Nepal, Sept. 22 -- Nepal has once again entered a moment of political turbulence. The collapse of fragile coalitions, the return of familiar figures, and the reshuffling of parliamentary alliances have perpetuated a cycle repeated for decades. Each round of instability has deepened public frustration with a political class more focused on entrenching itself than addressing the structural deficits of the economy and democracy. The persistent lack of accountability has hollowed out trust in political institutions, eventually pushing many citizens, particularly the young, towards protest and rebellion.
This pattern is not new. Since the restoration of multiparty democracy in 1990, and again after the 2006 people's movement, moments of democ...
Click here to read full article from source
To read the full article or to get the complete feed from this publication, please
Contact Us.