High number of statelessness rumbles on

Seven per cent is a huge number of people remaining stateless, particularly after the previous-previous-previous(?) government’s promise to deal with it.

NEPAL: Undocumented residents excluded from state services

KATHMANDU, 17 May 2012 (IRIN) – Some 7 percent of Nepal’s almost 27 million people may lack citizenship documents, excluding them from government-funded services.

“This is the central document of existence in Nepal,” said Hari Phuyal, a human rights lawyer in the capital, Kathmandu. “The denial of a citizenship certificate means the denial of access to the state, which means these people are stateless.”

Not having citizenship documents means being blocked from government jobs and pensions, driver’s licenses and passports, as well as government-run programmes like secondary school exams and health services. Bank accounts, land inheritance and the right to vote are also out of reach.

People in communities far from district administration offices, where citizenship certificates are processed, often do not understand the importance of obtaining these documents. Even when they do, they may lack the identification required to apply for a birth certificate, which starts the process.

Cases involving Dalits – members of the so-called “untouchable” caste – number in the tens of thousands, said Hast Bahadur Sunar, the National Citizenship Project Coordinator at the Dalit NGO Federation in Nepal.

“When I went to apply for my citizenship at age 16, I was told I need to register my caste as my surname or I could not have one [citizenship certificate],” Prakash Bishnu Karma,* 23, a farmer in the Far West Region of Nepal, told IRIN.

He declined because he did not want to face caste-based discrimination every time he produced his identity card. “My caste is not my name, but it is the name my father and his father were forced to register with the government when they were young,” said Bishnu Karma, referring to a historical state practice.

“In the past eight months alone, we have identified over 14,000 people who lack citizenship certificates,” said Sunar. The reasons include not owning land – and therefore not having proof of residency – absent fathers, and name-based discrimination.

Gender barriers

Nepal’s Citizenship Act of 2006 allows children to inherit their parents’ citizenship, but in practice mothers cannot pass on citizenship unless they can prove their husband has died or abandoned them, both of which expose them to social stigma.

Many Dalits in rural areas are extremely poor and the men often migrate for work. “Without a father, people can’t register as a citizen,” said Sunar.

“This blatantly discriminates against women,” said Sabin Shrestha, executive director of the local NGO Forum for Women, Law and Development (FWLD). “This is particularly harmful at this point in Nepal’s history, when men have died or disappeared in Nepal’s recent conflict, or migrated to support their families and not returned.”

decade of civil war between former Maoist fighters and the government, which killed more than 14,000 people and displaced another 200,000, ended in 2006 with a peace deal that is still being implemented.

FWLD knows of 127 women thus far who have gained citizenship for their children, including some who were willing to list the fathers as “unidentified”, which “invites a lifetime of stigma for mother and child”, Shrestha said.

Call for inclusivity

After six years of political deadlock, the recently announced unity government faces a constitution-drafting deadline of 27 May. Activists hope the long-awaited constitution will boost rights guaranteed in existing laws. If not, the problems related to obtaining citizenship documents to confirm what is usually regarded as a birthright could multiply.

“We have people without access to citizenship now who will marry other people without citizenship, and give birth to children who have no chance at getting a citizenship certificate,” Shrestha pointed out.

A recent meeting of the country’s four largest political parties agreed on a new federal structure with 11 provinces. Lack of an inclusive citizenship policy may presage political instability, said human rights lawyer Phuyal. “[Nepal is] about to institute a new federal structure. [The government] is redrawing lines and re-assigning people to new districts or provinces. You can expect difficulties when millions of these people have no state identity to begin with.”

From IRIN >

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Gurung Kakshapati photographs

The Rights Exposure has done an interesting interview with Nayantara Gurung Kakshapati from photo.circle whose beautiful photos of men and women recently appeared in the Nepali Times.

 

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It’s all over, the analysis begins

CK Lal sums up a rotten day:

The harmonium players

CONSTITUTION AND ETHNIC ASPIRATIONS

Results of CA elections confirmed worst fears of skeptics. Deep fissures of Nepal’s polity and society resulted in a fractured mandate. Since no political party was dominant enough to have its way and leaders were fearful of losing face in public, negotiations between different forces began to be held privately. Influential politicos shunned CA proceedings as a matter of routine.

No matter in which way the drama at New Baneshwar ends on May 27—on the morning of the D-day, rumor was rife that the probability of a constitution being promulgated or fresh elections being called was fifty-fifty—Nepal’s first CA would be remembered for not asserting its authority at critical moments of history. The experiment of formulating a constitution with the participation of representatives from the broadest cross-section of Nepali society collapsed for all practical purposes the day Supreme Court decided that interim constitution empowered the judiciary to review the functioning and the tenure of CA. The hallowed doctrine of separation of power and the principle of checks and balances are meant for maintenance of an existing regime. These should not have been allowed to undermine the sovereignty of a body entrusted with the task of creating a new political order altogether.

The court, however, was not alone in assuming that CA members could not be trusted with the task of making a ‘proper’ constitution and the legislature needed a judicial nudge from time to time. Nepalis of certain castes, class and community refuse to accept, individually and collectively, that certainties of yore when everyone knew their place cannot be resurrected again. Their attachment with beliefs of the past is so strong that they are ready to take political risks not only to defend but also to aggressively promote the politics they have been accustomed to. Unfortunately for them, the ruling castes and community can no longer get away with having a monopoly over truth and power. The saving grace of CA process is that it has made a large section of the previously ruled populations aware that they don’t have to unquestioningly conform to values of the dominant community.

The framing of a constitution is an exercise in making political compromises without sacrificing one’s fundamental beliefs. The CA, however, has hardened positions of almost all sections of society. The cultural elite wants to ensure continuity of its position at all costs. The upwardly mobile are more interested in maintaining a familiar system than gambling with a new order, which runs the risk of limiting horizons of their ambitions. The marginalized have no hesitation in using militant language to stake their claim over polity and society. And the externalized groups have little interest in saving legal processes that show little flexibility for their hopes and aspirations. Four instances, selected at random, demonstrate that apprehensions about efficacy of CA were correct and even if a new constitution materializes at the last moment, its legitimacy and acceptability shall remain permanently in doubt.

TRUST DEFICIT

Among the troika of Brahmin Marxists—the adjective and noun have to be reversed in order to correctly reflect their outlook—that claim monopoly rights over politics of CPN-UML, Chairman Jhalanath Khanal is the only one who owes his position to popular mandate. He got into the CA with the majority support of voters in his constituency. He won the presidency of his party with a convincing majority. He may not have been a successful prime minister, but his tenure remains more or less untainted of institutionalized corruption and willful inactivity that characterized the term of his predecessor. Hence, a certain level of political decency was expected from a person of Khanal’s stature. However, he too turned to be cut from the same thick hide when he reportedly asked his Madheshi and Janjati colleagues in the party and in the CA to sign on a blank piece of paper. The incident needs no explanation. Trust is a two way street—when a leader doesn’t have faith in his flock, nobody can blame followers for being on lookout for an escape route.

The second reported incident is so outrageous it is difficult to believe that it may have actually happened. It was rumored that a section of Nepali Congress was hatching a plot to bring a no confidence motion against the government on a day when voting on the proposal was out of question. The justification of the move was pure conspiracy: Had the CA died without promulgating a constitution, it would have given the ceremonial head of state a pretext to intervene in affairs of governance. The most intriguing part of the plot consisted of actors behind the move. It brought extreme leftwing section of UCPN (Maoist) and ultra conservatives of NC on the same platform. Apparently, the power elite of Nepal doesn’t believe in the sanctity of political ideologies and is ready to sacrifice its principles at the first available opportunity.

The third event was even more symptomatic of biases that prevail in the minds of dominant sections of Kathmandu society. In order to undermine the influence of general shutdown called by Janjati and Madheshi activists, moneybags of the capital city decided to have a mass gathering (apparently, they preferred an apolitical sounding term over what turned out to be protest rally against federalism for all practical purposes) to promote peace, harmony and prosperity. It was a colorful affair, but its orchestration widened the gulf between the elites of the old and the emerging order.

At the height of summer, it would have looked awkward to ask participants to don labeda-suruwal ensemble complete with black shoes, black coat and bhadgaule black topi. So organizers of the goodwill rally of May 23 had settled for the next best getup: White T-shirts. The original venue selected for the show of strength was picturesque Kathmandu Durbar Square. That quaint site could have given television cameras charming shots. Unfortunately, it has already been booked for a public meeting. Protestors that wanted “peace, not pieces” were ultimately forced to move to Durbar Marg.

The new location turned out to be even more appropriate for the temperament of the crowd that had gathered on the road between Narayanhiti Palace Museum and the Mahendra Memorial roundabout near Tindhara Pathshala. This is an area where the beautiful people of cosmopolitan Kathmandu truly belong. The place has everything for the daily needs of the rich and famous: Five-star swimming pools, pricey boutiques, fancy restaurants, exclusive beauty parlors, international airlines offices and travel agencies, upscale malls, and several banks should the need arise to cash a check. The upwardly mobile professionals come to Durbar Marg to pretend that they too have arrived in life. Little wonder, the group of forever-youngs, waving flags, looked uber-cool in their ultra whites. They were on their home turf mouthing slogans that were beyond reproach. The event, however, had unintended consequences of alienating aspiring Janjati and Madheshi activists, which may haunt its organizers should federalism materialize or even fail to take off.

The thread that binds these isolated incidents together is the conviction of the ruling community in the country that only they know what is best for the rest of the country. When such supercilious assumptions have to face rising aspirations, a clash becomes inevitable. The fracas at a media center may have been symptomatic of spars of the coming days.

The ruling community believes it knows what is best for the rest. When supercilious assumptions face rising aspirations, a clash is inevitable.

THERAPEUTIC AGGRESSION

Ang Kaji Sherpa is neither illiterate nor a social lightweight. The fact that he was invited to speak at a popular media forum was evidence enough of his clout. It would be highly presumptuous to assume that he did not know what he was talking about when he alleged that the Bahun-dominated Kathmandu media was contemptuous of Janjati movement. The media was awash with the coverage of the controversy for next few days. The Nepali cyber-space continues to reverberate with adversarial comments over what was quite clearly an observation intended to provoke and invite backlash.

Sanctimonious fears about verbal violence are all very well, but it comes naturally to communities that had to speak in grunts for centuries. The meek have begun to speak and the strong had better learn that now it is their turn to listen. Nepal needs a constitution so that it can hold further conversations. The musical instrument of harmony is powered by pressure and oftentimes it can generate some hot air too. However, even unpleasant notes are preferable to conspiratorial silences.

From Republica

cklal@hotmail.com

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Top guns say Nepal constitution today ‘for sure’

Are we there? Congratulations to the Himalayan Times for being on first.

Statute today for sure: Parties

KATHMANDU: After hectic parleys, negotiations, and squabbling, big four political parties have eventually decided to promulgate the statute by the midnight leaving the unresolved issues afflicting the constitution-drafting process to the ‘transformed parliament.’

“We will issue the first draft the new statute today taking into consideration all the agreement reached among us so far,” said one of the negotiators seeking anonymity over phone.

“Unsettled issues will be handed over to the transformed parliament”

Now top guns of the UCPN-Maoist, the Nepali Congress (NC) the CPN-UML, and the United Demorcatic Madhesi Front (UDMF) have left Baluwatar and are heading to Constituent Assembly (CA) in Nayabaneshwor to brief the Constituent Assembly (CA) Chairman Subash Nembang of the decision and call the assembly.

They went to Nayabaneshwor without talking with reporters.

It has been also learnt that parties have inched closer to crave mixed federal states with identities, during the process of state restructuring.

The talks took the U-turn after the representatives Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN) displayed maximum flexibility and budged from their earlier stance to federate the country on the basis of single identity.

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Nepal’s media prays to god as “big guns” get down to 10 or 11 states in constitution

Love the emerging reference to them as the big guns. Seems to be spread on Twitter too.

Dissolution of CA‚ or statute at hand through miracle

Big guns, who are making their last-ditch attempt to break the tough nut of federalism though consensus and promulgate a new statute by the midnight are still at fuss over the number, size, naming and mapping of the federal states, which indicates that breakthrough is possible only if some miracle took place at the eleventh hour.

“Unless there is a miracle, I do not see any hope of a breakthrough. Uncertainly has ruled the talks,” said Broader Madhesi front chairman Upendra yadav emerging from the meeting of the four political forces– the UCPN-Maoist, the NC, the CPN-UML, and the UDMF.

According to a privy source at Baluwatar, wrangling over whether to go for the 11 provinces or the 10 provinces while state restructuring is still overriding the top guns at PM’s official residence in Baluwatar.

Parties have resumed their talks after the luncheon.

But they are still at variance over assorted issues attached to federalism like:

Whether to go for single identity based federalism or multiple identity based federalism?

What sort of disputes should be decided through a federal commission later?

More than one ethnic groups should given identity or not in a federal unit?

If they failed to forge consensus on these issues by the midnight, the Constituent Assembly(CA) will be dissolved as per the Supreme Court’s verdict

From: Himalayan Times

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Nepal’s constitutional talks almost dead as leaders slope off to bed

Things are looking very bad this evening as the Constituent Assembly looks set to be dissolved. Perhaps unlike the Koiralas of yesteryear, these young 50-80 somethings just don’t have it in them to pull all-nighters.

Parties blame each other for the failure

The ongoing negotiations among the major political forces to forge an agreement on disputed issues including state-restructuring and promulgate the new constitution by Sunday failed after the UCPN-Maoist and the United Democratic Madhesi Front had irrevocable differences with the Nepali Congress and the CPN-UML over several issues.

Talking to the media after the meeting, Maoist and Nepali Congress leaders held each other responsible for the failure of negotiations held at the Prime Minister’s residence in Baluwatar Saturday late afternoon.

Accusing the Nepali Congress and CPN-UML of being obstacle of an agreement and democratic procedure, UCPN-Maoist Vice Chairman Narayan Kaji Shrestha said that an unfortunate situation has arrived.

“Constituent Assembly is on the verge of dissolution and the process for that has begun,” he emotionally told the media corps, pointing finger at the NC and UML for the situation. “Constituent Assembly held discussion for four years, and this is happening without the Constituent Assembly members getting to know.”

By calling the meeting of its Parliamentary Party this morning, Shrestha said, the CPN-UML disregarded the talks on constitution, which was fixed yesterday. “Nepali Congress and UML repeated their old stances at the meeting rather than focusing on the points of agreement,” he stated.

“They did not show readiness to resort to the CA when we asked to go there to resolve the issues related to state-restructuring as we could not agree upon them.” This is a mockery of democracy, he said, “This shows how autocratic attitude the parties that have claimed themselves to be the Messiah of democracy have.”

“ We said we have to bear a moral duty to inform the Constituent Assembly about the issues that could not be resolved,” he said, “Instead a big conspiracy was hatched to dissolve the Constituent Assembly without the Constituent Assembly members’ getting to know the matter.”

On the other hand, Nepali Congress Vice President and Parliamentary Party leader Ram Chandra Paudel said that the meeting ended inconclusively as UCPN-Maoist and United Democratic Madhesi showed unwillingness to resolve the issues of federalism. He had emerged from the meeting before the Maoist and Madhesi leaders and spoke the media first.

According to him. Nepali Congress put forth a proposal either to take up multi-ethnic identity as the basis of federalism or decide the issues related to state-restructuring through a federal commission and transitional parliament. The NC had suggested that if the federalism would base on multiple identity, language and capability then it was ready to consider the number of federal states.

Paudel claimed that Maoist Chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal walked out when the meeting was underway, only to be followed by the Madhesi Morcha leaders. Shrestha defended that Dahal went outside but did not walk out of the meeting.

Raj Kishor Yadav of Madhesi Janadhikari Forum-Republican, however, claimed that the talks were aborted after the Maoists and the UDMF could not agree upon a “strange proposal” floated by the Nepali Congress.

According to him, Paudel proposed to resolve the disputed issues through the purported transitional parliament in four months and if they could not be resolved then go to fresh elections.

“We asked them to go to the Constituent Assembly and vote on the issues,” Yadav said, “But they showed reluctance grieving that their lawmakers are not under their control.”

Saying the Nepali Congress and the CPN-UML were neither ready to build up an agreement nor take to the democratic procedure, Yadav said the parties would be responsible if the constitution could not be promulgated (tomorrow).

The leaders, however, said that efforts to build an agreement will continue.

Shrestha said the Maoist party was ready for an agreement but there was no essence of talks if only old stances would be repeated.

According to him, despite the conspiracies against the CA his party would remain committed to the making of the constitution as per the people’s aspirations and for their freedom.

After the four-side meeting, the parties left Baluwatar and headed to Singha Durbar in order to hold their internal meetings.

Meanwhile, the Constituent Assembly meeting rescheduled for 5 pm has been put off for tomorrow.

Earlier, the CA meeting was called for 11 am today.

From Himalayan Times

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Will the real constitution writers please stand up

Note the final paragraph: they cannot follow the procedures met. Read: they cannot use what the Constituent Assembly drafted?

New statute in the making ‘quietly’

KATHMANDU, May 26: Media headlines every other day suggesting failure by the major parties to arrive at consensus on disputed issues might have left you thinking that the actual writing of the new statute is yet to begin.

But the good news is, a group of legal experts have been quietly and on an almost round-the-clock basis drafting the new constitution since the past two weeks. And they are coming closer to finalizing a draft constitution, leaving aside some of the thorny issues that the parties are yet to thrash out.

Talking to Republica, Constitutional Committee (CC) Chairman Nilambar Acharya said they have almost completed the task of putting in writing the agreements reached among the parties and that will go into a constitution with a total of 27 parts. “We have almost completed the task of putting the agreed points into the draft constitution,” said Acharya.

The CC is entrusted with preparing a draft constitution, bringing together the agreements reached among the parties in the Constituent Assembly (CA) thematic committees and during inter-party negotiations. “A new statute is possible within the stipulated deadline if the parties agree to bring in one with an agreement to resolve the remaining issues through an extended parliament,” said a source at the CA Secretariat.

A group of legal experts comprising Law Secretary Bhesh Raj Sharma, former law secretary Madhav Paudel and former chief secretary Tirtha Man Shakya are busy drafting a new constitution in a separate room at the CA Secretariat in Singha Durbar. These key experts are being assisted by among others, legal advisor of the CA Secretariat, Tek Prasad Dhungana, and CA Chairman Acharya himself.

As the language and diction of a constitution matter a lot when it comes to interpretation, the experts are said to be giving close scrutiny to the linguistic aspects of the draft statute. “They have been working almost round the clock. For instance, the members were still working on the draft constitution when the government registered a bill seeking another CA term extension at the Parliament Secretariat late Tuesday evening,” a senior official at the Secretariat told Republica.

The major parties are yet to arrive at consensus on issues related to state restructuring, system of governance and citizenship. “These issues could be put under legislative schedules if the parties forge an agreement to promulgate a new statute within the deadline and settle them later through an extended parliament,” the official further said.

CC Chairman Acharya said since they have just two days left before the CA term expires they cannot bring a new statute if they follow the procedures already set. “It all depends on how the parties agree to amend the existing procedures for promulgating a new statute,” he further said.

From Republica

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Not quite there: Nepal promises federation, but 10 or 14 states?

After positive developments this morning, things take a turn for the worse as meetings start to break up.

Four party meet over May 27 crisis ends without making concrete decision

The meeting of four political forces- UCPN (Maoist), Nepali Congress, CPN-UML and United Democratic Madhesi Front (UDMF) held this afternoon could not make sure if the constitution would be promulgated within May 27 deadline. The leaders could not arrive at consensus after the Maoist party and UDMF stuck to their stance that state restructuring issue should be settled before promulgating the constitution.

UCPN (Maoist) leader and Deputy Prime Minister Narayan Kaji Shrestha talking …

In the meeting held at Prime Minister’s official residence in Baluwatar, the NC and UML leaders had sought consent of UCPN (Maoist) and UDMF to promulgate constitution within May 27 leaving disputed issues to the Constituent Assembly -turned-parliament to resolve.

It is learnt that the leaders of the Maoist party and UDMF insisted that 14-state model or 10-state model suggested by the parliamentary committee on state restructuring and State Restructuring Commission respectively should be adopted while federating the country and that if no agreement is forged, the issues should be settled through voting in the parliament.

The leaders have only two days left to promulgate new constitution after the Supreme Court ended all the possibilities of the CA term extension.

On Thursday, the Supreme Court had stayed the government’s decision to extend the CA’s term by three months.

From: nepalnews.com

 

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Progressive cop-out leads to constitution agreement between big 3

What a fantastic piece of politicking. Nepali politicians once again prove that they can agree anything in order to extend their grip on power. Will this be the first constitution in the world with no description of the executive and no description of the federal structure?

Big three agree to issue constitution within May 27; disputed issues to be settled by CA-turned-parliament

Three major parties – UCPN (Maoist), Nepali Congress and CPN (UML) – have agreed to promulgate the constitution within May 27 while leaving disputed issues to the “transformed legislature parliament” to resolve.

As per the understanding reached in the meeting of top leaders of the three parties held at Maoist chairman Pushpa Kamal Dahal’s Lazimpat residence Friday morning, the draft of the constitution will be issued by the Constituent Assembly within its deadline and that the parties will agree on the names and the number of the provinces before that.

The CA will turn into legislature parliament after the promulgation of the draft of the constitution.

The three-party understanding comes a day after the Supreme Court stayed the government’s decision to extend the CA’s term by three months. The major parties including the Madhesi Front are set to continue talks throughout the day.

The leaders of the UCPN (Maoist) and the Madhesi Front had met prior to the three-party meeting today. They agreed that the Prime Minister would not resign before the constitution is promulgated.

Sadbhawana Party chairman and Health Minister Rajendra Mahato told Nepalnews that the Front would not accept any agreement that does not address the issue of federalism. “The principles, names and the boundaries of the provinces must be laid out in the constitution,” he said.

Fro nepalnews.com

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Nepal’s political show must go on (and on)

One shouldn’t watch the markets when deciding whether something of political significance is going to happen, but a decrease in the Nepali rupees’ value by 18% is hard to miss.

The Nepali government has been managing to delay the country’s promised constitution for years. It all started so well; a violent civil war lasting eight years ended in peaceful negotiations that led to peaceful protests and a (fairly) peaceful end to the rule of an all-powerful king.

The party leaders got together with the revolutionary Maoists and agreed a fairly nondescript interim constitution while they struggled to make a better one. They set up a constituent assembly to write a new constitution and managed to get 30 per cent women involved too.

Things were going so well. The fact that they unrealistically promised a new constitution in a couple of years, even though they knew the South Africans took close to a decade, could be ignored as good old enthusiasm. Similarly, the idea that a revolutionary Maoist party having just put down their guns could hop into bed with a fairly conservation ‘communist’ party and a congress party modelled on India’s was for the international community, an acceptable leap of faith.

Today however, with just days to go, the Nepali people are finally saying they’ve had enough. On an unprecedented scale. Six years after the peace process was complete, the Supreme Court has said enough is enough, the people have said enough is enough, and the international community? Well, they’ve voted in dollars.

Now Nepali historians know that it’s not too late and that Nepali constitutions have a habit of being pulled out of hat, usually in the dead of the night by a group of old men perched under a candle (all the electricity has run out over six years of stagnation).

Just to put such historians off the scent, the political parties have also put a bill before parliament to extend their negotiations by three months, even though the Supreme Court reiterated the people’s mind: please for god’s sake, no more.

But there are also other more violent protests. The question of whether to go for ethnic-based federal units or ones that may actually succeed is one of the last problems on the table. Nepal is made up of lots of jats (come on 21st century: not castes, which is Portuguese for wine grapes) and some of their leaders want power, regardless of the bloodshed. They have a good point too, particularly after suffering centuries of nose-cutting, shit-smearing, and other forms of discriminatory practices.

Another question for the parties, who are right now huddled around that candle, is whether to go presidential or prime-ministerial. Those to the right want to hang on to the British system with all its pomp, while to the left everyone wants unaccountable and perhaps unstoppable power. It’s likely not to go the way of the Anglophiles.

Then of course, there are the markets, but who cares about them? In the midst of all this political intrigue, let’s not think about economics and some of the poorest people on the planet.

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