Nepal’s president, in consultation with the army on Friday, is working to secure a consensus interim leader following the collapse of the government after deadly anti-corruption protests swept the country.
The Himalayan nation of 30 million was thrown into turmoil this week when security forces attempted to suppress youth-led demonstrations against corruption, sparking violent clashes on Tuesday that left parliament in flames and deepened the political crisis.
At least 51 people were killed in the worst violence since the end of a Maoist civil war and the abolition of the monarchy in 2008.
The military took back control of the streets on Wednesday, enforcing a curfew, as army chief General Ashok Raj Sigdel and President Ramchandra Paudel held talks with key figures and representatives from “Gen Z”, the loose umbrella title of the youth protest movement.
Disagreements between rival factions remain, although Sushila Karki, 73, Nepal’s first woman chief justice, is a leading candidate.
“A meeting has been scheduled for this afternoon with the president, the army chief, former chief justice Sushila Karki, our representative Sudan Gurung, and one legal expert,” Nimesh Shrestha, who was part of the Gen Z protest, told journalists.
Karki has told newsmen that “experts need to come together to figure out the way forward”, and that “the parliament still stands”.
Gurung, the youth activist, told reporters on Thursday that their “first demand is the dissolution of parliament”.
Paudel issued a statement to the nation on Thursday saying that “a solution to the problem is being sought, as soon as possible”.
The army patrolled the largely quiet streets of the capital, Kathmandu, for a third day on Friday, after the protests and nationwide chaos that included a mass breakout of prisoners.
“I was very afraid and stayed locked inside my home with family and didn’t leave,” said Naveen Kumar Das, a painter-decorator in his mid-40s.
He was among many ordinary residents of Kathmandu who took advantage of a brief lifting of the curfew in the morning to stock up on supplies.
Food stores, tea stalls, and pharmacies bustled with customers after people spent days inside.
“It was a really tense time and we just stayed indoors. We came out as things have improved,” said Laxmi Thapa, 32, on a motorbike as her husband filled its fuel tank.
At least 21 protesters were among those killed, mainly on Monday during a police crackdown on demonstrations against corruption and poor governance that was sparked by a ban on social media.
Protesters set parliament, major government buildings, and a Hilton Hotel on fire on Tuesday. 73-year-old KP Sharma Oli resigned as prime minister, and the army then took charge of the streets.
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Nepal’s army said on Friday that it had recovered more than 100 guns looted in the uprising, during which protesters were seen brandishing automatic rifles.
More than 12,500 prisoners who escaped from jails across the country during the chaos “are still at large”, police spokesman Binod Ghimire told journalists.
Protests fed into longstanding economic woes in Nepal, where more than two-fifths of people are aged between 16 and 40.
A fifth of people aged 15-24 are unemployed, according to the World Bank, with GDP per capita just $1,447.
Discussions are still heated among Gen Z ranks as they seek a radical political transition.
James Karki, 24, who was among the protesters, said he was hopeful for change.
“We started this movement so we could make a better Nepal. And I am positive that the army will listen,” he said.
