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Nepal's Maoist rebel leaders appeared to have patched up their differences on Monday as the party's former deputy was reinstated to its high command after months out in the cold. Babu Ram Bhattarai, the Maoists' unofficial deputy leader who was regarded as head of a relatively "moderate" faction within the rebel movement, was stripped of his rank earlier this year after a power struggle with rebel chief Prachanda.
The Maoists have been fighting to overthrow Nepal's constitutional monarchy since 1996 and replace it with a Communist republic. The conflict has cost 11,000 lives.
There has been talk of divisions within the movement between moderates, who want to pursue a negotiated solution to the conflict, and hard-liners favouring a military solution.
But the crux of the dispute between the two men seemed as much about Prachanda's leadership style, Bhattarai accusing him of grabbing too much power for himself by running both the political and military wings of the movement.
Whatever the real cause of the row, the Maoists seem to have put their differences aside in the months since King Gyanendra sacked his government in February and assumed power for himself.
The rebels, sensing an opportunity, have been reaching out to the country's mainstream political parties to form an alliance against the king. Bhattarai, who led the rebel delegation in failed peace talks with the government in 2003, could play a key role in trying to build alliances with other groups.
"Differences within the party have been resolved on the basis of criticisms and introspection," Prachanda said in a statement e-mailed to the media.
So far the country's seven political parties have resisted the Maoists' overtures, saying they should first renounce violence.
Prachanda, a nom de guerre which roughly translates as "awesome", said Bhattarai had been reinstated to the Politburo's highest policy-making committee, while two of his aides had also been rehabilitated.
"There is no alternative to unity among all people-oriented parties against the feudal autocracy and to establish full democracy," he said.

Copyright Reuters, 2005

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