Wednesday, January 7, 2026
9.1 C
New Delhi

After ‘Gen Z’ revolt, Nepal’s PM Karki under protesters’ demands, political pushback

Chosen for her integrity after deadly anti-graft protests, Nepal’s Prime Minister Sushila Karki now faces her toughest challenge: to meet the demands of the protesters who toppled her predecessor and deliver elections in six months.

The ‘Gen Z’ demonstrators want the 73-year-old premier to arrest senior party leaders accused of graft, remove politically-connected bureaucrats from key posts, and investigate the deaths of 74 people during this month’s protests.

While they support Karki, who showed zero tolerance for corruption as Nepal’s first female chief justice, they are also impatient for results.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

In a social media post earlier this week, Sudan Gurung, who has emerged as the ‘Gen Z’ group’s representative, supported calls for the “immediate arrest” of ministers in the recently overthrown government of KP Sharma Oli.

“We mainly expect her (Karki) to fight corruption. She is our mother and we believe she will protect us,” 36-year old Gurung, founder of non-profit organisation Hami Nepal, told Reuters.

Nepal ranked 107 of 180 countries in Transparency International’s 2024 Corruption Perceptions Index.

Reuters could not reach Karki on her mobile and messages to her phone remained unanswered.

The protests began after Oli’s government announced a ban on social media. While initially peaceful the rallies spiralled out of control on September 8 and in just over 28 hours the government had collapsed.

As well as dozens of deaths, more than 2,000 people were injured as protesters targeted government buildings and businesses believed to be connected to the previous government.

“There is no room to fail … and six months is a good amount of time,” Gurung said. Gurung threatened to bring down Karki’s government too if the group’s demands were not met.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

Karki has already begun to act.

She has promised an anti-corruption committee and formed a panel to investigate the attacks on the protesters.

But experts warned she would need to tread carefully against powerful leaders such as Oli, who remains president of the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist), which maintains a strong support base in the country.

“There is a possibility of another uprising from the traditional political parties that are blamed for mismanagement,” said Binoj Basnet, a former army general who is now an independent analyst.

Other political experts said Nepal was at a turning point similar to when the Maoist movement overthrew the monarchy in 2008 following more than a decade of unrest that left the government unstable and economy weak.

Nepal has had 14 governments since, with repeated uprisings fuelled by stark income inequality and youth unemployment at more than 20%. A third of its young population – mostly in their 20s – have left the country for work.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

There is also little inspiration for Karki from a similar uprising in Bangladesh where Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus faces sporadic protests even as he attempts to guide the country through a fragile transition before holding a general election.

“If the Karki experiment does not work and is unable to successfully lay a path for the next credible government then the risk is that the country could be thrown into another decade of unrest,” said Puranjan Acharya, an independent analyst and a former government adviser in the 90s.

Karki’s challenges

In the midst of a political crisis, Karki also has to fix Nepal’s $43 billion economy, which has been hit by a drop in tourism and investment sentiment since the protests.

Fitch Ratings said “a period of extended political stress” would raise risks for the sovereign credit profile of the Himalayan nation, as it dampens economic activity and near-term growth prospects.

Karki’s government has said it plans to hold an election on March 5, although analysts say that could be extended by another six months.

They say Karki will have to give the unorganised youth time to figure out their leadership, while the Nepali Congress and the Communist Party-UML, which have dominated the country’s politics for decades, need time to identify candidates untainted by graft allegations.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

“This movement is all about corruption. So leaders like Oli, and Sher Bahadur Deuba (Nepali Congress President) and their close aides will not fight elections,” Acharya said, adding that the parties will have to find new faces.

Youth leader Gurung is mulling the formation of a new youth-based party.

He stressed elections needed to be fair for all sides to accept the results and avoid more protests.

“The next elections will be a generational clash of old versus the new,” Acharya said.

(This is an agency story. Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Firstpost staff.)

End of Article

Go to Source

Hot this week

India Concerned Over Venezuela Crisis, Urges Focus On People’s Safety: Jaishankar

Jaishankar made the remarks on the sidelines of his meeting with Luxembourg’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Xavier Bettel Go to Source Read More

Trump says Venezuela will turn over 30-40 million barrels of oil to US

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said Venezuela’s interim authorities would transfer what he described as “sanctioned oil. Read More

‘Holy mission’: Putin praise troops at Orthodox Christmas service as Ukraine war enters fourth year

At a Russian Orthodox Christmas service near Moscow, Vladimir Putin invoked religious and patriotic symbolism to promote unity and praise Russian troops as the war in Ukraine enters its fourth year. Read More

Nearly 10 Speedboats Damaged In Early Morning Fire At Phuket’s Chalong Pier

Rescue teams and municipal disaster units from Chalong, Rawai, Wichit, and Karon rushed to the pier. Read More

‘PM Modi Came To See Me, Ordered 68 Apaches But…’: Trump Slams 5-Year Wait For Helicopters

Former US President Donald Trump has once again drawn attention to defence delays, trade frictions, and his personal equation with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, offering a wide-ranging account of US–India ties during his tenure. Read More

Topics

India Concerned Over Venezuela Crisis, Urges Focus On People’s Safety: Jaishankar

Jaishankar made the remarks on the sidelines of his meeting with Luxembourg’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Xavier Bettel Go to Source Read More

Trump says Venezuela will turn over 30-40 million barrels of oil to US

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said Venezuela’s interim authorities would transfer what he described as “sanctioned oil. Read More

‘Holy mission’: Putin praise troops at Orthodox Christmas service as Ukraine war enters fourth year

At a Russian Orthodox Christmas service near Moscow, Vladimir Putin invoked religious and patriotic symbolism to promote unity and praise Russian troops as the war in Ukraine enters its fourth year. Read More

Nearly 10 Speedboats Damaged In Early Morning Fire At Phuket’s Chalong Pier

Rescue teams and municipal disaster units from Chalong, Rawai, Wichit, and Karon rushed to the pier. Read More

‘PM Modi Came To See Me, Ordered 68 Apaches But…’: Trump Slams 5-Year Wait For Helicopters

Former US President Donald Trump has once again drawn attention to defence delays, trade frictions, and his personal equation with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, offering a wide-ranging account of US–India ties during his tenure. Read More

Hindu Man Dies After Jumping Into Canal While Fleeing Mob In Bangladesh

Show Quick Read Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom A 25-year-old Hindu man died on Tuesday after jumping into a canal to escape a mob that was chasing him on suspicion of theft, police said, marking the latest incident in a Read More

Michael Reagan, Son Of Former US President Ronald Reagan, Dies At 80

Michael Reagan, eldest son of ex-US President Ronald Reagan and conservative commentator, died at 80. He was known for Newsmax contributions and hosting The Michael Reagan Show. Read More

‘I’ll Get Impeached’: Trump Warns US House Republicans Against Loss In 2026 Midterm Elections

Donald Trump warned Republican lawmakers that losing control of the US House in the 2026 midterm elections would prompt Democrats to move to impeach him. Read More

Related Articles