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Bina Awale mourns at her brother's funeral

Nepal’s uprising took their loved ones. Now they hope for change – gallery

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Seventy-seven people were killed during youth-led protests that toppled Nepal’s prime minister

Bina Awale, sister of Binod Maharjan, who was shot dead during youth-led protests that toppled Nepal's prime minister, mourns her brother during his cremation at Pashupatinath temple in Kathmandu, Nepal, 16 September 2025 Photograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Photography by Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Sun 15 Mar 2026 08.00 CET
Stones thrown by demonstrators partly cover the road in front of the parliament during youth-led protests that toppled Nepal’s prime minister. Kathmandu, Nepal, 8 September 2025. Seventy-seven people were killed in two days of protests that later forced the resignation of KP Sharma Oli and shook up Nepal’s broken political systemPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
A demonstrator holding Nepal’s flag celebrates at the Singha Durbar office complex, which houses the prime minister’s office and other ministries, after storming it on 9 September during protestsPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
A demonstrator jumps from the gate of parliament while being pushed back by riot police on 8 SeptemberPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Flames rise from the burning Singha Durbar complex on 9 September, during a curfew imposed after youth‑led protests in KathmanduPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
A damaged statue of a lion at the entrance of the presidential building, Sheetal Niwas, seen on 15 September. The building was ransacked and burned by protestersPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
A person walks past the burned Singha Durbar office complex on 11 SeptemberPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Bina Awale, sister of Binod Maharjan, who was shot dead during youth-led protests that toppled Nepal’s prime minister, mourns her brother during his cremation at Pashupatinath temple in Kathmandu on 16 September. After feeding pigeons on the terrace, like he did most mornings, Binod abruptly left home on 8 September, leaving his breakfast of rice and lentils. The family only discovered he had joined the swelling protests after Binod’s elder brother received a phone call from one of his siblings’ childhood friends and rushed to Kathmandu’s Everest hospitalPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Rachana Khatiwada, mother of Rashik Khatiwada, who was shot dead during the youth-led protests, leans on the coffin containing her son’s body during a tribute rally in Kathmandu on 16 September. After years of being largely indifferent to politics, Khatiwada joined the Rastriya Swatantra party, saying her decision was due to a motivation to seek justice for her son and the families of others killed in the protests. ‘What have past leaders done for this country over the last three decades?’Photograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
People take part in a tribute rally on 16 September with coffins carrying the bodies of those who were shot dead during the protests in Kathmandu Photograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Lata Maya Maharjan, mother of Binod Maharjan, who was shot dead during the protests, recalls memories of her son while sitting in her room in Lalitpur, Nepal on 20 February 2026Photograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
A floral offering by Lata Maya Maharjan, lies outside her home during her daily prayers in Lalitpur. ‘My son said he would return home and eat the meal he had left behind,’ said Lata Maya Maharjan. ‘He never came back’Photograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Portraits of people who died during the youth-led protests are pasted on the gate of the parliament building in Kathmandu seen on 23 FebruaryPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
A portrait of Dev Kumar Subedi, who was shot dead during the protests, hangs in his family home in Lalitpur, seen on 22 FebruaryPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Saloni Subedi sits on the lap of her mother, Parbati Subedi, the wife of Dev Kumar Subedi, who was shot dead during the protests. Subedi has received the 1.5m Nepalese rupees (£7,650) compensation that an interim government has provided to the families of 42 of the 77 killed that it declared martyrs. ‘I believe this protest happened because people wanted change in Nepal and change in our leaders,’ Subedi said. ‘Those in power forgot about families like ours, for whom putting two meals on the table is a daily struggle.’Photograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Parbati Subedi (left) accompanies her daughter, Saloni, and her nephews, Ridam Panday (right) and Krish Panday (front-centre), to their school on 23 February before heading to work in Lalitpur Photograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Rachana Khatiwada, mother of Rashik Khatiwada, who was shot dead during the protests, cries as she speaks about her son while sitting next to his portrait in the living room of her house in KathmanduPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Rachana Khatiwada shows a wrist tattoo on 23 February that she had made in her son’s memoryPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
The family of Binod Maharjan, who was shot dead during youth-led protests, mourn around his coffin, during a tribute rally in Kathmandu on 16 SeptemberPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Lata Maya Maharjan prepares to cook leafy greens in Lalitpur on 21 FebruaryPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
Lata Maya Maharjan climbs the stairs next to paintings made by her son that cover the wall of her house in Lalitpur on 21 FebruaryPhotograph: Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters
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