Monarchists rally in support of ex-king as Nepal limps toward election


Pro-monarchy supporters holding a portrait of former King of Nepal Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev, chant slogans as they wait to welcome him in Kathmandu, Nepal, February 13, 2026. REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar

KATHMANDU, Feb 13 (Reuters) - ⁠Thousands of supporters of Nepal’s former king rallied in Kathmandu on Friday ⁠to greet its last monarch Gyanendra on his return from holiday, ahead ‌of the first election since anti-graft unrest by Gen Z young people.

A special assembly dominated by former Maoist rebels abolished Nepal's monarchy in 2008 and turned the Hindu-majority, Himalayan mountain nation into a secular republic.

Gyanendra, ​78, the last king, has since been living in ⁠his private home in Kathmandu ⁠as a commoner. Meanwhile, Nepal has had 14 changes of government in the past 18 ⁠years ‌and the instability has spooked investors and retarded growth.

On Friday, pro-monarchy demonstrators shouting “King, come and save the country" offered bouquets of flowers and waved ⁠the national flag as Gyanendra arrived by car at his ​home from the airport ‌after three months' holiday in Nepal's east.

“We must restore the monarchy because the ⁠king can be ​a caring guardian of all Nepali people, something many corrupt political leaders have failed to do,” said Sanatan Prasad Regmi, 55, a Gyanendra supporter. “We have no use for a republic.”

Many ⁠Nepalis have voiced frustration with republican government, accusing it ​of failing to deliver its promises of economic development and increased job creation.

Seventy-seven people were killed in anti-corruption unrest led by Gen Z youths in September and Prime Minister ⁠K.P. Sharma Oli was forced to resign.

A fresh election is set for March 5 for a new parliament, and a group of royalists who favour the restoration of a constitutional monarchy is among 65 parties running for the 275 seats in the assembly.

Two ​popular leaders - a rapper-turned-Kathmandu mayor and a former TV ⁠host-turned-politician - have joined forces to challenge the older parties which have dominated the Himalayan nation's ​politics for over three decades.

The election commission says nearly ‌19 million of Nepal’s 30 million people ​are eligible to vote in the elections. Nearly one million voters – mostly youths – were added after the protests.

(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; editing by Mark Heinrich)

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