By Sangam Prasain

Kathmandu, Nov 8 (EFE).- Taking a cue from neighboring India, Nepal politicians, including communists, are banking on Hindu appeasement to win general elections later this month.

Hindu nationalism has become a key part of the election campaign, with parties attempting to win voters with offers or contributions to build Hindu temples, despite the fact that many of them are communists preaching atheism.

The Himalayan republic is holding general elections on Nov.20 to elect 275 members of the House of Representatives. It will be held alongside provincial elections to elect 550 representatives to the provincial assembly.

Fostering the Hindu sentiment has become an important part of this election campaign for the opposition Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist), or the CPN (UML), and the ruling social-democratic Nepali Congress.

“Both parties, although they have not incorporated Hindu agendas in their political manifesto, are trying to cash-in on the religious-nationalist card,” Vijay Kant Karna, a professor of political science at Tribhuvan University, told EFE.

“People who do not believe in it are propagating the Hindu ideology. Politicians are trying to polarize the society to get the votes and that’s a bitter reality,” Karna said.

Nepal, where more than 80 percent of the population are Hindus, officially became a secular republic with the promulgation of its new constitution in 2015.

The Himalayan nation went through a traumatic process of political transition, with the first outbreak of a decade-long civil war in 1996, which pitted Maoist guerrillas against the official forces of the then Hindu monarchy.

With the start of the peace process in 2008, elections were held to form a Constituent Assembly, and at its first meeting, the 239-year-old Hindu monarchy of the Himalayan kingdom was abolished and Nepal was declared a secular state.

However, Karna considered that the recent religious overtures to win over votes could polarize society and lead to negative repercussions for the Nepali society, especially given that it recently went through 15 years of turbulence in search of stability.

This story was originally published in laprensalatina.com . Read the full story here