Zürcher Nachrichten - Why Nepal is burning

EUR -
AED 4.334151
AFN 77.8911
ALL 96.74255
AMD 446.113817
ANG 2.112588
AOA 1081.622045
ARS 1706.640144
AUD 1.694871
AWG 2.12577
AZN 2.001288
BAM 1.957665
BBD 2.377665
BDT 144.377509
BGN 1.981932
BHD 0.444922
BIF 3498.346743
BMD 1.180164
BND 1.503532
BOB 8.156803
BRL 6.193269
BSD 1.180524
BTN 106.686611
BWP 15.628952
BYN 3.381521
BYR 23131.214804
BZD 2.374161
CAD 1.612452
CDF 2625.864602
CHF 0.915589
CLF 0.02583
CLP 1020.125085
CNY 8.192875
CNH 8.185807
COP 4321.040743
CRC 585.257415
CUC 1.180164
CUP 31.274347
CVE 110.37012
CZK 24.265883
DJF 210.22022
DKK 7.465995
DOP 74.500957
DZD 153.375302
EGP 55.303406
ERN 17.70246
ETB 183.940048
FJD 2.604151
FKP 0.864097
GBP 0.87161
GEL 3.174806
GGP 0.864097
GHS 12.9614
GIP 0.864097
GMD 86.745383
GNF 10360.867975
GTQ 9.054624
GYD 246.975226
HKD 9.220208
HNL 31.182699
HRK 7.535109
HTG 154.8675
HUF 378.308624
IDR 19910.842233
ILS 3.672735
IMP 0.864097
INR 106.497234
IQD 1546.472903
IRR 49714.409554
ISK 144.795585
JEP 0.864097
JMD 184.635852
JOD 0.836756
JPY 185.077455
KES 152.287979
KGS 103.204967
KHR 4764.558082
KMF 492.128304
KPW 1062.183028
KRW 1727.565411
KWD 0.362712
KYD 0.983783
KZT 582.224527
LAK 25373.1661
LBP 105718.384885
LKR 365.317939
LRD 219.580298
LSL 19.071364
LTL 3.484717
LVL 0.713869
LYD 7.478122
MAD 10.83512
MDL 20.062193
MGA 5222.974504
MKD 61.603711
MMK 2478.088599
MNT 4212.19062
MOP 9.500031
MRU 47.08985
MUR 54.358763
MVR 18.245263
MWK 2046.949571
MXN 20.550704
MYR 4.658141
MZN 75.247247
NAD 19.071364
NGN 1614.570237
NIO 43.441375
NOK 11.539255
NPR 170.698578
NZD 1.971812
OMR 0.453761
PAB 1.180534
PEN 3.968179
PGK 5.131888
PHP 69.345247
PKR 330.536312
PLN 4.218774
PYG 7795.424576
QAR 4.302498
RON 5.092762
RSD 117.373199
RUB 90.371868
RWF 1723.021352
SAR 4.425803
SBD 9.517607
SCR 16.18246
SDG 709.853886
SEK 10.66218
SGD 1.502904
SHP 0.885429
SLE 28.972816
SLL 24747.448565
SOS 673.441404
SRD 44.693245
STD 24427.012485
STN 24.523357
SVC 10.328837
SYP 13052.112374
SZL 19.062236
THB 37.497332
TJS 11.049324
TMT 4.136475
TND 3.420658
TOP 2.841551
TRY 51.383748
TTD 7.993613
TWD 37.360407
TZS 3050.72365
UAH 50.940417
UGX 4214.013542
USD 1.180164
UYU 45.553386
UZS 14479.79095
VES 446.083531
VND 30648.859615
VUV 141.251085
WST 3.217534
XAF 656.612977
XAG 0.01576
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.189452
XCG 2.127535
XDR 0.815613
XOF 656.582347
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.262561
ZAR 19.083282
ZMK 10622.888903
ZMW 21.928071
ZWL 380.012333
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    23.58

    +0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    23.92

    +0.21%

  • GSK

    2.0850

    59.315

    +3.52%

  • BTI

    0.2350

    61.865

    +0.38%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    92.38

    -4.44%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    87.29

    -0.57%

  • BCC

    -1.1950

    89.035

    -1.34%

  • BCE

    -0.9800

    25.36

    -3.86%

  • BP

    -0.9650

    38.235

    -2.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    16.62

    -0.36%

  • VOD

    -0.9950

    14.715

    -6.76%

  • AZN

    1.9250

    189.375

    +1.02%

  • RELX

    0.6600

    30.44

    +2.17%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.21

    +0.45%


Why Nepal is burning




Nepal has endured its most tumultuous week in years. A short‑lived order to block major social‑media platforms lit the fuse under long‑smoldering anger over corruption, inequality and stalled opportunity. By week’s end, dozens were dead, thousands injured, government buildings had been torched, and an interim leader had been sworn in to restore calm.

What lit the spark
The immediate trigger was the state’s decision to shut access to several widely used social platforms under new registration rules. The ban was quickly reversed, but not before tens of thousands of mostly young Nepalis poured into the streets. Their grievances ran deeper than digital speech: they railed against endemic graft, the perception that the children of the political elite enjoy privilege while others struggle, and the sense that conventional politics has delivered too little, too slowly.

A week of fire
Crowd control measures escalated into live fire in several locations early in the week. Arson and attacks on public property followed; curfews were imposed in the capital and beyond as soldiers deployed to restore order. Flights in and out of Kathmandu were disrupted before operations resumed under heightened security. Hospitals reported a surge of trauma cases. Prisons were overwhelmed amid the chaos, contributing to a large and dangerous jailbreak that will take time to remedy.

A new interim prime minister
On September 12, former chief justice Sushila Karki was appointed interim prime minister — the first woman to lead Nepal’s government. Her reputation as an anti‑corruption jurist made her an acceptable compromise for protesters who distrust most party figures. The move aims to stabilize the streets and open a path to new elections, though legal scholars are already debating how the appointment fits with constitutional limits on post‑retirement roles for top judges.

Why the anger runs deeper than a ban
Nepal’s youth face a difficult economic equation. Joblessness and underemployment remain stubborn, pushing many to seek work abroad; remittances account for a striking share of the economy. Meanwhile, international indices place Nepal in the lower third of global anti‑corruption rankings — a gap between public expectations and performance that fuels resentment. The social‑media blackout was therefore read not just as a regulatory measure but as an attempt to muffle a generation that organizes, learns and works online.

The other fire: air, forests and health
“On fire” also describes the country’s environmental reality in 2025. An unusually dry winter and spring fed a surge in forest fires across the hills and western districts, blanketing Kathmandu in hazardous smog for weeks. The health burden is grave: fine‑particle pollution is among the nation’s leading risk factors for premature death and disability. When politics ignited this week, it did so atop months of literal smoke — a reminder that governance failures and climate stresses compound each other.

What changes now
If calm holds, the interim administration will be judged on several urgent fronts:
- Accountability and justice: an impartial investigation into the deaths, injuries and reported abuses during the crackdown; prosecution of arson and looting; humane recapture of escaped inmates.
- Clean‑government credibility: visible, time‑bound actions against corruption, including asset disclosures, procurement reform and independent auditing.
- Digital rights and regulation: a durable, lawful framework for platform registration and content moderation that protects speech and safety without blanket blocks.
- Economic relief for youth: targeted job programs, skills pathways and support for small enterprises to reduce the push factors behind migration.
- Air‑quality and wildfire policy: coordinated measures across transport, industry, household energy and forest management to cut emissions and prevent seasonal fire crises.

The stakes
Nepal’s turmoil is not just a capital‑city story. Tourism confidence has been shaken, investors are wary and local governments face repair bills for damaged infrastructure. Families are grieving. Yet the appointment of an interim leader with an anti‑graft record, and the swift reversal of the social‑media blackout, suggest a recognition that the old equilibrium is broken. Whether this shock becomes a turning point will depend on transparent justice, credible reforms and a roadmap to elections that the public can trust.