When the Streets Speak: Nepal’s Crisis, Gen Z, and the Long Work of Rebuilding Trust
I have been watching the unfolding crisis in Nepal with a mixture of alarm and a deep, sad recognition of what happens when a society’s trust in its institutions collapses. The dramatic scenes — parliament and leaders’ homes torched, ministers pursued in the streets, and a prime minister forced to resign — are not merely headline spectacles. They are the visible ruptures of a social contract under strain Nepal unrest: PM Oli resigns after violent Gen Z protests, parliament torched; what's next?.
There are a few facts the world has noticed: this is a youth-led, Gen Z uprising against corruption and perceived cronyism; social media both organized the revolt and became a flashpoint when the state tried to clamp it down; and an outsider, Kathmandu’s mayor Balen (Balendra) Shah — a rapper-turned-politician with an unconventional trajectory — has emerged as a figure many young Nepalis rally around Engineer, Rapper, Mayor, Now PM? Nepal's Gen Z Rallies Around Balendra Shah, Rapper, mayor and now Nepal's next PM? Meet Balen Shah - studied in Karnataka; banned Indian films in Kathmandu.
These dynamics — rage at corruption, the centrality of social media, and the sudden rise of charismatic nontraditional leaders — are not unique to Nepal. But how Nepal moves from this rupture to a constructive, stable future matters not just for Nepalis, but for any polity learning to absorb the pressures of rapid digital organisation, youth expectations, and fragile institutions.
I believe three painful truths must be owned first
Violence corrodes legitimacy. When protests become arson and assaults, the moral high ground and the political momentum that legitimate reform movements need are at risk. The images of chaos that drove the Oli resignation also make the path to constructive change narrower Nepal protests: Kantipur TV Building Torched Amidst Gen Z Anti-Corruption Fury.
Social media is a double-edged sword. It empowers coordination, exposes malpractice, and creates new accountability pathways. It also amplifies rage and enables rapid escalation when governance acts impulsively — for example, by imposing blunt platform bans that feel like silencing rather than reform Nepal lifts social media ban after protests that killed 19 people — why it’s not the end of Gen Z revolt (reporting on the central role of social platforms in both organising and catalysing the unrest).
The temptation to trade institutions for personalities is strong. In moments of crisis we look for heroes. Balen Shah’s rise shows that appetite. But real and lasting reform is structural, not merely charismatic Who Will Be Nepal's Next Premier After Oli's Exit? Lamicchane, Balen Shah Lead Race.
So how can Nepal move forward — without romanticising either street fury or rigid order? Here are practical, anchored ideas I keep returning to.
1) A short, transparent transitional framework focused on accountability and calm
- Convene a broadly representative interim council: elder statespeople, respected civil-society figures, youth leaders (including nonviolent protest leaders), independent jurists, and neutral international observers. Its mandate: oversee immediate de-escalation, protect basic civil order, and set a calendar for institutional reforms.
- Prioritize transparent investigations into incidents of violence and credible allegations of corruption — but ensure these processes follow the rule of law, not vendetta politics.
Why this matters: legitimacy after rupture depends on visible fairness. Without credible, open processes, retribution will fuel further cycles of unrest.
2) Rebuild trust through institutional fixes, not symbolic purges
- Strengthen anti-corruption bodies with genuine independence: fixed tenures, guarded budgets, and international technical support for investigations and asset tracing.
- Judicial and electoral safeguards: expedite reforms to the electoral process and speed up adjudication of corruption cases, while keeping due process intact.
- Decentralize responsibly: empower municipalities with budgetary and administrative teeth so citizens feel change where they live.
Why this matters: reforms that change incentives for elites create sustainable deterrents against corruption. Symbolic removals without altered incentives will only delay future crises.
3) A digital compact: protect free expression, but curb organized harm
- Undo blunt bans that create more grievance than security. Instead, negotiate a digital rights charter: preserving freedom of speech, protecting privacy, and defining emergency, narrowly tailored, judicially reviewed limits for violence-incitement or proven disinformation campaigns.
- Invest in civic tech and official channels so government's messaging and service delivery match the speed and accessibility of social platforms.
Why this matters: the internet is now the public square. If states try to close it, they hand legitimacy to whoever controls the feeds.
4) Engage youth with real stakes — jobs, education, and governance roles
- Launch targeted programmes for employment in green infrastructure, digital services, and tourism — sectors where Nepal can realistically scale jobs for young people.
- Create youth advisory councils with budgetary authority at municipal and national levels. Invite young Nepalis into policy co-creation, not token roles.
Why this matters: protests are expressions of agency. Channelled into co-governance, that agency becomes a resource rather than a threat.
5) A moral economy of accountability and reconciliation
- Pair criminal accountability for proven abuses with truth-telling mechanisms where appropriate. Societies heal faster when harms are acknowledged, not merely repaid.
- Support media safety and pluralism. Journalists in the line of fire are not just collateral — they are necessary for public deliberation.
Why this matters: justice without reconciliation leaves wounds. Reconciliation without accountability leaves grievances.
A few cautions I hold dear
Don’t outsource reform to a single celebrity. Balen Shah or any other charismatic leader may channel youth hopes, but durable governance is plural and procedural. Heroes can catalyse, but institutions sustain.
Avoid crude internationalisation. Nepal’s sovereignty matters. External technical support and mediation can help, but domestic legitimacy must lead.
Resist the binary of order vs. change. Stability without reform is fragile; reform without order can be destructive. The task is to sequence: stabilize, investigate, reform, and then open space for participatory renewal.
A personal, perhaps sentimental, last thought
I find it meaningful that this unrest is being driven by young Nepalis who want dignity, transparency, and a future that isn’t mortgaged to entrenched privilege. That yearning is a gift to any society. It’s also fragile — easily hijacked by anger or opportunism. My hope is that Nepal’s next chapter will take that energy and turn it into institutions that outlast a single generation.
Reading the reportage — the painfully vivid accounts of unrest and the profiles of new political actors — convinced me that the hard work ahead is not only political engineering but moral: rebuilding faith in the idea that public life is worth stewarding together Nepal unrest: PM Oli resigns after violent Gen Z protests, parliament torched; what's next?, Engineer, Rapper, Mayor, Now PM? Nepal's Gen Z Rallies Around Balendra Shah, Who Will Be Nepal's Next Premier After Oli's Exit? Lamicchane, Balen Shah Lead Race.
If I had to boil down a single imperative it would be this: restore institutions that respond quickly and fairly, and make sure young people are not merely the instruments of protest but partners in governance. Everything else — policy, economy, diplomacy — becomes easier when citizens feel they are seen and heard.
Regards,
Hemen Parekh
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