'No regrets': wounded Nepali protesters proud at change
Youth protesters injured during unrest vow to continue fighting against social media bans, corruption, and economic challenges, with 458 injured and six deaths reported by Civil Service Hospital.
- In Nepal, anti-corruption protests led by youth under the 'Gen Z' label left at least 72 people killed after police gunfire on September 8.
- The veteran prime minister quit and key government buildings were set on fire, before the army seized back control.
- Former chief justice Sushila Karki, 73, was sworn in as interim prime minister to steer Nepal to elections within six months.
60 Articles
60 Articles
Nepali protesters proud at change
University student Aditya Rawal was outside Nepal's parliament with hundreds of other anti-corruption protesters when gunfire crackled and 14 people slumped down in front of him. One was his university friend, and as he dashed forward to help -- with his hands up -- bullets smashed into him too. "I heard somewhere that if you raise both hands, they will not shoot you," Rawal, a 22-year-old digital marketer, told AFP as he lay on a bed in the cap…
On September 8, student Aditya Rawal saw 14 people fall in front of him under police bullets near the Nepali Parliament where he protested against the blocking of social networks and government corruption. ...


‘No regrets’: wounded Nepalis protesters proud at change
University student Aditya Rawal was outside Nepal's parliament with hundreds of other anti-corruption protesters when gunfire crackled and 14 people slumped down in front of him. One was his university friend, and as he dashed forward to help -- with his hands up -- bullets smashed into him too. "I heard somewhere that if you
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium