Nepal's new Prime Minister Sushila Karki visits injured Gen Z protesters; Schools in Pokhara are preparing to open again

Nepal’s newly appointed interim Prime Minister Sushila Karki visited hospitals on Saturday to meet the injured Gen Z protesters. The visit of the new Prime Minister comes after the nation returned to normality after two days of Gen Z protests, violence that overthrew the previous government of Nepal. In Pokhara, schools will resume from September 17, reports the Kathmandu post. The unrest-the most violent Nepal who has been seen since the decade-long civil war and the abolition of the monarchy in 2008-has left at least 51 people dead. Buildings were burnt down, former Nepal Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli, offered his resignation – with the nation staring into a political void. Sushila Karki was sworn in by President Ram Chandra Poudel on Friday – who made her first female prime minister of her Nepal. Hours after her appointment, Parliament was dissolved. What is next for Nepal President Ramchandra Paudel said the new caretaker led by the interim prime minister Karki is the order to keep new parliamentary election within six months. Nepal is scheduled to hold elections on March 5, 2026, Kiran Pokharel, press adviser to the president, told AFP. How Nepal PM was elected during the unrest, Gen Z protesters turned themselves to disagreement to prefer their next leader. Discord, launched in 2015, is a communication platform originally built for gamers to communicate with each other without leaving the game over 100,000 Nepali citizens who regularly met in a discord chat room to lead the country next, the New York Times reported on September 11. “Nepal Parliament is now a Discord,” said a 23-year-old from Kathmandu, Sid Ghimir. Through countless polls and discussions, one name rose upwards: Sushila Karki, the former chief justice of the country – who took an oath on Friday.