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Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre)

The Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre) (Nepali: नेपाल कम्युनिस्ट पार्टी (माओवादी केन्द्र)), abbreviated CPN (Maoist Centre), CPN-Maoist Centre, CPN Maoist Centre, or CPN (MC), is the third largest political party in Nepal and a member party of Samajbadi Morcha.[7] It was founded in 1994 after breaking away from the Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre). The party launched an armed struggle in 1996 against the Nepalese government. In 2006, the party formally joined mainstream politics after signing a peace agreement following the 2006 Nepalese revolution.[8]

For other communist parties in Nepal, see List of communist parties in Nepal.

Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre)
नेपाल कम्युनिस्ट पार्टी (माओवादी केन्द्र)

1994 as CPN (UC) (in parallel with original one)
1996 as CPN (Maoist)
2009 as Unified CPN (Maoist)
2016 as CPN (Maoist Centre)
8 March 2021 (second iteration)

17 May 2018 (first iteration)

Nepal Communist Party[1][2][3] (first iteration) (2018–2021)

Perisdanda, Koteshwor, Kathmandu

RIM (defunct)
CCMPOSA

"Let us march ahead on the path of struggle towards establishing the people's rule by wrecking the reactionary ruling system of the state"

People's Liberation Army, Nepal (dissolved after peace agreement)

121 / 753
5,044 / 35,011

Pushpa Kamal Dahal has served as the leader of the party since its foundation. The party holds 32 seats in the House of Representatives making them the third largest parliamentary group. Dahal is also currently serving as Prime Minister of Nepal as part of a ruling coalition following the 2022 general election.[9] The party has also led three previous governments; in 2008 and 2016 under Dahal, and in 2013 under Baburam Bhattarai.[10][11][12]


The party was formed in 1994 with same name as its parent party Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre) and was named as the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) in 1996. After the Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre–Masal) and its electoral front, Janamorcha Nepal merged with the party in 2009, the unified party came to be known as the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). The party emerged in its current state in 2016 following the unification of various splinter groups with the party.[13][14]


The party was dissolved on 17 May 2018, after merging with the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) to create the Nepal Communist Party but was revived on 8 March 2021 following a Supreme Court ruling in favor of Rishi Kattel, who had claimed the Nepal Communist Party name.[15][16] The party claimed to have 750,000 members as of December 2021, making them the third largest party in Nepal by membership.[17]

History[edit]

Founding, 1994–1996[edit]

The party was formed in 1994 following a split in the Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre) into two factions, one led by Pushpa Kamal Dahal and the other led Nirmal Lama. The electoral front of the party, the United People's Front of Nepal, also split and the faction led by Baburam Bhattarai allied with the Pushpa Kamal Dahal led Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre). The two United People's Front of Nepal decided to register itself with the Election Commission, but the commission only recognized the Nirmal Lama backed party. Baburam Bhattarai responded by calling for a boycott of the 1994 mid-term elections.[18]

Preparations for struggle, 1995–1996[edit]

The Unity Centre led by Pushpa Kamal Dahal went completely underground after the split to begin preparations for its next phase of struggle. The party held its Third Plenum in March 1995, where the party renamed itself to the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). It also decided that the for "the true liberation of the people, all efforts must be concentrated for the development of a people's war that would usher in the new people's democratic form of government" and officially decided to give up its policy of taking part in parliamentary elections.[18]


The March meeting was followed by six months of preparations to recast the old organizational structure into a fighting machine, and in September 1995, the 'Plan for the Historic Initiation of the People's War' was adopted by the Central Committee of the party. There then began a series of public meetings all over the country under the aegis of the United People's Front of Nepal as part of the final politico-ideological preparation. The party launched the 'Sija campaign' in Rolpa and Rukum, named after the Sisne and Jaljala mountains in the two districts, to propagate the ideology of Marxism–Leninism–Maoism.[18]


In October 1995, during the Sija campaign, a fight broke out between supporters of the United People's Front of Nepal and other parties, mainly the Nepali Congress and the Rastriya Prajatantra Party, at a village in the eastern part of Rukum. The newly formed government under Sher Bahadur Deuba moved swiftly to arrest the UPFN supporters, accusing them of creating public disorder. The police then launched 'Operation Romeo' in November 1995. Officially, Operation Romeo was labeled as an operation to control a rise in criminal activities in Rolpa. Operation Romeo resulted in gross violations of human rights, including the arbitrary arrest and detention of hundreds of members of left-of-center parties, rapes, executions and “disappearances.”[19][20] In the light of this action, the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the party met briefly in January 1996 and made the final decision on the historic initiation of the 'People's War' for 13 February 1996.[18]


On 4 February 1996, Baburam Bhattarai led a three-member delegation of the United People's Front of Nepal to present a memorandum to Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba. The memorandum warned that unless the government took initiative to fulfill their 40-point demands by 17 February the UFPN would launch an armed revolution.[18][21]

Criticism[edit]

Use of children[edit]

During the Nepalese Civil War, the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) resorted to mass under-age recruitment, particularly of young students, usually between 12 and 16 years old. At the conclusion of the war, an estimated 12,000 Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) soldiers were below 18 years of age, and Human Rights Watch estimates that the majority of the current militia joined as minors. The United Nation Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) has verified that there were nine thousand child soldiers in Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) cantonment training camps.


The Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) used children as soldiers, messengers, cooks, porters and suppliers. Regardless of role, all children received rudimentary military training concerning explosives, so they would be able to recognize and avoid land mines. The current Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist-Centre), however, continues to deny that any of its soldiers during the war were less than 18 years of age. They also claim that they have cared for orphans of adult soldiers killed in the war, and that these children were not placed in danger.[95]

Links with fraternal parties[edit]

According to available information, the Maoists of Nepal have well-established linkages with Indian revolutionary communist organizations, primarily with the Communist Party of India (Maoist), currently leading a protracted "people's war" throughout the subcontinent. The first signs of contacts were reportedly registered during 1989–1990, when the two groups started collaborating in order to expand their influence. According to Indian government analysis, they began the process of laying a corridor, which is now widely referred to as the Revolutionary Corridor (RC) extending from Nepal to across six Indian States, including Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha and Madhya Pradesh. This entire area has been identified in Maoist literature as the Compact Revolutionary Zone (CRZ). The CRZ was organized by the Nepal and Indian members of the Naxalite movement, in a meeting at Siliguri in the Indian State of West Bengal during August 2001. Indian Maoists are known as Naxalites (or Naxals) in reference to a popular uprising that began decades ago centered in the village of Naxalbari.


Nepalese Maoists had sent their delegates to the March 2001 Congress of PWG held at Abuz Marh in the Bastar region of Chhattisgarh. The establishment of CRZ gave a wider space and platform for all the proscribed Nepal and Indian Naxalite organizations to strengthen their bases in both the countries.

2001–2018, 2021–present

Pushpa Kamal Dahal

Young Communist League, Nepal

All Nepal National Independent Students' Union (Revolutionary)

All Nepal Women's Association Revolutionary

Press Centre Nepal

All Nepal Trade Union Federation (Revolutionary)

Nepal National Civil Servants Employees Association

Newa Rastriya Mukti Morcha, Nepal

Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Socialist)

Socialist Front

Pir

2021 split in Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre)

Nepalese Civil War

People's Liberation Army, Nepal

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

History and statements of Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)

Archived 2008-01-10 at the Wayback Machine November 2006

L'Espresso Interview with Prachanda: Our Revolution Won

Directed by Robert Koenig

Returned: Child Soldiers of Nepal's Maoist Army

BBC news Video/Transcript Interview with Prachanda

Washington Times, December 14, 2002

Interview with Baburam Bhattarai

Archived 2020-09-06 at the Wayback Machine

Li Onesto, a journalist who has spent a great deal of time covering the Maoists

Nepal Maoists, live news feed

A critical view of the Maoists from Global Security

National Geographic Slideshow "Inside Nepals Revolution"

International Road-Building Brigades to Nepal official website

World Politics Watch, April 6, 2007

"From Jungle Fatigues to Sensible Suits: Nepal's Maoists Join Government"

by Peter J Karthak, Republica, May 21, 2009

Waiting for Mao's Maya