Kathmandu : Kathmandu Mayor Balendra Shah is unstoppable. A man on a mission, Shah shows no fear of hurdles, legal or otherwise, and is unequivocal about his mission to transform the metropolitan city. Only that he is headed in the wrong direction, and his mission is guided by a myopic vision of what a city should be like.
photo: balen shah
For Shah, a city
is a gentrified, boutique-style showpiece that has no place for the poor. Each
day, Shah’s city police officers perform an unbearable spectacle on the
streets, upending fruit carts and chasing poor vendors. His officers regularly
roam around in bulldozers, razing buildings even when the homeowners plead for
a chance to produce their papers of legitimate ownership. In Shah’s vision, a
municipal mayorship is a one-man show where there is no space for debate,
discussion and difference of opinion. Hardly has the mayor of the capital city
in his short stint in power shown any inclination towards the spirit of
cooperation between three levels of governance as envisioned by the
constitution of the federal democratic republic.
In over a year of his service ordisservice, as his victims may want to put it thre
is perhaps no public institution with which the rapper-turned-mayor has not
sparred. The latest such institution is the judiciary, as he signalled in a
tweet on Thursday that he would dishonour the Patan High Court’s interim order
to allow the showing of Hindi films in the metro city. Those who have faced
Shah’s wrath in the past belong to the high corridors of Singha Durbar to street
corners alike hose in between the extremes include educational institutions,
the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal, private homeowners, and a hapless
heritage structure along the Tukucha rivulet s Shah bulldozes his way through
established norms of public participation and democratic governance.
When the people
of
There is no
denying his attempts at bringing some positive changes—he has named and shamed
schools and hospitals that fail to fulfil their duties; he has made some
earnest attempts at managing the city’s ever-growing waste problem; and made
some significant strides at digitalising the city’s public service system.
However, the good is almost always shadowed by the bad, and Shah’s stunts are
ugly. At his heart, Balendra Shah, the Balen of his rapper avatar, increasingly
appears to be a rebel without a cause. Pumped up by the cheers of a sadistic
crowd that gathers to enjoy the spectacle of the mayor’s bulldozers razing
buildings made with somebody’s blood and sweat, Shah ticks all the marks of
populist desperation bordering on authoritarianism.
Hiding his true
self behind those iconic shades, the mayor of Kathmandu is fast metamorphosing
from a youth icon into a reckless figure out there to diss, dismiss and defeat
his imaginary opponents—and that is a dangerous trait in a democracy.
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