. But
in the context of Nepal, where there has been an absolute breakdown of trust in
government over the last five years, these statements are a breath of fresh
air. Sure, the CMP is over-ambitious. But ambition stems from desire, and the
desire to improve can be no bad thing.
(This appeared as a column in The Himalayan Times on 23 March 2014).
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