Karan Singh had told King Gyanendra to assume ceremonial role

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 NEW DELHI 002699 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/17/2016 
TAGS: PREL KDEM PHUM PGOV PBTS OREP NP IN
SUBJECT: INDIAN ENVOY TO NEPAL KING: ASSUME CEREMONIAL ROLE 
 
REF: NEW DELHI 2602 
 
Classified By: Charge Bob Blake for Reasons 1.4(B, D) 
 
1.  (C) Summary: As the Indian establishment debates the 
effectiveness of envoy Karan Singh's visit to Kathmandu, New 
Delhi is still reaching out to Nepalese actors to try to pull 
the parties and Palace together.  Speaking with the Charge on 
April 21, Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran said the King had 
responded positively to Singh's message, but acknowledged the 
king had responded positively before and then done nothing. 
Saran warned that Gyanendra was rapidly approaching the 
"point of no return" at which the monarchy itself was in 
danger.  End Summary. 
 
NOT AS SUCCESSFUL AS HOPED 
-------------------------- 
 
2.  (SBU) Indian envoy Karan Singh met with the Prime 
Minister on April 21 to discuss his April 19-20 visit to 
Nepal (reftel), and told reporters afterward that he was 
optimistic that the King would soon take a "major step" 
toward restoration of democracy.  However, Indian press 
reports, calling the visit a "failure," suggested that Singh 
and Saran returned early from Kathmandu after Gyanendra 
refused to agree to the demand to turn power over to the 
political parties, and instead pressed for his preferred 
option of appointing a prime minister of his choosing. 
Without any immediate results to report, Saran told reporters 
on his return that the visit had been a "fact finding" trip 
and Singh had only shared his "objective assessment" with 
Gyanendra. 
 
STILL PUSHING RECONCILIATION BETWEEN KING AND PARTIES 
--------------------------------------------- -------- 
 
3.  (C) In an April 20 conversation with PolCouns, Minister 
of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma reported that 
while the GOI was encouraged by the King's agreement to turn 
over power to a Prime Minister, New Delhi was not optimistic 
Gyanendra would call for immediate elections.  Sharma noted 
that the GOI continues to use CPI(M) politician Sitaram 
Yechury as a channel to Nepal's Seven Party Alliance (SPA) 
because of his strong ties to the CPN(UML), but did not 
suggest he would have any broader role to engage the Maoists. 
 Sharma met with Yechury and Nationalist Congress Party 
General Secretary DP Yadav (also a supporter of the SPA) on 
April 20 to discuss GOI policy.  Prior to his meeting, 
Yechury told reporters that there was no longer "any place 
for monarchy" in Nepal.  Sharma later met with CPN(UML) 
leader and SPA negotiator Jhala Nath Khanal in New Delhi on 
April 20, in order for Khanal to convey the SPA's reaction to 
Karan Singh's visit.  Indian media has also reported that 
former NDA Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh plans to visit 
Nepal with the GOI's blessing on April 24, adding yet another 
envoy (and perspective) into India's interactions with 
Nepalese leaders. 
 
INDIA'S MESSAGE TO THE KING 
--------------------------- 
 
4.  (C) In an April 21 meeting, Foreign Secretary Saran told 
Charge and visiting Staffdel Sheehy that Karan Singh had told 
Gyanendra that he was "fast approaching the point of no 
return," and facing a growing upsurge of popular anger. 
Singh asked the King to summon the SPA leaders, tell them 
that he will turn over executive power to a leader of their 
choosing, call for elections to a new Parliament, and help 
work on a peace settlement.  He should then step back into a 
ceremonial role. 
 
TIME MAY BE RUNNING OUT 
 
NEW DELHI 00002699  002 OF 002 
 
 
----------------------- 
 
5.  (C) The King responded "positively" to Singh's message, 
Saran reported.  However, Saran admitted, Gyanendra has given 
positive responses before but then done nothing.  If the King 
does not take immediate action, there was a good chance of 
the monarchy's role "being usurped," and the King could be in 
personal danger, Saran commented.  Even "his friends" may not 
be able to help him out.  Saran told us that the King said he 
may have a public message at 5 pm on April 21, when he would 
"announce that he has an announcement." 
 
INDIA ASKS SPA TO BE RESTRAINED 
------------------------------- 
 
6.  (C) Saran and Singh also met with leaders of the SPA 
while in Kathmandu, and asked them not to "overload the 
agenda with demands" if the King does reach out to them.  The 
Indian envoys discussed with the SPA the urgency of an 
economic development agenda for Nepal after the restoration 
of democratic government, and the need for "major financial 
backing" for the country.  India will "do what we can 
financially" to promote development, Saran said. 
 
COMMENT: A LAST MINUTE FRENZY 
----------------------------- 
 
7.  (C) The world has waited fourteen months for India to 
lead on Nepal.  Now, as the walls figuratively are crashing 
in around the King, the Indian establishment is in a frenzy 
of action that comes almost too late, but could yet pay 
democratic dividends if Gyanendra acts soon. 
 
8.  (U) Visit New Delhi's Classified Website: 
(http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/sa/newdelhi/)

(From Wikileaks, released on Aug 30, 2011)  

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