For decades, the narrative of political protest in Nepal was written by stone-throwing cadres of established parties, veteran Maoists, and the heavy-handed batons of the state police. But in the first half of 2024, the script was torn up by a demographic that the old guard forgot existed: Generation Z.
It is a damning indictment of the 2008 Republic. For Gen Z, the abstract ideal of "democracy" has delivered only unemployment and brain drain. The monarchy, for all its historical sins, represents a pre-looted Nepal. They are nostalgic not for him , but for a time when they believed the country had a future. nepal's gen z protests
This was the moment for South Asia.
It is reductive to say Gen Z loves the King. Most of these protesters were born after the royal massacre of 2001 or were toddlers when the 2006 democracy movement ended the Shah dynasty’s direct rule. Their rallying cry of “Aau Ram, Aau Ram” (Come, Ram) was less a feudal loyalty and more a nihilistic cry against a broken system. For decades, the narrative of political protest in
What started as a niche online campaign to restore the monarchy (a fringe sentiment since its abolition in 2008) spiraled into a massive, leaderless movement that forced the government to impose curfews, shut down the internet, and ultimately, arrest nearly 2,000 protesters. But to call these simply "pro-monarchy protests" is to miss the point entirely. For Gen Z, the abstract ideal of "democracy"
The backlash was immediate. Mainstream media pundits (mostly aging Baby Boomers and Gen X) called the protesters "traitors" and "misguided children." They pointed out the irony of protesting for a King who once dismissed the parliament in 2005.
Or does Gen Z simply need better offline infrastructure to turn their digital rage into lasting political change?