Nepal wakes up again: People take to the streets to demand that Nepal be declared a Hindu nation: A call to restore monarchy
- Monarchy abolished in Nepal in 2008: Supporters of former Maharaja Gyanendra flocked to Kathmandu from all over the country to restore the monarchy.
Kathmandu: India's immediate neighbor Nepal is world famous for its Hindu culture. It is a Hindu majority (very large majority) country. This country was ruled by a single dynasty for 300 years. On the one hand, there was an internal dispute within the dynasty itself, on the other hand, communists dedicated to China came into force. He took full power and made efforts to make Nepal a communist nation. These efforts only cost him. It is well known that communism is atheistic. There is no place for religion or rituals in it.
It is said that since the advent of the communist government in Nepal, the religious places there are continuously being neglected. Communists do not believe in God. All South-Asian countries, including Nepal, Bhutan and India, could not sign it because they strongly believed in a universal supreme power. Their names may have been given differently. Hence the overwhelming right leaning has started in both India and Nepal. After they abolished the monarchy in Nepal, the Nepali people still living in the medieval ideology have openly fallen against the government. He stormed into Nepal's Panchayat-Bhavan (Parliament Hall) making strong proposals to declare Nepal a Hindu nation and to restore the monarchy and reinstate former Maharaja Gyanendra, an heir to the original dynasty. To participate in this movement, people from almost all parts of Nepal reached Kathmandu. To stop their procession, the police had to resort to lathi charge and tear gas.
These protesters raised slogans accusing the communist regime of corruption and governance failure and also carried placards in this regard.
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