Why We Can’t Tolerate Corruption Any Longer
Corruption has robbed Nepal of time, talent, and trust. For decades, public money meant for schools, hospitals, roads, and jobs has been siphoned into private pockets. The cost isn’t just numbers on a balance sheet—it’s young people leaving the country, communities stuck without services, and a democracy that feels hollow.
When officials are unaccountable, everything slows down: projects stall, procurement becomes a theatre, and the simplest services require connections instead of merit. Meanwhile, those who speak up face retaliation, censorship, or worse. This isn’t governance—it’s extraction.
What Nepal Could Be
Nepal could be building world‑class public universities, powering the region with clean energy, and nurturing creative industries. We could be investing in research, technology, and modern agriculture, creating dignified jobs at home. We have the talent; we lack honest stewardship of public resources.
Where We Draw the Line
We refuse to normalize theft of public funds and violence used to silence accountability. We demand transparent procurement, real-time disclosure of public spending, independent anti-corruption bodies with teeth, and legal consequences for those who profit off the public’s pain.
Corruption is not a victimless crime. It steals children’s futures, forces migration, and undermines our right to dignity. Enough delay. Enough excuses. We will not tolerate it any longer.