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    Nepal Gen Z protest: 18 protestors dead, 250+ injured as police stop demonstrators breaking into Parliament

    Synopsis

    Nepal Social Media Ban Gen-Z Protest: Protests erupted due to a social media shutdown and corruption allegations. Eighteen people died, and over 250 were injured. Police used tear gas and rubber bullets on protesters. Demonstrations occurred in Kathmandu, Jhapa, and other cities. The army has been deployed. Protesters stormed parliament and burned effigies.

    Nepal youth storm parliament gates over Facebook & Instagram ban | Anger grows over corruption
    Nepal Social Media Ban Protest: 18 persons were reportedly killed and more than 250 people have been injured as police in Nepal fired tear gas and rubber bullets and used water cannons to disperse protesters, mostly young people who tried to break into Parliament during a protest on Monday over a social media shutdown and alleged government corruption, according to Nepal's Health Ministry

    The Himalayan Times reported that a "Gen Z" protester reportedly died while several others sustained injuries in New Baneshwor in Kathmandu and in Damak city in Jhapa district in the Koshi province in the east of the country, in escalating demonstrations.

    Incidentally, Damak is the hometown of Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli.


    ALSO READ: Nepal’s Gen Z protests social media ban, calls for end to corruption

    One of the protesters was allegedly shot as protesters clashed with police in New Baneshwor. He died while receiving treatment at Civil Hospital. The identities of some injured remain unconfirmed, the news outlet reported.

    Soon after, the Himalayan Times reported that a second 'Gen Z' protester died in Kathmandu while receiving treatment at a trauma centre.

    The Kathmandu district administration office (DAO) declared the curfew from 12:30 PM to 10 PM on Monday.

    ALSO READ: Nepal protests: What triggered the massive deadly chaos in India's neighbourhood?

    The Kathmandu Post reported that later restrictions were extended to cover the residences of the president, prime minister, and vice-president and Singha Durbar.

    It includes the President's residence, Shital Niwas area, Maharajgunj, the vice-president's residence in Lainchaur, all sides of Singha Durbar, the prime minister's residence in Baluwatar, and surrounding areas.

    The Himalayan Times reported that the Nepali Army has been deployed to support security forces after protesters stormed restricted zones and the Federal Parliament premises.

    Last week Nepal had blocked access to social media platforms, including popular sites like Facebook Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube and others in a crackdown on misuse.

    The Social Media ban came into effect on September 4 targeting platforms that had not registered with the Nepalese government.

    The government said social media users with fake IDs have been spreading hate speech and fake news, and committing fraud and other crimes via some platforms.

    Local media reported that protesters marched from Damak Chowk toward the municipal office, burning an effigy of Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli and attempting to break municipal gates. Police intervened with rubber bullets, leaving one critically injured. Demonstrators also set fire to several motorcycles, escalating tensions.

    Protesters threw tree branches and water bottles, shouting slogans against government corruption, and some even entered the Parliament premises, According to Kathmandu Post.

    The Himalayan Times reported that officials described the situation as highly tense, and security forces are attempting to restore order while ensuring civilians' safety.

    Beyond Kathmandu and Jhapa, Gen Z youths also staged protests in Pokhara, Butwal, Chitwan, Nepalgunj and Biratnagar.
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