GENZ PROTESTS AGAINST SOCIAL MEDIA BAN AND ELITE CORRUPTION BECOME MASS UPRISING
AGAINST STATE VIOLENCE
~ Cristina Sykes ~
Soldiers are patrolling the streets of Kathmandu after protests against
corruption and a sweeping social media ban escalated to open rebellion following
the killing of 19 protesters. Parliament was stormed and torched on Tuesday (9
September) and politicians’ homes were vandalised, leading to the resignation of
the prime minister.
On 5 September the government moved to outlaw 26 platforms, from TikTok to
WhatsApp, under rules demanding registration and state oversight. Ministers
cited hate speech, but for many it was an attempt to silence dissent. Two
million migrant workers rely on it for contact with families.
Mostly Gen Z protesters carried books and banners reading: “Shut down
corruption, not social media”. Their protest was fuelled by recent viral clips
flaunting politicians’ children’s luxury lifestyles, in a country with about £1k
annual income and 20 percent youth unemployment.
The events followed a similar pattern as the recent eruption in Indonesia. On 8
September police escalated from water cannons to live fire. At least 19 were
killed, including students in uniform shot in the head and chest, with more than
100 wounded. One witness called it “state-sanctioned murder”.
Mass anger erupted as crowds torched party offices and the houses of leaders
including Sher Bahadur Deuba and Pushpa Kamal Dahal, while curfews across
Kathmandu failed to halt mass defiance. Statements from the streets stressed the
revolt is about graft and elite impunity, not only censorship. One communiqué
declared: “Parents wait terrified for children who’ll never return. Our streets
are killing fields”.
Parliament and government buildings were torched, the prime minister and home
minister have resigned, and the ban has been scrapped. The newly formed Safal
Committee went further, calling the massacre of protesters “the first shot in a
class war” and demanding disarmament of the police, dissolution of parliament
and arming of the masses.
The post Nepal: Parliament torched after police kill 19 protesters appeared
first on Freedom News.
Tag - Rebellion
PROTESTS REMAIN MILITANT, AS STUDENT AND UNION LEADERS FAIL TO GAIN CONTROL OF
THE GRASSROOTS
~ Cristina Sykes ~
Protesters across Indonesia have launched another day of confrontational
demonstrations, with the uprising that has gripped the country in recent days
showing no signs of abating. Initially opposing both steep tax hikes and lavish
wage- and expense increases for members of parliament, the protests took a
militant turn after brutal footage showed paramilitary police running over a
delivery driver during a demonstration on 28 August.
The following day, rebellions exploded erupted spontaneously in the capital
Jakarta and many other cities including Makassar, Bandung, Yogyakarta, Medan,
and Pontianak. Demonstrators have targeted police posts, police stations, and
the House of Representatives (DPR) office. By the weekend, protests also spread
to the private homes of DPR members and political party offices.
At least six more protesters have been killed since then, more than 700
arrested, and hundreds injured. However, footage has also emerged of police
making hasty retreats away from advancing crowds and their projectiles. While
the government has not resorted to all-out power outages, there have been phone
signal disruptions at the demonstration sites and disruptions to internet access
and digital information flows.
“The demonstrations no longer emerged from the consolidation of formal student
organisations and labour unions, but emerged organically from the people
themselves”, said Indonesian anarchists in online correspondence. “Furthermore,
support for violent actions increased, whereas in the past, we anarchists were
always scapegoated and blamed by the public, the press, and the government”.
Since 2019, Indonesia has experienced waves of uprisings that have ebbed and
flowed. Anarchists have always been at the forefront of street battles as well
as influential in organising resistance to evictions and land struggles, student
and pupil movements, football supporters, and the underground music scene.
Mainstream media reported that Indonesian president Prabowo Subianto has
cancelled his trip to China, while political parties agreed to cut lawmakers’
benefits in a bid to calm the rebellion.
“This is not just a protest—it’s a collective eruption of rage against rising
housing taxes, endless corruption, and the military-police dogs of the state”,
said another anarchist statement. “Usually some liberal union or opposition
party controls the narratives but not this time. We give it up to the
youngsters. We can only stimulate them to be more uncontrollable”.
As the situation continues to escalate, anarchists are raising funds to
establish a network of safe houses for protesters and frontline activists at
risk. A page maintained by our friends at Organise Magazine collects the latest
statements from protesters and additional background articles.
The post Indonesia uprising: “A collective eruption of rage” appeared first on
Freedom News.