Nepalese royalists demand monarchy restoration ahead of March elections

Nepalese royalists demand monarchy restoration ahead of March elections

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Supporters of Nepal's deposed royal family rallied in the capital on Sunday demanding the restoration of the monarchy ahead of March elections.

Associated Press Supporters of Nepal's former royal family participate in a rally demanding the restoration of the monarchy as they mark the birth anniversary of the 18th century king Prithivi Narayan Shah, founder of the Shah dynasty, in Katmandu, Nepal, Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Subash Shrestha) Supporters of Nepal's former royal family participate in a rally demanding the restoration of the monarchy as they mark the birth anniversary of the 18th century king Prithivi Narayan Shah, founder of the Shah dynasty, in Katmandu, Nepal, Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Subash Shrestha)

Nepal Royal Rally

It was the first rally by supporters of ousted King Gyanendra since a wave ofviolent demonstrations by disgruntled youthin September installed an interim government that set fresh parliamentary elections in March.

"We love our king. Bring back the king," the rally participants chanted around the statue of King Prithvi Narayan Shah, who started the Shah dynasty in the 18th century. The last Shah king — Gyanendra — was forced to step down and the monarchy was abolished in 2008, making Nepal a republic.

"The last and only alternative for this country is king and monarchy only" said protester Samrat Thapa. "In the present context and the path country has taken after the Gen Z movement, there needs to be monarchy restored to manage the situation."

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Sunday marks the birth anniversary of Prithvi Narayan and theannual rallyin the past has turned violent with clashes between demonstrators and police.Two people were killedduring a pro-king rally last March. Sunday's gathering was peaceful as riot police kept a close watch on the event.

Nepal's royal family still enjoyssignificant support.

The interim government, headed by Nepal'sfirst female prime minister, Sushila Karki, a retired Supreme Court judge, took over following protests by Gen Z activists complaining ofcorruption, lack of opportunities, employment and poor governance. They were triggered by the previous government's short-lived ban on social media.

Karki has been criticized for dragging her feet in filing corruption cases.

 

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