The Nepalese are currently burning the government!

If this is what the People think of Communism, then China should be very, very worried! (4 minute video on the situation in Nepal).

Unfortunately for me, our wonderful democracy does not like Rumble.

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Telegram post from @European_dissident
Nepal turmoil: NED and Soros stirring the pot? No shocker

Nepal’s Gen Z–driven chaos ousted the government on September 9, leaving 29 dead.

🔍 What lit the fuse?

A ban on social media, preceded by an online “nepo kids” campaign against nepotism and corruption.

At the forefront is Sudan Gurung, head of Hami Nepal, a nonprofit born after the 2015 quake. Notably, Hami Nepal lists backing from the US-based global beverage behemoth Coca-Cola and the New York-registered Students for a Free Tibet.

NED’s fingerprints


🔴 Students for a Free Tibet has been listed as a grantee of the US State Department-funded National Endowment for Democracy (NED) — the US’ go-to vehicle for regime-change ops and “color revolutions.”

🔴 In 2024 alone, NED splashed out $53.5M across 347 Asia projects, bragging that the 2024 Bangladesh coup showed “democratic resilience.”

Soros’ footprint

🔴 George Soros’ Open Society Foundations (OSF) have pumped millions into Nepal since 2007 — $2.2M in 2020 alone for “justice reform,” “journalism” and “democratic practice.”
🔴 In 2017, the Alliance for Social Dialogue (ASD) became the OSF's grant-making arm in Nepal. In 2023, the entity was rebranded as Purak Asia with a mission to "catalyze societal transformation through meaningful action" in Nepal.
🔴 Purak Asia’s website champions a "new generation in politics" and appeals to Gen Z with imagery of raised fists—an emblem also emblazoned across Hami Nepal’s homepage. This clenched fist has become a symbol associated with Soros-funded revolutions, visible all over Yugoslavia, Georgia, and the Arab Spring.
🔴 Meanwhile, the Soros-funded V-Dem Institute has ranked Nepal as an “electoral democracy” and above India in its 2025 report.

Echoes from Indonesia

🔴 Nepal’s chaos erupted after Indonesia’s “anti-corruption” protests.

🔴 Both waves use the One Piece skull-and-straw-hat icon as a rebellion symbol.

🔴 Both nations are key to China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and growing BRICS ties. Indonesia joined BRICS in January 2025; Nepal renewed its BRI status in late 2024.

🔴 International political commentators flagged NED and Soros behind Jakarta’s unrest. Coincidence? Hardly. Nepal looks like the sequel.
 
In relation to the “battle for the networks” in Nepal, I observe a crossover of information with the different events taking place in American society, which is the “battlefield” to be controlled using technological magic (Palantir Peter Thiel, Alex Karp) It is possible that we will soon begin to see pressure to accept certain technologies of control, surveillance, Minority Report, biometric control, etc., thereby reducing rights and freedoms... or what else needs to be done for us to accept them?


It is known that Victoria Nuland visited Nepal in January 2023 to ratify with Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal and opposition leaders the pact with the United States Indo-Pacific Strategy, through the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) compact, which is a type of ex-USAID.
Critics of this pact, including several political parties and civil society groups, have argued that the provisions of the agreements are a threat that undermine Nepal's sovereignty and constitutional integrity, especially given the geopolitical framework aimed at countering China and its Silk Road. Currently, the controversy surrounding the pact still reflects a broader struggle in Nepal to balance foreign aid, non-interference, and the preservation of its national sovereignty in pursuit of development without being forced to align itself in international relations, but still with a weak legal framework.
In line with US interests, China offered Nepal projects such as the current airport, the Trans-Himalayan Railway, and the Upper Trishuli-1 hydroelectric power plant, in addition to vaccines, but it has been a failure especially for China in terms of its commitment and execution of agreements for Nepal's debt relief.

On the other hand, investigations in the Asian region have uncovered an international supply of invasive tools used to monitor communications that originate from Chinese technologies that export or sell digital authoritarianism as a service:
In the early hours of 1 February 2021, Myanmar’s online world went dark. As a military junta seized power, they cut access to Twitter, Instagram and Facebook in a bid to quell protests, before shutting down the internet almost completely. Links to the outside world were largely gone, and with them, a way to share the horrors unfolding and call for help. Even VPNs were blocked, and checkpoints were set up where armed militia searched citizens’ phones for signs of tech which the junta believed could aid dissent.
(…)
“People have no idea of this constant surveillance, and its incredible reach,” said Agnès Callamard, Secretary General at Amnesty International. The human rights NGO analyzed the data mainly with regard to the deployment in Pakistan.
“This dystopian reality is extremely dangerous because it operates in the shadows, severely restricting freedom of expression and access to information.”
FollowtheMoney
Geedge Networks, a Chinese company, has been quietly selling surveillance technology and censorship systems apparently inspired by the Great Firewall, partly based on Western and European technology, to governments around the world.

Geedge Networks, a company founded in 2018, counts the “father” of China's mass censorship infrastructure as one of its investors. It presents itself as a network monitoring provider offering enterprise-grade cybersecurity tools to “gain complete visibility and minimize security risks” for its customers, according to documents. In fact, researchers discovered that it has been operating a sophisticated system that allows users to control online information, block certain websites and VPN tools, and spy on specific individuals.

The researchers who reviewed the leaked material (...)-(from Geedge Networks' internal data). in a months-long investigation conducted by Follow the Money, German investigative news outlet Paper Trail Media, Austrian newspaper DER STANDARD, and Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail, with assistance from Amnesty International, Justice for Myanmar—a group of activists investigating to dismantle the junta in Myanmar—the Tor Project, and InterSecLab) (...)- where it was discovered that the company is capable of packaging advanced surveillance capabilities into what amounts to a commercialized version of the Great Firewall, a wholesale solution with both hardware that can be installed in any telecommunications data center and software operated by local government officials. The documents also discuss desired features the company is working on, such as cyberattacks on demand and geosurveillance of specific users.
According to the leaked documents, Geedge has already begun operating in Kazakhstan, Ethiopia, Pakistan, and Myanmar, as well as another unidentified country. A job posting shows that Geedge is also seeking engineers who can travel to other countries to perform engineering work, including several countries not named in the leaked documents, WIRED has learned.
(…) “This is not like the legal interception carried out by all countries, including Western democracies,” says Marla Rivera, technical researcher at InterSecLab, a global digital forensics research institution. In addition to mass censorship, the system allows governments to target specific individuals based on their activities on websites, such as visiting a specific domain.
“The surveillance system sold by Geedge gives the government power that no one should have,” says Rivera.
FollowtheMoney

(…)
The core of Geedge's offering is a gateway tool called Tiangou Secure Gateway (TSG), designed to be located within data centers and which could be scaled up to process the internet traffic of an entire country, according to the documents. According to the researchers, every packet of online traffic passes through it, where it can be scanned, filtered, or stopped. In addition to controlling all traffic, the documents show that the system also allows additional rules to be set for specific users it considers suspicious and to collect their network activities.
According to the leaked documents, in the case of unencrypted internet traffic, the system is capable of intercepting sensitive information such as website content, passwords, and email attachments. If the content is properly encrypted using the Transport Layer Security protocol, the system uses deep packet inspection and machine learning techniques to extract metadata from encrypted traffic and predict whether it is passing through a censorship circumvention tool such as a VPN. If it cannot distinguish the content of encrypted traffic, the system may also choose to flag it as suspicious and block it for a period of time.
Another key Geedge product is Cyber Narrator, the main user interface from which government customers without technical knowledge can access the data that Tiangou Secure Gateway monitors in real time with a bird's-eye view, according to the documents. In screenshots of the system found in the leak, Cyber Narrator operators can see the geographic location of each mobile internet user based on their cellular service communications, as well as analyze whether the user is accessing the internet through VPN services.

In the case of Myanmar, internal records reveal that Geedge identified 281 popular VPN tools, with their technical specifications, subscription prices, and whether they can be used in Myanmar. Another document identified 54 applications marked as high priority for blocking. The list of priority tools includes mostly popular commercial services such as ExpressVPN, as well as Signal, the encrypted messaging app.
Geedge's experience in Pakistan also shows that it is building products on interoperable equipment to attract different customers. Before Geedge arrived in Pakistan, the country had worked with Sandvine, a Canadian company that supplied deep packet inspection equipment before withdrawing due to US sanctions. When Sandvine left, its hardware remained in Pakistani data centers, according to the leak. According to the documents, Geedge moved in to repurpose the existing infrastructure, offering a transition to a new censorship regime, which would ultimately run on Chinese-made hardware.

Wired

After digging into several sites, in my opinion, this only leads me to think that Silk Road, like the former USAID (or whatever its proxy is now), is a euphemism for establishing and conquering digital control with the help of infrastructure offered in exchange for freedoms and digital identity impositions, the classic “carrot and stick” approach, and even more so now that it can be better appreciated because it is no longer just about territorial control, which it is also, but especially about pursuing measures of mass mind control of individuals. It is necessary to take measures to protect our judiciary, on the one hand, that these reports are being leaked is because they are making a statement for you to know that the degree of surveillance is going to be maximized; On the other hand, any type of “agent” could select, censor, or ‘eliminate’ any individual under some Orwellian protocol, especially digital surveillance agents (or the misnamed AI, which reminds me of the Ethereum prototype called “trusted agents”) that will emerge to monitor and “facilitate secure and verifiable interactions.”
We are at an opportune moment to continue learning and seeking informed alternatives and strategies to something that seems inevitable, since the majority is asking for security!


 
Surprise, surprise, guess who was behind the Nepal uprising?


Leaked files reviewed by The Grayzone show the US gov’t covertly funded Nepalese youth groups in the run-up to a violent coup. The “Gen Z” shadow army mobilized as the US sought to neutralize Chinese and Indian influence over Kathmandu – now controlled by a leader chosen by an informal social media poll.

The US government’s National Endowment for Democracy (NED) spent hundreds of thousands of dollars tutoring dozens of Nepalese youth on “strategies and skills in organizing protests and demonstrations” prior to a violent coup which overthrew the government of Nepal in September 2025, leaked documents show.

The documents reveal a clandestine campaign organized by an NED division known as the International Republican Institute (IRI) that sought to cultivate a Nepalese “network” of young political activists explicitly designed to “become an important force to support US interests.” The leaked documents note that the IRI’s program “connects vibrant youth… and political leaders” and “provides comprehensive trainings on how to launch advocacy campaigns and protests.”

The demonstrations organized under the NED’s umbrella would relate to “issues selected” by the Institute and its local collaborators, thereby “ensuring the U.S. concerns with Nepal’s democracy [would] be resolved,” an IRI report stated. As The Grayzone reported, a similar effort by the IRI in Bangladesh helped generate a coup in August 2024.

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Nepal was rocked by so-called “Gen Z” protests in September 2025 after authorities blocked access to social media platforms including Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter/X, citing the companies’ failure to abide by local regulations requiring them to register with the government. At least 76 people were killed during the resulting violence, including multiple police officers, leading to the resignation of communist Prime Minister K. P. Sharma Oli less than a week after the violence began.

Days later, he was replaced by an interim leader chosen in an anonymous poll which registered fewer than 10,000 votes from Discord accounts.



Though the unrest was widely characterized in Western media as a peaceful and democratic uprising against an authoritarian government, video of the mayhem showed protesters armed with semi-automatic rifles rampaging throughout cities. The Jolly Roger flag from the popular anime series One Piece featured prominently – just as it did during recent anti-government “Gen Z” rebellions in the Philippines, Indonesia, and Mexico. Due in part to their proximity to China or the US, each of those countries is also considered a crucial chess piece in the game of international politics.



Nepal held particular importance for the IRI, the leaks show. The Institute gushed over Nepal’s “strategic geographic location” between China and India, which they said “makes the country core” to Washington’s “Indo-Pacific” ambitions — namely, encircling Beijing with pliable governments and US military installations. IRI initiatives to educate Kathmandu’s youth to “use their power for policy intervention” and to influence “national decision-making” were forecast to have an impact “beyond the life” of the underlying projects. Alumni would not only be primed to cause street-level havoc, but create political parties and run for office.

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The leaked files show the IRI drew inspiration from the so-called “Enough is Enough” protests which unfolded in Nepal in the summer of 2020 in response to the government’s COVID policies. For the Institute, those demonstrations proved the ability of young people “to shape and play a significant role in Nepali politics,” and extract concessions from the government – a “success” which the NED subsidiary was keen to “sustain” and “capitalize on.” The Institute therefore decided to begin providing the country’s youth with “opportunities and platforms to develop extensive, sustainable networks to effectively advocate for common concerns and be successful champions for democratic change supported by the US.”

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Since its creation in 1983, the NED has secretly bankrolled similar initiatives across the globe in an effort to topple sovereign governments for decades, with one of its founders openly boasting that “a lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA.” The documents strongly suggest that the chaos that played out in Kathmandu in September may have represented the culmination of Washington’s efforts to cultivate a political leadership in Nepal conducive to its “Indo-Pacific strategy.” As the region grows increasingly interconnected amid India’s recent tilt further towards China and Russia, the US national security state would undoubtedly welcome the installation of a more pliable government in the geopolitically vital country of Nepal.

Young activists promote ‘reform advocated by the US’

Among the most crucial IRI projects in Nepal was a program called “Yuva Netritwa: Paradarshi Niti” (Youth Leadership: Transparent Policy), which ran at an initial cost of $350,000 from July 2021 to June 2022. The IRI project sought to provide “emerging leaders [with] increased opportunities to build momentum for youth activism and put pressure on Nepali political decision-makers,” the documents show. The program was predicted to “benefit” between 60 – 70 young Nepalis.

“Networks of youth activists and political leaders” would be cultivated in Nepal, provided with “skills, resources, and platforms to build connections” and communicate their grievances publicly, then trained to “advocate concerns on political turmoil, government corruption and national policymaking,” the files state. Washington’s concerns would be addressed by “advocacy campaigns and protests, urging the government of Nepal to pay more attention to their concerns and promoting democratic reform advocated by the US.”

Once a sufficient number of Nepalese “youth leaders” who “endorse and advocate” US “values” were groomed, they could then be mobilized “to launch advocacy campaigns on Nepali issues of US concern.” IRI pledged to deploy an Emerging Leaders Academy (ELA) to bolster its project, described it as “an IRI program that seeks to bring together young civic activists and political leaders… and provide them with the skills, platforms, and resources needed to initiate positive change in their communities.”

The Institute boasted that its other ELA programs “elsewhere in Asia,” such as Sri Lanka and Indonesia, had “seen success” in preparing its hand-selected youth activists “to assume leadership positions within their communities and parties.”

IRI undertook to “specifically solicit applications” to its Nepalese ELA “from young participants in a range of different sectors – including political parties, civil society and the media.” These “youth leaders” would be provided with “the skills and knowledge to ensure that future advocacy efforts and protests are effective and sustainable enough to encourage more people to engage” in US-approved political action, the report states.

Once they’d returned to their everyday lives, the Institute would “encourage and support participants to strive for higher positions in [their] respective political parties.”

IRI expressed confidence that it would create a Nepalese “youth network” that “has a say in national decision-making.” The Institute’s hand-picked young troublemakers would learn “methods… to effectively broadcast messages of advocacy campaigns and protests,” the report’s authors wrote, specifically highlighting “social media and other web-based tools” as ideal ways to get the word out. In the end, “the remarkable results of the advocacy campaigns and protests will be known by more and more young people and arouse their interest in participation,” IRI predicted.

In August 2021, when seeking $500,000 for a local “youth civic education project,” the IRI cited internal research indicating 90% of young Nepalese were “disengaged with politics.” Because youth comprised 40% of the country’s population, it was therefore seen as critical to train future civic and political leaders who “support the development of a sustainable strong federalist nation that is vital to the US’s Indo-Pacific strategy.” IRI boasted of being “uniquely prepared to leverage its civil society and political contacts” to support this objective. It is unknown whether those funds were ultimately disbursed.

US regime change outfit tutors Nepalese youth in “organizing protests”

Another leaked file outlines how IRI developed “training manuals for Youth Empowerment Workshops,” to further the objectives of both Yuva Netritwa: Paradarshee Neeti and NED’s local ELA chapter. These events were intended to attract Young Nepalis from across the country who were “both politically affiliated and unaffiliated, to strengthen their capacity to make positive change… and develop their leadership qualities.” The sessions were meant to help participants brush up on their “public speaking, strategic messaging, resource mobilization, advocacy campaign and protest management and effective governance,” the document explains.

Workshop attendees were taught how youth activists had achieved “socio-economic and political changes” across the globe, and given tips on how to recreate those movements on a local level. Simultaneously, they were individually evaluated for “leadership potential,” and given tutorials focused on “inspiring and motivating the participants to be rational, good and effective leaders to lead change.” They were also encouraged to “exercise leadership,” with lessons on “how young leaders can drive political change through protest.”



The final module focused on “enhancing the knowledge and skills of the participants,” in order to help them seek “accountability” from “public office bearers.” This was to be achieved by training attendees “in the use of modern technology for collecting data, tracking community concerns, and articulating the concerns” through online campaigning, “leveraging digital tools identified by the technical experts in IRI’s Digital Democracy practice.”

IRI’s covert curriculum also included lessons on “strategies and skills in organizing protests and demonstrations” in order to influence “local, provincial, and national” politics. Meanwhile, the Institute enlisted the services of a Kathmandu-based firm, Solutions Consultant, to conduct extensive focus grouping from February to April 2022, seeking “to identify and evaluate the barriers Nepali youth face while engaging in the political process.”

Solutions Consultant was to conduct seven focus group discussions, and “recruit 8 – 10 participants for each in person group or 5 – 7 participants for each online group as well as 2 – 3 alternates in case any of the original participants are unable to participate.” The cost of this exercise was $9,135, a negligible fraction of the $350,000 annually IRI invested in its Nepalese “youth empowerment” operations. This suggests a sizable number of locals were surveyed, though exactly how many were radicalized in total is not clear.

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IRI staffers sought “to observe the focus group discussions in person or remotely,” and demanded “high quality” recordings of the meetings “with clear sound,” along with “full verbatim transcripts in English” from Solutions Consultant. The company would also ensure “each participant speaker” could be identified “by number or first name,” to connect their comments with their “exact age, education level, city and occupation.” Attendees were “between the ages of 18 and 35, with each session roughly gender balanced.”

“The youth will be political leaders and activists, including but not limited to youth wings of political parties, politically unaffiliated activists and civil society representatives, as well as youth who are not civically active,” IRI declared. The Institute also sought “key informant interviews” with “civil society activists and politicians” to explore the question. Solutions Consultant was charged with contacting “potential interviewees” provided by IRI, “with the goal of recruiting them for an interview and/or to obtain recommendations for potential additional or alternate interviewees.”

Coup clears path for monarchy’s return

IRI explicitly instructed moderators of focus group discussions that they “should emphasize that it is important that the participants speak freely and openly,” and that participants must “understand that their comments, both positive and negative, will make a contribution to understanding and addressing the barriers preventing the full participation of youth in politics.” The IRI described its “guide” as designed to “familiarize the moderator with the questions and issues that we would like to see addressed.”

As long as moderators focused on the IRI’s handpicked topics, they were “free to combine questions, change questions, omit questions that do not seem to be working and add questions in response to interesting trends as they become apparent.”

Entitled “Qualitative Study on Political Participation of Youths in Nepal,” the end product offered extensive insight into perceived barriers to political engagement locally. In a twist of irony, several interviewees expressed frustration that young citizens were “often used and discarded” by established political parties, which sought only to advance their own agendas. An unnamed 24-year-old male noted that Kathmandu’s Congress Party exploited “youth during demonstrations” when convenient, only to later ignore them and their concerns. They hinted these party-sponsored protesters were incentivized to employ violent tactics.

“The government creates policies and the youth demonstrate in rejection,” the attendee added. Elsewhere, an anonymous informant from the opposition Bibeksheel Sajha Party was quoted as saying that “capable youth are kept out of meaningful politics and are only used to bolster the demonstrations and riots” orchestrated against Nepal’s government of the day by “traditional parties”. Youth activists were “used to fight on the streets and safeguard the positions of the leaders, but they have no say in how to develop their nation,” the informant lamented.

This dynamic, in which young activists wreaked havoc on Nepalese politics through demonstrations sparked by opposition to government policy, was clearly demonstrated just a few years later, when “Gen Z” protests ousted Kathmandu’s elected government. The mayhem was sparked by precisely the concerns about which IRI sought to exploit, raising questions about whether it was inspired by a US government meddling campaign.

As the New York Times admitted in a September 15th editorial, while “Nepalis from all walks of life were ready to reject the system they had fought for decades to achieve,” they lacked “any clear sense of what comes next.” This vacuum has triggered a resurgence of forces seeking to restore Nepal’s monarchy, which was finally driven from power in 2008 after decades of decades of political resistance by republican forces.

As The Times noted, arsonists targeted “almost every organ of state power,” including parliament, party offices, and the homes of government ministers. Military institutions, however, were left untouched, as was the palace of Nepal’s former king, Gyanendra Shah, who issued a statement in support of the “Gen Z” insurgents. Since then, the army has actively sought to empower pro-monarchist figures by including them in discussions about Kathmandu’s future government with protest leaders.

If IRI training contributed to the September coup, the US will have cleared a path for the installation of a leader who will advance its imperial interests, but from behind an internet-inspired, anarchic aesthetic of youthful defiance.
 
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