Sunday, November 16, 2008

Maoist Education in Nepal

In light of what has been done to the educational system in this country, it is interesting to look at what the communists are trying to do in Nepal. We consider an article entitled No more private school, Nepal's Maoist government declares by Bikash Sangraula, November 15, 2008.

The former rebels plan to put all children in public schools by 2010, saying it will even the playing field.

Kathmandu, Nepal - The massive election win last April by Nepal's former rebel Maoists put them in the position to set the government agenda, and bring about drastic changes they promised during their campaign.


The same is true in the United States, considering the results of our election earlier this month.

But their initial proposals on education – to end private investment in schools and distribute academic certificates to Maoist fighters – have left many Nepalese worried.

They're concerned that their new government will take the country in too radical a direction that favors its former fighters and Marxist-Leninist-Maoist ideology.


Again, the same is true in the United States -- we may be moving in too radical a direction, as the Obamanistas take over from Bush's Banana Republicans.

"Recent statements by Maoist leaders are indicative of their political immaturity," says Krishna Khanal, a political scientist at Tribhuvan University in Kathmandu. "They have made strange announcements to please their cadres and fighters."

The Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) wields considerable legislative power to advance its policies. The group, which fought a 10-year insurgency from 1996 demanding a new constitution and an end to monarchy, is the largest party in Nepal's 601-member special assembly. With 220 seats, it has twice the representation of the second biggest party, the centrist Nepali Congress.

The government also has few moderates who might push back against a radical agenda. The Maoists' biggest alliance partner is the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist), third largest in the assembly, which also has radical roots and a history of armed violence.

An 'unequal education system'

The controversial announcement came Nov. 6, when Finance Minister Baburam Bhattarai declared the government would end private investment in education by 2010. Private investors, he added, should limit themselves to investing in universities.

The Maoists have long opposed private investment in primary and secondary schooling, arguing that it produces an unequal workforce – those coming from private schools have an edge over their peers from public schools, they claim.


And communism cannot permit that anyone can have an unfair edge over their peers -- except for the communists themselves, and whomever they should favor, who get all the advantages of power.

"We have fought against this unequal education system for years now," said Himal Sharma, general secretary of All Nepal Free Students' Union (Revolutionary), the Maoist party's student's wing.


Obviously, the only way they can equalize the results of the educational system is to bring everyone down to the same low, miserable level of incompetence and underachievement.

I can almost here "Dubya" telling us now that "No child will be left behind."

Only don't kid yourselves, the Obamanistas will work on social issues with a vengeance that the Banana Republican neocons and Clintonite neolibs would be hard-pressed to match in their wildest dreams.

"We are pushing for a declaration next year of free education in public schools till class 8. And a year after that, we want the provision expanded for up to class 12. Ideally, we would want an end to private investment in schools by then," he said.


"Ideally, we would want an end to private investment in schools by then."

But the announcement has experts worried that the transition will undermine youths' quality of education. According to the Ministry of Education, private schools account for nearly one-third of the country's 41,000 schools.


First of all, it should be pointed out that the private schools in Nepal is, generally, the third of the education industry that actually works.

Notice how it is the third that the Moo-ists want to eliminate.

Does that ring any bells?

"The plan is extremely ambitious and highly unlikely to succeed," says Mani Wagle, principal and proprietor of Miniland School in Kathmandu that runs classes from nursery to 12. "Two years aren't enough time for the government to provide an alternative arrangement for millions of school-going children and thousands of teachers in private schools."


Second of all, the Moo-ists want to eliminate it well before they have in place a workable alternative.

This will ensure that those who heretofore had an adequate education will suffer the most. Success must be properly penalized, or equality of outcome cannot be achieved!

Nepal's government-run schools tend to have poor infrastructure. Newspapers here regularly run stories of government schools in the remote hilly areas where classes are conducted outside due to insufficient number of classrooms.


The next thing the Moo-ists will have to do is shut down those newspapers, so the truth about how miserable the system is won't leak out.

Of course, once enough of their comrades get into power in the media, the truth will get drowned out anyway -- kind of like it does here under a "free" press.

The passing rate of public school students is poor. According to figures from the Ministry of Education, 82 percent of private school students who take the School Leaving Certificate exam pass the test, compared with 36 percent of public school students.


Remember, this is the level of achievement that will be stardardized at -- inequality cannot be tolerated, so those who actually are able to pass the test now must have the part of the system they use destroyed.

People like Professor Khanal, of the Tribhuvan University, say that privately-run schools have provided the quality education that public schools have not.

Suprabhat Bhandari, president of Nepal Guardian's Association, calls the announcement ridiculous. "Is the state intending to produce a mediocre manpower in the name of equality? And how will the state ensure that Nepalese children who do their schooling outside Nepal are not more competent than those who study in the public schools here?"


"Is the state intending to produce a mediocre manpower in the name of equality?"

That's exactly what they are going to do.

That is what they do with health care, that is exactly what they do with incomes, that is what they do with the safety of citizens in the face of criminals -- standardize on the lowest level, so it will all be equal.

That means if you have health care, money, or a means to defend yourself against thugs, it must be taken away from you.

That is how it works -- except for those in power.

Read on:

Fighting for a degree

Mr. Battarai further announced that the government is working to give academic certificates to Maoist fighters who couldn't attend schools during the war.

"Our friends who could not continue their education due to involvement in the armed conflict but have the necessary skills and knowledge should receive due academic recognition," he said.


Notice how they will deny opportunity from those who are making something out of it, but give rewards to those who have not done so.

That is how the wealth redistribution of the Obamanistas will work, too.

Except that the Obamanistas, like the Banana Republican neocons and Clintonite neolibs before them, will be careful that their own privileges are not infringed.

Khanal, calling the idea unacceptable, likened it to the thinking during China's Cultural Revolution, when a degree holder in agricultural science was valued less than a farmer who hadn't received formal education.

"These are the same revolutionary leaders who said Nepal's formal education is useless, and asked youths to leave schools and join the war. Why the need for certificates now?" he says.


It's exactly the kind of thinking that made China's Cultural Revolution so successful.

Then there's Obama's "acquaintance", the unrepentant anti-American terrorist Ayers, who has expressed an interest in molding the minds of our young...

Which makes me wonder whether Obama will give Hillary another shot at America's health care system....

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