Crisis in Nepal after PM K.P. Sharma Oli’s resignation 

Background of the Crisis

  • Trigger: Oli government’s ban on social media platforms (Sept 2025) → cited misinformation & national security.
  • Youth Anger: Gen Z, digital natives, saw this as an attack on freedom of expression.
  • Underlying Issues:
    • Deep corruption and lavish lifestyles of politicians’ families.
    • Rising youth unemployment and lack of development.
    • Nepotism and political stagnation since Nepal’s 2006 democratic transition.

Escalation of Protests

  • Day 1: Protests turned violent; police firing killed 19 young people → sparked nationwide outrage.
  • Day 2: Despite curfew, protests intensified:
    • Parliament, Supreme Court, Singha Durbar (government HQ) set on fire.
    • Residences of former PMs Oli, Deuba, Dahal targeted and burnt.
    • Media houses like Kantipur Publications
  • Central Slogan: “Nepal’s political class lives lavishly at the expense of our parents’ tax money.”

Political Fallout

  • PM K.P. Oli resigned → submitted letter to President Ram Chandra Poudel.
  • Home Minister Ramesh Lekhak resigned on “moral grounds.”
  • Parliament paralysed; political leadership discredited.
  • Emerging Figures:
    • Balendra Shah (Kathmandu Mayor): Independent, sympathetic to protests, possible interim leadership role.
    • Rabi Lamichhane (RSP leader, recently released from jail): Populist outsider, could ally with Shah.
  • Speculation: Rise of outsider politics challenging mainstream parties.

Army & State Response

  • Army Chief Gen. Ashok Raj Sigdel: Appealed for restraint, urged protesters to engage in dialogue.
  • Army to take control of law & order → raising concerns about future military role in politics.

India’s Position

  • PM Modi: Called violence “heart-wrenching”; appealed in Nepali for peace, unity, and normalcy.
  • MEA:
    • Stressed neutrality; avoided taking sides.
    • Cautious, due to sensitivity of Nepal’s politics.
    • Issued travel advisory for Indians in Nepal.
  • India’s Concerns:
    • Stability of a key neighbour.
    • Preventing anti-India narratives.
    • Avoiding perception of interference in Nepal’s internal politics.

Structural Issues Behind the Crisis

  • Democratic Fatigue: Since 2006, Nepal has seen frequent government changes, unstable coalitions.
  • Failure of Federal Institutions: Corruption, slow development, poor governance.
  • Youth Alienation: A large young population (Gen Z) sees no credible leadership.
  • Anti-Institutional Sentiment: Unlike Jana Andolan movements (1990, 2006), current protests are leaderless, nihilistic, and anti-system.

Regional & Comparative Context

  • Bangladesh: Student-led protests toppled Sheikh Hasina but led to instability.
  • Sri Lanka: Aragalaya (2022) ended Rajapaksa dominance but produced populist outsiders (JVP rise).
  • Nepal Parallel: Risk of authoritarian regression or outsider populism filling the vacuum.

Implications for Nepal

  • Political Vacuum: Caretaker PM, burnt institutions, fragmented parties.
  • Danger of Anti-System Capture: Pro-monarchy nostalgia and outsider populism could destabilise democracy.
  • Role of Army: Its stance may decide if Nepal stabilises democratically or slips into authoritarian control.

Implications for India & South Asia

  • India–Nepal Relations:
    • India’s careful neutrality avoids alienating any side.
    • Instability may affect border management, trade, and security.
  • Regional Pattern: Adds to a cycle of youth-led uprisings in South Asia → governance failure, corruption backlash, erosion of democratic institutions.
  • China Factor: Instability may invite Beijing’s opportunistic moves in Kathmandu.

Way Forward

  • Inclusive Dialogue: Between political class, protesters, civil society, and army.
  • Reforms in Governance: Anti-corruption measures, youth employment, accountability.
  • International Role: India, UN, and SAARC neighbours to encourage peaceful transition, avoid interference.
  • Balancing Protest & Institution: Need to transform anger into constructive democratic reform rather than institutional destruction

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