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Nepal in Flames: Why a Generation Is Rising Up

The resignation of Nepal’s Prime Minister, K.P. Sharma Oli, is more than a political shake-up; it is a direct result of a nation’s boiling point being reached. After violent street clashes left at least 19 people dead, the Prime Minister and his cabinet stepped down, but the deep-seated anger that fueled the protests remains, with no clear solution in sight.

This explosion of public fury did not happen overnight. For years, a deep well of frustration has been building among the Nepali people, particularly the youth. The government’s decision to ban popular social media platforms last week was not the cause, but the final spark that lit the fuse.

Gen Z protesters run after gathering and protesting from the roof of a parliament house building and also fire at Gate No. 2 of the Federal Parliament in Kathmandu, Nepal, on September 8, 2025. The demonstration, which begins peacefully against corruption and the social media shutdown, turns violent as security forces respond with tear gas, water cannons, and rubber bullets. At least 18 people are reported killed so far and dozens injured in the clashes. (Photo by Safal Prakash Shrestha/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Leading the charge are Nepal’s Gen Z, a generation that has only known a democratic republic. Their protest is a powerful cry against two major forces: the immediate brutality of state violence witnessed on the streets and the decade-long failure of the country’s leadership to solve deep-rooted social and economic problems since the end of the monarchy. Their outrage is a demand for a future that the promised democracy has failed to deliver.

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