How did protesters unite in Nepal without internet? Now a shocking revelation has been made on the Gen-Z movement

Violence suddenly erupted in Nepal which shook politics. Incidents like attack on Parliament and burning of former Prime Minister Oli's house took place. Most of the youth were involved in the movement due to which it was called Gen-G movement. A campaign was going on on social media against corruption and after the ban, the anger of the youth erupted. 19 people died in Nepal violence.

How did protesters unite in Nepal without internet? Now a shocking revelation has been made on the Gen-Z movement

Violence suddenly erupted in Nepal and shook the entire politics within just a few hours. From attacking the Parliament to burning down the house of former Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli, many heartbreaking pictures emerged one after the other from the streets of Nepal.

Most of the people involved in this movement were around 20 years old, due to which the movement was named Gen-G. Nepal was already campaigning on social media against alleged corruption. At the same time, after banning social media, the anger of the youth flared up and they started a campaign against the government.

19 people died in Nepal violence. Eventually the government also lifted the ban on social media. But, the crowd of protesters did not agree to this and arson continued in many parts of Nepal.

VPN was used

According to the World Bank, despite the ban on social media and the ban on the Internet, more than half of Nepal's population was online. For this, the protesters took the help of VPN. People were also sending messages to each other on the Bluetooth messaging app BitChat.

According to senior journalist Pranay Rana,

"Technology played a very important role in Nepal violence. It all started when people raised their voice on social media against corruption in Nepal. #NepoKids started trending in Nepal after videos of the luxurious life of politicians' children surfaced."

Figures revealed

Rights activist Sanjib Chaudhary says, "Nepokids (children of politicians) always trended in Nepal. A post related to this was liked by more than 13,000 people. All these things fueled the Nepal violence."

Swiss VPN company Proton said on Monday that more than 6,000 people signed up within 3 days. The number of Nepali messages on BitChat also increased suddenly.