Shot in school uniform: BBC reveals police order led to Gen Z protest killings
Shot in school uniform: BBC reveals police order led to Gen Z protest killings 6 hours ago Subina Shrestha ,BBC Eye Investigationsand Deepak Kharel ,BBC Eye Investigations An order allowing the use of lethal fire against thousands of young, unarmed protesters in Nepal was issued by the country's former police chief, a BBC investigation reveals.
The BBC World Service team has seen an internal police document detailing events on 8 September.
Khapung - who retired in November - has not replied to the BBC's request for comment.
The events of 8 September are now being examined by a public inquiry, which has yet to report.
So far, no-one has been held accountable - and general elections are set to take place on 5 March.
Warning: This story contains images of dead bodies Nepal is a young democracy.
By some estimates, about one in five young Nepalis is out of work.
Last August, Gen Z activists began to share terms on social media such as "nepo baby", to describe the privileged children of the Nepalese elite.
On 4 September, the government banned some platforms, including Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and X.
Activists moved onto the gaming chat platform Discord, which became a hub for organising.
Shreeyam Chaulagain's mother did not want him to go.
"I told him not to participate.
Things can happen at protests," she told the BBC.
But Shreeyam was deeply engaged with politics, his father said.
"He said corruption had hollowed out [Nepal].
He was far more informed than I was. "
"He was so curious - he wanted to know what was going on in the world," she said.
A barricade stands several hundred metres from parliament.
About 30,000 people arrive to protest - 10 times the number anticipated by police.
The protesters begin moving towards parliament, but are stopped by the police barricade.
The crowds surge past and protesters reach the gates of parliament.
12:15: One group of protesters breaches the walls of the parliament compound.
Police fire tear gas and use batons.
The crowd does not retreat, even as organisers urge people on Discord to pull back.
Video footage shows Shreeyam outside the gates.
Elsewhere, the protests are becoming more violent.
Inside the situation room Senior security officials are gathered in a control room almost 3km (1.
9 miles) away, near a complex of government offices.
Representatives of the civilian police, army, armed police and intelligence officials are present.
12:30: The chief district officer imposes an immediate curfew, making the protests illegal.
Officers use loudhailers to order people home.
Rather than obeying, some protesters surround a police unit and pelt them with bricks and stones.
About the same time, footage shows the parliament gatehouse on fire.
One of us asked to be rescued," one anonymous police source tells us.
They pinpoint the source of the approval to one call sign: Peter 1.
The instruction from Peter 1 is recorded in the police log: "Curfew already in place.
No further need to obtain permission.
Peter 1 is Chandra Kuber Khapung, then inspector general of police.
However, its then chair, Rijal, has denied in court that he authorised live rounds.
Several said they had been unprepared for a crowd rapidly mobilised on Discord.
Others questioned why military support did not arrive sooner.
Many say they are still struggling with the memory of that day.
"Our officers fired on them like they were enemies," one says.
13:15: The first death from live fire is recorded by the BBC.
The BBC has been able to analyse six shootings after the curfew order.
In the footage we examined, we have not seen any of the victims engaging in violence.
Still carrying his school bag, he claps his hands - a gesture that appears calm.
A bullet strikes the back of his head, and he falls to the ground.
We have been able to establish that police fired seven shots at the crowd.
In total, 77 people were killed during the unrest.
The army took control at 21:00.
No-one has yet taken responsibility for what happened.
Meanwhile, families of all the victims are waiting for justice.
Shreeyam's mother, Karki, says she has not been able to cry.
"I don't feel he's gone yet - I still feel he'll be back soon," she tells us.
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