You are currently viewing Nepali Troops Move to Restore Order as Death Toll Rises to 22
Share this story

Protesters defied a curfew to set fire to government buildings and the homes of politicians as unrest over censorship and economic issues continued.

 Pinned

Here is the latest.

Nepal’s military began deploying troops late Tuesday in Kathmandu after a day on which rampaging protesters set upon the South Asian nation’s political elite both in government offices and in their homes.

A day after government forces opened fire on protesters, killing at least 19, smoke billowed from fires set at Parliament and the Supreme Court in the capital, Kathmandu, as well as from the homes of lawmakers past and present. The wife of one former official was badly burned. Hotels and airports were also attacked.

The violence, which began on Monday, continued even after the Nepalese prime minister resigned and the government retreated from a ban on social media platforms like WhatsApp that had incensed Nepalese already angry over official corruption.

Advertisement

To order your copy, send a WhatsApp message to +1 317 665 2180

The heads of Nepal’s main security agencies issued a joint statement appealing for calm and calling on political parties to find a peaceful way out of the crisis. But after the resignation of Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli and other top officials, it was unclear who, if anyone, was in charge.

Later in the day, after the death toll climbed to 22, the army said it would step in. Just after midnight, soldiers and well-armed police officers could be seen on some city streets in Kathmandu. They encircled groups of protesters and, in some cases, forced them to their knees, with hands crossed behind their heads.

The chaos stemmed from a government ban issued last week on major social media platforms that lit a fuse on years of anger and frustration over corruption and economic inequality.

Here’s what else to know:

  • Ban reversal: Social media is a critical tool in Nepal, where many citizens work abroad and send money back home. Last week, the authorities banned 26 services, including WeChat, YouTube and LinkedIn, which it said had failed to register with the government. By Tuesday morning, they were all back online.
  • South Asia: The crisis is unfolding similarly to how other unrest has in the region. Barely a year ago, similar scenes played out in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. Its prime minister, long the most powerful figure in the country, disappeared after being driven from office by angry street protests. About three years ago, the same happened in Sri Lanka.
  • Youth and democracy: The demonstrators in Nepal, who appeared to be mostly teenagers and young adults, have embraced the label “Gen Z protest.” Free speech is prized in Nepal, which has maintained robust space for debate as similar rights have shrunk in other South Asian countries.
  • Economic crisis: Outrage has also been growing over economic inequality and what many Nepalese see as the government’s failure to aggressively pursue high-profile corruption cases. The country’s biggest lingering crisis centers on jobs.
  • Resignations: Mr. Oli had been elected in 2024 for a fifth time as Nepal’s top official, and it’s not clear who will replace him. In all, four cabinet ministers stepped down, including three from the Nepali Congress, which is in a coalition government with Mr. Oli’s communist party.

Now a democratic republic, Nepal was a monarchy for nearly 250 years.

The violent protests in Nepal that were ignited when the government banned major social media platforms come amid a longstanding identity crisis, as the troubled young democracy grapples with the country’s long history as a monarchy.

Advertisements

At least 22 people have been killed since government forces opened fire on protesters on Monday. Violence escalated on Tuesday as protesters set fire to the Supreme Court in the capital, Kathmandu, as well as the homes of lawmakers. The violence was fueled by years of anger and frustration over government corruption and economic inequality.

Before becoming a republic in 2008, Nepal was ruled by a Hindu monarchy for nearly 250 years. The country’s first attempt at introducing a democratic political system dates to 1951, when the Nepali monarch established a cabinet system that created political parties. But a constitution that was put in place in 1959 was soon abolished by the next monarch, and for the next half-century Nepal teetered between an autocracy and a constitutional monarchy.

From 1996 to 2006, the monarchy was locked in a power struggle with Maoist rebels, who pushed to end royal rule. The 10-year civil war caused the deaths of more than 17,000 people. In 2007, Nepal’s government finally agreed to abolish the monarchy, and the next year, the country was declared a democratic republic.

Nepal has more than 100 ethnic groups and spoken languages, scores of castes and a total population of approximately 30 million people, making political consensus difficult.

Since 2008, Nepal has cycled through a series of leaders, leaving the country in an extended state of political uncertainty. Corruption ran rampant through Nepal’s government, with officials committing bribery and extortion.

K.P. Sharma Oli, a leader in the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist), took over as prime minister in 2015, the first of several terms as premier. In his most recent ascension to the prime minister’s office, in 2024, Mr. Oli forged a deal with the Nepali Congress, the largest party in Parliament, to form a new government with him at the helm. Under the deal, the Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of Nepal agreed to lead the government on a rotating basis until 2027, when the current session of Parliament was supposed to conclude.

Mr. Oli resigned on Tuesday. It is not clear who will replace him and if anyone was in charge of the country.

Wealthy ‘Nepo Kids’ are a source of outrage in Nepali protests.

In the weeks leading up to Tuesday’s violent protests in Nepal, photographs purporting to show the ritzy lifestyles enjoyed by the children of the country’s political elite were shared widely on social media.

They were tagged #nepokids, suggesting young people who had profited from their families’ connections, and they were condemned by many Nepalis as out-of-touch in a country where one in four live below the national poverty line.

It is not clear if these images were real or fabricated, but they have come to symbolize the corruption that many Nepalis say has widened inequality and enriched officials and their relatives.

The outrage has been one of the drivers of the protests, which were triggered by a social media ban but were fueled by years of resentment against those in power.

As part of Nepal’s #nepokids social media trend, users upload videos and posts to TikTok and X that purport to show the children of Nepali political figures on luxury vacations and wearing fancy clothing, juxtaposed with scenes meant to show the everyday struggles of ordinary Nepalis.

Among the most frequently shared images was a photo claiming to show a son of a minister posing with boxes labeled Louis Vuitton and Cartier, arranged into a Christmas tree. Another video stitched photos the user claimed was the son of a former judge dining at high-end restaurants and posing next to a Mercedes car.

“Thousands of such videos are trending across Nepal’s digital ecosystem,” said Raqib Naik, the executive director of the Center for the Study of Organized Hate, a watchdog group based in Washington that tracks extremism and misinformation online in South Asia and its diasporas.

Advertisements

The contrast “between elite privilege and everyday hardship struck a deep chord with Gen Z and quickly became a central narrative driving the movement,” he said.

Nepal’s “nepo kids” trend, using an abbreviated version of nepotism, is similar to the popular concept in the West, where that term and “nepo babies” is used to refer to the privileged children of celebrities and other public figures.

In many posts, images of those so-called “nepo kids” are interspersed with images depicting the struggles faced by ordinary and poor Nepalis, expressing a widespread sense in Nepal that the affluence of the country’s political class has come at the expense of the wider population.

Transparency International, an independent nonprofit, has ranked Nepal as one of the most corrupt countries in Asia. Despite frequent scandals, typically involving collusion among elected politicians and supposedly independent officials, very few accusations have resulted in successful prosecutions.

For example, a parliamentary probe revealed that at least $71 million was embezzled in the construction of an international airport in the city of Pokhara. And in another case, Nepali leaders were caught collecting money from young people aspiring to find employment in the United States under the cover of refugee status that was intended for ethnic Nepalis who had been forcibly deported from neighboring Bhutan.

In particular, young people have recoiled at a small number of elite Nepalis seen to be accumulating vast estates for their children, with many calling for the state to open investigations into how they were purchased.

The government’s short-lived ban on social media further antagonized protesters, who saw it as an attempt to control criticism of the inequalities they continue to protest against.

Advertisements

Bhadra Sharma and Alex Travelli contributed reporting.

Sept. 9, 2025, 2:31 p.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

Just after midnight, soldiers and well-armed police could be seen on some city streets in Kathmandu. The forces encircled groups of protesters and, in some cases, forced them to their knees, with hands crossed behind their heads. Nepal’s army has a fearsome reputation, and people generally take orders from soldiers seriously. Two hours earlier, the Nepali military had announced it was sending in troops to restore order. Some young men created roadblocks with burning tires and waved sticks at approaching vehicles.

Sept. 9, 2025, 2:09 p.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Anushka Patil

Advertisements

More than 200 injured people were admitted to Nepal’s Civil Service Hospital on Tuesday and 3 have died, the hospital said, bringing the death toll over the past two days to 22.

Sept. 9, 2025, 1:08 p.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Anushka Patil

Any use of force by the Nepali Army on Tuesday night will be closely watched by international observers after security forces opened fire on protesters on Monday, killing at least 19 people. The U.N. human rights chief, Volker Türk, has called for an investigation into those killings and into other “reports of unnecessary and disproportionate use of force by the security forces.”

And the U.N.’s office in Nepal has warned authorities that the law enforcement response should remain “in line with international human rights standards,” adding that the country would “benefit from taking concrete steps to address the root causes of issues raised.”

Several nations, including the United States, the United Kingdom, France and Japan, signed a statement on Monday affirming “strong support for the universal rights of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression” in Nepal. The number of signatories rose to 10 on Tuesday after Germany, Norway and Switzerland signed on.

Sept. 9, 2025, 1:00 p.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Jenny Gross

Nepal’s bid to censor social media sparks violent unrest.

When Nepal’s government blocked access to social media platforms last week, it was following a familiar playbook used by leaders of neighboring countries to tighten control.

What was not part of the playbook was the huge backlash that followed.

In Nepal, the ban set off the worst unrest in decades, unleashing pent-up outrage over corruption and economic inequality. By Tuesday morning, the Nepali government had reversed course, reinstating access to all 26 of the platforms blocked last week, including Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram and WeChat.

Nayana Prakash, a research fellow at the Chatham House research institute in London who studies the use of technology in South Asia, said that the suddenness of the ban in Nepal took people by surprise, whereas internet censorship is more common in India and Pakistan.

“This is quite new to Nepal,” Dr. Prakash said. While many countries have either banned TikTok or are discussing it, restricting access to platforms like LinkedIn and Reddit “goes quite a lot further,” severely curtailing people’s ability to find jobs or network outside of Nepal, she said. The government in Nepal also tried to impose a much broader ban than exists in India, she said.

Social media is a critical tool in Nepal, where people rely on the apps to receive money and stay in touch with family and friends abroad. Businesses also use platforms like WhatsApp to operate.

India, the second biggest internet user in the world after China, with a population of 1.4 billion, has a much easier time getting tech companies to comply with government restrictions because they do not want to risk losing access to such a big market, Dr. Prakash said.

In contrast, many social media companies did not comply with Nepal’s new registration requirements. “Nepal doesn’t have the same level of political or commercial clout to make these tech companies fall into line,” Dr. Prakash said. “Companies can’t really afford to get on the wrong side of India, and India is well aware of that.”

Around the world, internet freedom has declined for the 14th year in a row, with governments restricting access to social media platforms in at least 25 countries, according to a report published last year by Freedom House, a nonprofit organization that supports transparency and democracy. The Indian government censors online content and sometimes restricts access to social media platforms or orders tech companies to remove certain content.

Jon Roozenbeek, a lecturer in psychology at the University of Cambridge who focuses on misinformation and authoritarianism, said that India and other countries have gained public support for restricting some internet access by framing it as a nationalistic policy. That did not happen in Nepal.

He added that Nepal lacks the leverage of large countries like India. “Google and Meta and others were like ‘OK, see ya. We don’t care enough about Nepal,’” Dr. Roozenbeek said.

Sept. 9, 2025, 12:31 p.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

At 10 p.m., Nepal’s armed forces issued a notice, across multiple platforms, in English and in Nepali, announcing an “official Army Helpline” for people to call. It appeared to be an step in the army’s newly announced plan to assert control over the streets and restore order. Local analysts expect a declaration of emergency to follow.

Sept. 9, 2025, 12:23 p.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Anushka Patil

Nepal’s Health Ministry is urging people to donate blood at local hospitals and the country’s central blood bank in Kathmandu to help treat the injured, according to the state-run newspaper Rising Nepal. Hundreds of people were wounded on Monday after witnesses said security forces fired live ammunition, rubber bullets and water cannons at protesters. The police and other security agencies were largely absent during the day on Tuesday, and the number of new injuries remained unclear.

Sept. 9, 2025, 12:10 p.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

Nepal’s army issued a statement saying it intends to assume responsibility for law and order, starting at 10 p.m. local time tonight. It called upon citizens to cease all acts of arson and looting. In formal language, the army’s high command promised that its troops would take to the streets to protect the country’s public and private properties. There was little advance warning: the clock strikes 10 p.m. in Kathmandu within 15 minutes.

Sept. 9, 2025, 11:27 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

The streets are dangerous in Kathmandu tonight. Some protesters encircled my motorbike and then rushed it when they realized that I was a journalist. They only let me pass after I mouthed an anti-government slogan. Security forces are scarce on the ground, and they are not the only ones with guns and other weapons. Some protesters were throwing live grenades into a government building. Civilians have been photographed carrying assault rifles. Protesters also have attacked politicians’ homes, as well as some of the capital’s bigger buildings. Two airports have been damaged, as have the Hilton and Varnabas hotels.Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters; Reuters; Birkam Rai/Reuters; Adnan Abidi/Reuters

Sept. 9, 2025, 9:48 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Matthew Mpoke Bigg

Seismic protests in Asia have had young people at their core.

Demonstrations in Nepal against corruption and a social media ban — which the government reversed — have put young people front and center, borrowing the name Gen Z.

That generation, including teenagers and people in their early to mid-20s, has been important in other recent political protests in Asia. In many of them, young demonstrators have expressed frustration at corruption, social inequality, unemployment and a lack of economic opportunity.

Here are countries where young people have played a leading role in recent protests.

Protesters in Indonesia, the largest country in Southeast Asia, have held demonstrations in recent weeks against rising unemployment, inflation and economic inequality.

The All-Indonesia Students’ Union has played an organizing role in the protests, which have involved thousands of people in the capital, Jakarta, and other cities on the island of Java and elsewhere. At least four people, including a motorcycle taxi driver, were killed in the unrest in late August, which prompted the authorities to deploy the navy marine corps to bring order.

Demonstrators have demanded that the government cancel the monthly housing allowances that lawmakers receive, which many in the country see as lavish.

The president, Prabowo Subianto, said in recent days that the country’s House of Representatives had agreed to some policy changes and said he acknowledged the “genuine aspirations of the public.” Allowances for national lawmakers would be cut and a moratorium imposed on their expensive overseas trips, he said.

Student-led protests last year forced Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to leave office and flee the country after 15 years in power.

Nearly 1,400 people were killed in a security crackdown, but it failed to stop demonstrators from eventually reaching Ms. Hasina’s official residence in the capital, Dhaka.

The demonstrators’ aim was to rebuild Bangladesh as a more equitable and less corrupt democracy. Since Ms. Hasina left office, an interim government has led Bangladesh without a prime minister.

The success of the protests, which have been associated with Gen Z, has been closely watched around the region.

Months of protests against President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, whose family has dominated Sri Lanka’s politics for years, forced him to resign in 2022. The protesters accused him of corruption and mismanagement, which they said had ruined the island nation’s economy and caused shortages of fuel, medicine and food.

Young people were central to the demonstrations and built a protest camp along the scenic Galle Face neighborhood at the heart of the capital, Colombo, with protesters insisting they would not go home until the Rajapaksas left the government.

Sept. 9, 2025, 9:38 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

The house of a former prime minister, Jhala Nath Khanal, was set on fire Tuesday while his wife, Ravi Laxmi Chitrakar, was inside. She was severely burned. “His wife was taken to the army after she was critically burned. She’s still receiving treatment at the hospital,” said Jagannath Khatiwada, a leader of Khanal’s party.

Sept. 9, 2025, 8:40 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Alex TravelliSouth Asia reporter

Anger at Nepal’s social media ban reflects families’ dependence on workers abroad.

For at least half of Nepal’s society, the government’s decision last week to block access to more than two dozen social media platforms was worse than an inconvenience. It tore away at family bonds and, often, a lifeline to household budgets.

Nepal’s scarcity of jobs has driven millions of young people to seek work in other countries for generations. More than a thousand young men and women leave the country every day to serve long-term contracts, many in the oil-rich countries of the Persian Gulf and Malaysia.

In Hong Kong, Nepalis power the electronics recycling industry. More and more reach Europe every year. In the United States, they form the fastest growing community of Asian Americans.

This emigration has less to do with wanderlust than with Nepal’s economic desperation.

The country of 30 million people relies heavily on the remittances that an estimated 2 million workers abroad send home. In 2024, the $11 billion they sent accounted for more than 26 percent of Nepal’s economy. That money buys food and medicine and sends children to school.

The social media ban, which went into effect last Thursday after the authorities said Facebook, YouTube and other platforms had failed to register with the government, had the effect of isolating families from their faraway breadwinners. The government repealed the ban on Tuesday after protests, though the unrest continued.

The International Labor Organization estimates that half of all Nepali families rely on financial support from relatives working abroad. This dependence increased after the Covid-19 pandemic. By 2023, there were twice as many Nepalis working in other countries as there had been in 2019, the biggest increase in Asia.

Sept. 9, 2025, 7:37 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Alex TravelliSouth Asia reporter

The sudden collapse in Nepal confirms a recent pattern in South Asia. It was barely a year ago that similar scenes played out in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. The country’s prime minister, long the most powerful figure in the country, disappeared after being driven from office by angry street protests. Almost three years ago, the same happened in Sri Lanka. Each protest movement came with a catchy name, student leaders and burned buildings, and each succeeded in toppling an entire establishment.

Sept. 9, 2025, 7:29 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Alex Travelli South Asia reporter

Balendra Shah, the mayor of Kathmandu and a rapper, emerged two days ago as a supporter of the so-called Gen Z protesters. He said he would not march with them — on the grounds that, at 35, he is too old to be a part of Gen Z — but wrote in a Facebook post that he was on the side of their “spontaneous movement.”

With nearly all of Nepal’s established political class on the run from protesters, Shah has suddenly become more prominent. In another post, after the prime minister’s resignation, Shah wrote: “Dear Gen Z, the resignation of your murderer has come. Now be restrained!!” He urged the protesters to stop destroying property, negotiate with the army chief and insist on dissolving the seated parliament.

Sept. 9, 2025, 7:12 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

The New York Times

Armed men are starting to roam the streets of the capital. It wasn’t clear if they were part of the protests.

Sept. 9, 2025, 6:56 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

Tribhuvan International Airport, Nepal’s main international airport, has been closed as smoke from fires covered Kathmandu Valley. “There’s zero visibility around the airport, so we have closed all flights,” said Gyanendra Bhul, a spokesperson for the civil aviation authority of Nepal. Flights scheduled to land there were diverted to other countries.

Sept. 9, 2025, 6:52 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

The prime minister who resigned on Tuesday, K.P. Sharma Oli, was elected in 2024 for a fifth time as Nepal’s top official. He leads the communist party of Nepal, known as UML, the second-largest party in Parliament. He had been known for pro-China policies. It’s not clear who will replace him.

Sept. 9, 2025, 6:36 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

The Supreme Court building and a special anti-corruption court were on fire. Smoke was also seen pouring out of the Parliament building.

Sept. 9, 2025, 6:28 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

The heads of Nepal’s main security agencies, including the army chief, have issued a joint statement appealing for restraint and calling on political parties to find a peaceful way out of the crisis by holding a political dialogue as soon as possible.

Sept. 9, 2025, 6:23 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra SharmaReporting from Kathmandu, Nepal

You can see black smoke all around Kathmandu Valley as reports of arson increase. Protesters are setting fire to government buildings, police stations and the houses of politicians. My eyes are itching because of the smoke.

Sept. 9, 2025, 5:56 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Bhadra Sharma and Alex Travelli

Bhadra Sharma reported from Kathmandu, Nepal, and Alex Travelli from New Delhi.

What’s behind the Nepal protests?

The protests in Nepal’s capital escalated as they went into a second day on Tuesday, as anger and disappointment that had built up for years among the protesters were ignited. The government’s ban on major social media platforms a few days earlier had only lit the fuse.

Declaring themselves to be the voice of Nepal’s Gen Z, the protesters were expressing not only outrage at the official violence that met them on the streets on Monday, but also at longstanding social problems that have afflicted Nepal during the 10 years since it replaced its monarchy with a democratic republic.

The country relies heavily on the remittances that an estimated two million workers abroad send home. The social media ban had the effect of isolating families from their faraway breadwinners.

The government repealed the ban on Tuesday after protests, and Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli and other ministers later resigned. But the unrest continued, as protesters set fire to government offices and to politicians’ homes.

The country’s biggest slow-burning crisis centers on jobs. Getting one is a herculean task in Nepal, a mountainous nation of 30 million sandwiched between India and China. According to the Nepal Living Standard Survey published by the National Statistics Office in 2024, the unemployment rate was 12.6 percent.

Those figures tend to understate the severity of the problem. They represent only participants in the formal economy, leaving out a majority of Nepalis, who work without officially reported jobs, mostly in farming. And the unemployment is heavily concentrated among younger adults.

Finding no opportunities at home, more than a thousand young men and women leave the country every day to serve long-term contracts in the oil-rich countries of the Persian Gulf and Malaysia. Tens of thousands work in India as seasonal migrant laborers. Government data show that more than 741,000 left the country last year, mainly to find work in construction or agriculture.

The rest of Nepal relies heavily on the remittances those workers abroad send home. In 2024, the $11 billion they sent accounted for more than 26 percent of the country’s economy. That money buys food and medicine and sends children to school in Nepal.

If there were one thing to blame for this cluster of economic problems, many Nepalis, especially those active in this Gen Z protest, would point to corruption. They recoil at the spectacle of a small number of elite Nepalis accumulating vast estates for their children. Transparency International, an independent nonprofit focused on holding governments accountable, has ranked Nepal as one of the most corrupt countries in Asia.

A steady drumbeat of scandals, typically involving collusion among elected politicians and supposedly independent officials, feeds this resentment. Very few accusations result in successful prosecutions.

For example, a parliamentary probe revealed that at least $71 million was embezzled in the construction of an international airport in the city of Pokhara. Loans from the Export-Import Bank of China evaporated in a nexus among officials, elected politicians and Chinese construction companies. The probe recommended further investigation and specific actions against the accused, including the director general of civil aviation. Still, no one was booked.

In another case, Nepali leaders were caught collecting money from young people aspiring to find employment in the United States under the cover of refugee status that was intended for ethnic Nepalis who had been forcibly deported from neighboring Bhutan. Fake documents gave the unemployed Nepali nationals the identities of displaced Bhutanese. Politicians from all parties were named in the ensuing investigations, but only members of the opposition were charged.

Ordinary Nepalis are aware of the ways they could benefit from a better-funded government. Health and education expenses are high. Farmers lack critical fertilizer during rice-planting seasons. Inflation makes it tough for anyone to survive in Kathmandu, the capital, where young people move to pursue higher education and jobs.

Democracy was hard won in Nepal, but it has not met the aspirations that sent protesters to the streets this week. Many of the Gen Z protesters are fixated on the son and the daughter-in-law of former Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba. They bitterly post images of them and other politicians’ children flaunting lavish lifestyles.

Ever since the new constitution came into effect in 2015, three leaders have rotated as head of the government: Mr. Oli, Pushpa Kamal Dahal and Mr. Deuba. For younger people, this electoral game of thrones, in which each prime minister’s tenure has lasted just a year or two, is infuriating.

Mr. Oli, the current prime minister, is an avid social media user. People close to him say he personally reads the comments that pile up under the videos he posts. Other Nepali leaders are fixated on social media as well, though they may not use the platforms much. In November 2023, Mr. Dahal, who was then prime minister, banned TikTok, in order, he said, “to restore social harmony.” It was Mr. Oli, when he returned as prime minister, who lifted that ban, nine months later.

Sept. 9, 2025, 5:23 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Matthew Mpoke Bigg

The protesters said the social media ban, which put platforms including Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram offline, was effectively an attempt at political censorship by the government. Hundreds were injured in the protests, which also expressed anger at the lack of action over high-profile corruption cases.

Sept. 9, 2025, 5:21 a.m. ETSept. 9, 2025

Matthew Mpoke Bigg

Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli of Nepal has resigned following the deaths of at least 19 people in protests on Monday. Security forces used water cannons, tear gas and live ammunition in an attempt to quell protests that have been led by young people angry about corruption and restrictions on social media imposed last week by the government.

Credit: www.nytimes.com

Do you have an important success story, news, or opinion article to share with with us? Get in touch with us at publisher@thepodiummedia.live-website.com or ademolaakinbola@gmail.com Whatsapp +1 317 665 2180

Join our WhatsApp Group to receive news and other valuable information alerts on WhatsApp.


Share this story
Advertisements
jsay-school

Leave a Reply