Bajura Dalits in fix following CPN-UML amp;#039;s bifurcation

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
BAJURA, APRIL 29The bifurcation in CPN-UML has created factions in a Dalit settlement in Bajura's Swamikartikkhapar
Rural Municipality-3, Jukot.
Elephant, leopard menace in Buddhashanti Rural Municipality
14, including late rural municipality chair, sued for graft
Prior to the split of the party, a majority of voters of the Dalit settlement voted for CPN-UML in
the last election, following the instruction of the so-called upper-caste people, most of whom wereUML supporters.
Following the split of UML party, the entire Jukot village is now divided between UML and the breakaway party CPN (Unified Socialist) under
Madhav Kumar Nepal
Both the parties have fielded their own candidates for the upcoming local elections
While UML has fielded Chaturbhuj Shahi as its candidate for the post of chairperson for Swamikartikkhapar Rural Municipality, Chiranjivi
Shahi is running from CPN-US.Chiranjivi Shahi had won the previous local election from here five years ago, and this time he also has the
support of CPN-Maoist Centre.Though Jukot also has Nepali Congress and CPN-MC supporters, they are said to be in minority.Then Jukot is a
single ward under the present local level - Swamikartikkhapar Rural Municipality
There are now 2,096 voters in the ward and 218 Dalit families."We used to vote for some candidates under the instruction of the upper caste
people earlier; now that there are rural municipality chairman's candidates from our village itself, we are in confusion," said local Man
Kami.Another Dalit member, in condition of anonymity, said the present election has put them in a fix
"Both the candidates are our money lenders from high caste, so we don't know whom to vote
We fear we will be offending one of the two men anyway when we vote," he said.Seventy-four-year-old Nande Luwar is also worried as to whom
to vote this time."We've never voted by using our own discretion thus far, and this time too we're preparing to vote for a candidate the
high caste people will ask us to, but this time as there are two candidates from our own village representing two different parties, we
don't know whom we have to listen to and vote for," he said.It is important to note that most of the Dalit families in Jukot are working as
haliyas for Thakuri families
While they apparently vote by listening to their masters, other Dalit voters, who are not working as haliyas, either don't vote on their own
discretion but vote for whomever the so-called higher caste people tell them to vote for.A version of this article appears in the print on
April 30, 2022, of The Himalayan Times
This article first appeared/also appeared in https://thehimalayantimes.com