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Nepali loan shark victims march during a protest in Kathmandu on February 23. Photo: EPA-EFE

Nepal loan shark victims make 23-day march for justice: ‘they cheat, exploit people like us’

  • Many people in rural regions lack access to financial institutions and bank loans, leaving them at the mercy of ‘predatory’ money lenders
  • Borrowers are often trapped into a lifetime of liability, and advocates say a new law to ban ‘unfair transactions’ is stunted by corruption
Nepal

Two years ago, Nirmala Thakur’s family desperately needed money for a medical emergency.

She rushed to a local money lender to borrow 200,000 rupees (US$1,500), only to find out later that the man had tricked her into signing a second document for an amount 10 times higher. Thakur and her husband have since sold their house, but still have not repaid the loan they took for their son’s treatment.

“The money lender keeps threatening us and has even filed a case for defaulting the loan,” said Thakur from central Nepal’s Mahottari district. “They cheat and exploit people like us.”
Nirmala Thakur is one of the hundreds of Nepali loan shark victims who have come to Kathmandu in a ‘March for Justice’. Photo: Bibek Bhandari

Thakur is among more than 1,000 debtors waging a peaceful protest campaign against unscrupulous lenders in Kathmandu, many of them farmers from the southern Terai plains. The victims gathered in eastern and western corners of Nepal and walked for 23 days in the “march for justice” campaign, reaching the capital on February 21 in an attempt to convey the government to act against exploitative lenders.

Many rural residents in Nepal turn to local money lenders due to limited access to financial institutions and complex loan process in banks. The lenders often end up taking advantage of desperate situations and illiteracy, either by charging borrowers high interest rates that multiply quickly, or deceiving them into signing documents with higher principal amounts.

Economist Khushbu Mishra said informal lending was an “inefficient system” that burdened borrowers with high interest rates and a lifetime of liability, pushing them into poverty.

“The current protests reflect the unequal power relations across the borrowers and lenders, which are often predatory,” said Mishra, an associate professor at Stetson University in the United States.

“Because it is an informal and inefficient market for lending, the perpetual debt for families cripple them economically, harming the overall economy of the country.”

Debtors like Thakur said that money lenders also harass and threaten them, while confiscating their property for not repaying on time.

“My husband is so stressed about repaying the debts that he has now drowned himself in alcohol,” Thakur said. “We need justice.”

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In April, the government struck an agreement with loan shark victims and formed a commission to address their demands after they protested in the capital. A few months later, lawmakers passed a bill criminalising “unfair transactions” using fraudulent loan deeds and exorbitant interest rates, with violators facing seven years in prison and fines of up to 70,000 rupees (US$530).

But the current demonstrators in Kathmandu, who initially camped under open skies and now moving from one shelter to another, said the new law had not translated into meaningful outcomes.

Mukesh Yadav, leader of the victims’ group from Mahottari, said he had attended several unfruitful meetings with district administration officials. He alleged that money lenders bribed lower level government workers to delay processing their cases.

“They victimise the victims even more,” he said.

Hundreds of loan shark victims from different parts of Nepal walked for 23 days to reach the capital Kathmandu, where they are demonstrating about the exploitation practise. Photo: Bibek Bhandari

Yadav also borrowed 300,000 rupees from a local lender four years ago and now owes him nearly three times more. He added many lenders secretly add higher than the agreed upon interest rates after signing the loan deeds.

Mohna Ansari, lawyer and former commissioner of the National Human Rights Commission, said even though the current Maoist government had waged a decade-long insurgency for the rights of the poor and marginalised, its leaders had not been able to follow the party’s values. She said most Nepali political parties, claiming to have socialist agendas, provided some form of protection against loan sharks.

“It is an open secret that they have political protection,” she said. “There are laws, but who will implement and monitor them? The local government should ensure the laws are implemented, but there is so much corruption that police and officials often end up aiding money lenders.”

Nepal ranked 108 out of 180 countries and regions in Transparency International’s corruption perceptions index 2023.

Ansari added the government should focus on addressing the “serious issue” and come up with effective solutions instead of indulging in “public stunts by creating commissions after commissions”.

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In December, the commission formed early last year to address the woes of loan shark victims said local authorities had resolved more than 5,000 of the 27,500 complaints received, though demonstrators believe the real number could be much higher. Money lenders also agreed to return some 147 hectares of land to their rightful owners through reconciliation, and claimed to settle for lower amounts with the debtors.

But Yadav does not see that as a breakthrough, and negotiations with government officials this week have remained inconclusive so far.

During a National Concern and Coordination Committee meeting on Wednesday, Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal acknowledged that certain loan shark-related issues remained unsettled despite having a relevant law, and they should now be resolved through a judiciary process.

Nepali farmers demonstrate against usurers in front of prime minister’s residence in Kathmandu on February 22. Photo: EPA-EFE

But the demonstrating loan shark victims have additional demands, including a streamlined process to lodge complaints, legal actions against money lenders with unfair transactions, compensation to the victims, and an investigation into the alleged harassment and sexual abuses committed by lenders.

“They are looting us, so this time we will stay in the capital as long as our demands are not met,” Yadav said.

Other victims like Thakur are also determined to peacefully protest for as long as it takes. She urged the authorities to act in their favour instead of protecting the money lenders.

“I hope we get justice this time, or else we might just die burdened with loans,” she said. “We have lost our houses and lands and now we are on the streets. Where do we go from here?”

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