NC NOT IN HURRY TO PICK ITS PM CANDIDATE SAYS SUSHIL KOIRALA
Kathmandu, 10 Sept.: : Nepali Congress president Sushil Koirala has said that his party would not enter into any agreement with the Unified CPN (Maoist) from now until it created an environment of trust, RSS reports..
Koirala also accused the UCPN (Maoist) of breaching the agreements reached with it in the past from time to time.
The Nepali Congress president who arrived in Myagdi in connection with inaugurating the party's district convention was speaking in a press meet organized by Nepal Press Union, Myagdi here today.
He said the UCPN (Maoist) has not implemented any of the agreements signed with it from the 12-point agreement to the latest five-point agreement. "Assurances alone are not enough, the UCPN (Maoist) should build an environment of trust," Koirala asserted.
The Nepali Congress president said that the UCPN (Maoist) chairman had only given him assurances of abiding by the agreements whenever he requested him to follow the agreements but never took the pains to live by his words.
On a different note, Koirala said the prime minister's resignation was the first precondition of the Nepali Congress for forging national consensus.
Koirala also alleged the prime minister of unilaterally dissolving the Constituent Assembly and announcing the date for new election. He insisted that the new election could be held only after a national consensus government was formed.
The Nepali Congress president said that his party was never in a hurry to select the prime ministerial candidate but was concerned more on how to find an outlet from the present political impasse. "Both options- holding new elections or revival of the Constituent Assembly—can be discussed if there is national consensus," he added.
Central committee member of the party, Arjun Narsingh K.C., said that reviving the defunct Constituent Assembly would go against the Supreme Court's verdict and the people's mandate. He stressed that there was no alternative to holding new elections in this context.
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MYSTERY ABSENCE FROM PUBLIC OF TOP CHINESE LEADERS
Kathmandu, 10 Sept.: — Where is President-in-waiting Xi Jinping? Is he nursing a bad back after pulling a muscle in a pick-up soccer game (or maybe in the swimming pool)? Has he been convalescing after narrowly escaping a revenge killing by supporters of ousted Communist Party boss Bo Xilai? Was he in a car accident? Or just really busy getting ready to lead the world's no. 2 economy ahead of his promotion to top leader expected in the next month or so?, AP reports from Beijing.
Chinese micro-bloggers and overseas websites have come up with all kinds of creative speculation as to why vice president Xi has gone unseen for more than a week. During that span, Xi canceled meetings in Beijing with visiting U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. Monday, it was the Danish prime minister's turn.
Xi's whereabouts during this sudden absence from the spotlight may never be known. One thing, however, is certain: China may now be a linchpin of the global economy and a force in international diplomacy, but the lives of its leaders remain an utter mystery to its people and the rest of the world, its politics an unfathomable black hole.
So when the presumptive head of that opaque leadership disappears from public view, rumor mills naturally go into frenzy.
"There is a long-standing practice of not reporting on illnesses or troubles within the elites," said Scott Kennedy, director of Indiana University's Research Center for Chinese Politics and Business in Beijing. "The sense is that giving out such information would only fuel further speculation."
Adding grist to the mill was a scheduled photo session with visiting Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt. The Foreign Ministry last week sent an invitation to overseas media to cover it, only to remove it from the program. Thorning-Schmidt is due to meet with other Chinese leaders on Monday and Tuesday.
Asked repeatedly by reporters, the Foreign Ministry claimed the Xi-Thorning-Schmidt meeting was never intended to take place.
"As I said last week, China's state councilors will meet the Danish prime minister," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said at a daily media briefing. When asked about the rumors of an injury, Hong said, "We have told everybody everything." He refused to elaborate.
Most online speculation about the portly 59-year-old Xi has centered on a back problem, possibly incurred while Xi took a dip last week in the swimming pool inside the Zhongnanhai leadership compound. Another rumor has the back being hurt in a soccer game. It wasn't clear what the sources of the information are.
More dramatically, the U.S.-based website Boxun.com, cited an unidentified source inside Zhongnanhai as saying Xi was injured in a staged traffic accident that was part of a revenge plot by Bo's supporters in the security forces. Another member of the all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee, He Guoqiang, was also injured in a similar incident, said the site, which acts as a clearing house for rumors and unsubstantiated reports. It has correctly predicted some recent political developments and been wildly off the mark on others.
This year, China has seen an unusual amount of political intrigue, with the shocking downfall of politburo member Bo exposing divisions within the leadership and prompting rumors of nefarious activity ranging from the wiretapping of top leaders to an attempted coup.
The sudden transfer of a key secretary to President Hu Jintao earlier this month also spawned conjecture about a Ferrari crash involving the aide's son and an ensuing attempted cover up.
Rumors about Xi were churned further by Russian President Vladimir Putin's cryptic remark over the weekend that the start of the Asia-Pacific Economic Forum leaders' meeting in Vladivostok had been delayed because Hu needed to attend to an important but unspecified domestic issue.
The tension and uncertainty are heightened by the timing ahead of a generational shift to a new leadership that will be headed by Xi. Still, in keeping with the China government's proclivity for secrecy, the logistics of the transition remain unknown.
Xi is expected to first assume Hu's mantle as Communist leader at a party congress held once every five years. Yet the dates for the meeting, expected in the second half of October, have yet to be announced, prompting talk that at least some of the seats on the nine-member Standing Committee remain up for grabs.
Recent economic and diplomatic challenges have also added to the sense of insecurity.
While China avoided the worst of the global economic slowdown, export growth and domestic demand have both fallen sharply in recent months, prompting forecasters to slash their estimates for economic growth needed to create jobs and fill government coffers.
Meanwhile, Beijing has been deeply unnerved by Washington's new emphasis on military and political ties to China's neighbors in the western Pacific and finds itself enmeshed again in a nagging dispute with Japan over uninhabited islands in the East China Sea.
Wang Xiangwei, editor-in-chief of Hong Kong's South China Morning Post and a longtime state media insider, wrote Monday in his newspaper that Chinese leaders' meetings are planned well in advance and cancellations are extremely rare.
"Barring Xi himself offering a very unlikely explanation today about his canceled meetings last week, the outside world may never know the exact reason, and the rumors are unlikely to fade away," Wang wrote.
Though absent in person, Xi did pop up Monday on the front page of the newspaper of the party's top training academy alongside a transcript of the speech he delivered nine days earlier, his last public appearance.
In the text, he enjoins newly enrolled cadres to use their time on the leafy campus in the northern Beijing suburbs to think critically about major national issues and not spend it "expanding personal contacts and inviting guests to dinner."
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