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Nepal’s prime minister resigns after worst protests in decades amid claims of corruption

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Nepal’s prime minister KP Sharma Oli has resigned as anti-corruption demonstrators defied an indefinite curfew and clashed with police, a day after 19 people died in violent protests triggered by a social media ban.

Mr Oli’s government lifted the ban after protests intensified on Monday, local time, with police firing tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters trying to storm parliament.

Nineteen people were killed and more than 100 injured in the unrest.

But there was no let up in the protests on Tuesday, forcing Mr Oli to quit and plunging Nepal into fresh political uncertainty.

The unrest is the worst in decades in the poor Himalayan country that is wedged between India and China and has struggled with political instability and economic uncertainty since protests led to the abolition of its monarchy in 2008.

Nepal’s prime minister KP Sharma Oli has resigned. (AFP: Prakash Mathema)

“In view of the adverse situation in the country, I have resigned effective today to facilitate the solution to the problem and to help resolve it politically in accordance with the constitution,” Mr Oli said in his resignation letter to President Ramchandra Paudel.

An aide to Mr Paudel told Reuters the resignation had been accepted and the president had begun the “process and discussions for a new leader”.

The army posted an appeal on X asking people to “exercise restraint” since Mr Oli’s resignation had been accepted.

Protesters also set vehicles alight in Kathmandu as they vented their fury against Nepal’s prime minister. (Reuters: Navesh Chitrakar)

Mr Oli, 73, was sworn in for his fourth term in July last year as the country’s 14th prime minister since 2008.

Two of his cabinet colleagues resigned late on Monday, saying they did not want to continue on moral grounds.

Protests continue in Kathmandu
Earlier on Tuesday, Mr Oli had called a meeting of all political parties, saying violence is not in the interest of the nation and “we have to resort to peaceful dialogue to find solutions to any problem”.

But anger against the government showed no signs of abating, as protesters gathered in front of parliament and other places in the capital Kathmandu, in defiance of an indefinite curfew imposed by authorities.

The protesters set fire to tyres on some roads, threw stones at police personnel in riot gear and chased them through narrow streets, while some looked on and shot videos of the clashes on their mobile phones as thick black smoke rose to the sky.

Hundreds of people from some towns located near the India-Nepal border had started marching towards Kathmandu to support the protesters, one of the protesters told Reuters by phone.

Witnesses also said that protesters were setting fire to the homes of some politicians in Kathmandu, and local media reported that some ministers were plucked to safety by military helicopters.

Demonstrators outside the Nepali Congress party office pushed over a police booth to burn it in Kathmandu. (Reuters: Navesh Chitrakar)

Reuters could not immediately verify the information.

Kathmandu airport — Nepal’s main international gateway — was closed with immediate effect as smoke from fires nearby set by protesters could endanger the safety of aircraft, the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal said.

Organisers of the protests, which spread to other cities in the Himalayan country, have called them “demonstrations by Gen Z”, driven by young people’s widespread frustration with the government’s perceived lack of action to tackle corruption and boost economic opportunities.

Neighbouring India, which is home to hundreds of thousands of Nepali migrant workers, said it hoped all concerned will exercise restraint and resolve issues through talks.

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