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Communist Party of Nepal
Last modified: 2005-09-17 by rob raeside
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image by
Jaume Ollé
See also:
A red 
flag with the hammer and sickle. I have seen a photo with an 
image of a red flag with a hammer and sickle and a device in the lower fly 
corner, that must be the (electoral?) emblem, a sun.
Jaume Ollé, 30 January 2003
The Communist Party of Nepal was founded on 22 April 1949 by Pushpa Lal Shrestha. 
It was banned in 1952 for three years. The Party held its First National 
Congress on 30 January 1954, with Man Mohan Adhikari as General Secretary.
In the parliamentary elections of 1959, the CPN won 4 seats out of 109. In 1960, 
following a royal coup, the Parliament was dissolved and all political parties 
were banned. The Partyless Panchayat system lasted until 1990.
In 1971, a radical movement was formed in the Jhapa district. The movement was 
the root of the All Nepal Communist Revolutionary Coordination Committee 
(Marxist-Leninist), founded in 1975. The Communist Party of Nepal 
(Marxist-Leninist) was formed in 1978. The Communist Party of Nepal (Marxist) 
seceded in 1986, but both parties merged again in the the Communist Party of 
Nepal (Unified
Marxist-Leninist) in 1991. The party broke again in 1998 and was reestablished 
in March 2002.
In 1991, the CPN-UML won 30% of the voices, earning 69 out of 205 seats in the 
House of Representatives and 16 out of 60 seats in the National Assembly. In 
1994, the CPN-UML won the elections with 31% of the votes and 88 seats. The 
party formed a minority government in December 1994, with Man Mohan Adhikari as 
Prime Minister, and was ousted from the government in August 1995. In March 
1997, the CPN-UML was involved with two other parties in a coalition government.
Ivan Sache, 30 January 2003
Here is the current situation of the CPM.
  The Communist Party of Nepal was founded in Calcutta, India, on April 29, 
  1949. CPN was formed to struggle against the autocratic Rana regime, feudalism 
  and imperialism. The founding general secretary was Puspa Lal Shestra. CPN 
  played an important role in the 1951 uprising that overthrew the Rana regime. 
  In 1954 the first party congress was held clandestinely in Patan. Manmohan 
  Adhikari was elected general secretary. In 1957 the second party congress was 
  held in Kathmandu. For the first time the party could hold its congress 
  openly. Keshar Jung Rayamajhi was elected general secretary. The congress 
  approved a republican party programme.
    In early 1961 all political parties were banned. A wave of 
  repression against CPN was initiated by the government. Rayamajhi, had 
  however, expressed certain faith in the politics of the monarch, something 
  that provoked stern reaction from other sectors of the party. To resolve the 
  conflict a Central Plenum was convened in Darbhanga, India. The plenum lasted 
  one month. Three lines emerged, a pro-constitutional monarchy line led by 
  Rayamajhi, a line that wanted to restore the dissolved parliament and launch 
  broad mass movements led by Pushpa Lal and a third line which favoured a 
  constitutional assembly led by Mohan Bikram Singh. The latter line emerged 
  victorious, but its sole representative in the Central Committee was Singh.
    A 3rd party congress was convened in Varanasi, India, in 
  April 1962. But the preparation of the congress had been full of controversy. 
  Initially the Rayamajhi clique, who controlled the Central Committee, had been 
  hostile towards holding it. The congress approved the programme of National 
  Democratic Revolution proposed by Tulsi Lal Amatya, and elected Tulsi Lal as 
  general secretary. In an attempt to maintain the unity of the party, Pushpa 
  Lal and Tulsi Lal were to share central leadership responsibilities. Rayamjhi 
  was expelled. But the conflicts soon re-emerged. The inner-party conflict can 
  be seem with the backdrop of the Sino-Soviet split and the internal polemics 
  in the Communist Party of India. The Rayamajhi section, which could be seen as 
  the most pro-Soviet Union faction, did not recognize the outcome of the 
  congress, although they recognized the congress as such as the legitimate 3rd 
  party congress. Rayamjhi's followers organized themselves as a separate party, 
  Communist Party of Nepal (Rayamjhi).
    In 1968 the section of Pushpa Lal organized a separate 
  convention. This led to the founding of a separate party, with Pushpa Lal as 
  general secretary. This party became know as Communist Party of Nepal (Pushpa 
  Lal). Out of this group, Communist Party of Nepal (Marxist-Leninist) and other 
  groups would evolve.
    In 1971 a group of CPN leaders (Manmohan Adhikari, Shambhu 
  Ram and Mohan Bikram Singh) were released from jail. They formed the Central 
  Nucleus, which tried to unify with Pushpa Lal's group. That unity proved 
  impossible and the Central Nucleus gave way to new parties. Adhikari formed 
  his own CPN, Communist Party of Nepal (Manmohan). This party developed close 
  relations to the Indian CPI(M). Singh's group became known as Communist Party 
  of Nepal (4th Congress). Other splinter groups included the Nepal Workers and 
  Peasants Party, Communist Party of Nepal (Krishna Das), Communist Party of 
  Nepal (Burma) and Communist Party of Nepal (Manandhar).
    Although technically the original CPN, the Amatya-led group 
  was reduced to become one of many communist factions. The party became known 
  as Communist Party of Nepal (Amatya). The party was largely identified as part 
  of the pro-Soviet Union stream, although it maintained some independence 
  towards Moscow.
    Thus the Nepali communist movement was fragmented in various 
  factions. In the early 1980s, CPN (Manmohan) and CPN (Pushpa Lal) merged to 
  form Communist Party of Nepal (Marxist). Similarly the pro-Soviet Union 
  factions, i.e. CPN (Burma), CPN (Manandhar) and CPN (Amatya), merged together 
  to form Communist Party of Nepal (Democratic). The unity of that party was 
  however very short-lived. In 1989 several communist groups got together to 
  form the United Left Front, to struggle against the authocratic regime. Out of 
  this cooperation CPN(ML) and Communist Party of Nepal (Marxist) united in 
  December 1990 to form Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninists). CPN(UML) thus emerged as the major communist party in Nepal, amalgamating many 
  of the other communist factions, including CPN (Amatya) and CPN (Burma) (which 
  had come out of CPN (Democratic), in the beginning of the 1990s. 
  Source: 
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_Party_of_Nepal 
  Official website: http://www.cpnuml.org/ 
  (Communist Party of Nepal Unified Marxist Leninist)
  Esteban Rivera, 3 July 2005
 
image located by
Jaume Ollé
A variant of the flag of the Nepal communists, showing a white hammer and 
sickle on red (flag format higher than wide); the smaller variant also includes 
some inscription (party name?) was reported in Süddeutsche Zeitung 28/29 
May 2003, p. 11.
M