Nepal’s ex-PM Oli arrested over deaths during Gen Z protests

Former Nepal Prime Minister and Chairman of the Communist Party of Nepal, K.P. Sharma Oli gestures while being taken to a hospital from the District Police Range after his detention by police, who are investigating whether he was negligent in preventing dozens of deaths during the Gen Z protests, in Kathmandu, Nepal, March 28.
KATHMANDU, March 28 (Reuters) – Nepal’s former prime minister, K.P. Sharma Oli, was arrested ​on Saturday as police investigate whether he was negligent in ‌failing to prevent dozens of deaths during Gen Z anti-corruption protests last September, officials said.
His home minister, Ramesh Lekhak, was also arrested.
They were taken ​into custody one day after rapper-turned-politician Balendra Shah was sworn in ​as prime minister and after a recommendation last week by ⁠a Nepali panel investigating violence during the protests that they should ​be prosecuted for negligence.
A total of 76 people were killed in ​two days of unrest, which led to Oli resigning.
Police spokesman Om Adhikari said both Oli and Lekhak were being detained at the Kathmandu Police Office and ​would be produced before the court on Sunday, a working ​day in Nepal.
“We have arrested them as per the recommendations made by the ‌investigation ⁠commission,” he said.
Oli, 74 and who has had two kidney transplants in the past, was subsequently transferred to a hospital from the police office, witnesses said.
His lawyer Tikaram Bhattarai told Reuters that the ​arrest was unwarranted.
“They have ​said it (the ⁠arrest) is for investigation. It is illegal and improper because there is no risk of him fleeing ​or avoiding questioning,” he said.
Lekhak and his lawyer ​could not ⁠be immediately reached for comment.
The panel held Oli responsible for not taking any action to stop hours of firing that killed at ⁠least 19 ​Gen Z protesters on the first ​day of the demonstrations.
Anger over the deaths helped sweep Shah’s Rastriya Swatantra Party to a ​landslide election this month.

Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Edwina Gibbs

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