Nepal’s federal finance ministry defends temporary budget freeze for NPR 500 billion audit, promises November dialogues. Gen Z threatens protests; Maoists eye provincial alliances. Time’s tight.
In a stark reminder of the fragile federal experiment, provincial leaders in Nepal have accused the interim government of Prime Minister Sushila Karki of sidelining them with a “unilateral” budget freeze, crippling preparations for crucial March elections. The row, erupting just weeks after deadly youth-led protests toppled the previous regime, underscores deepening rifts in Nepal’s devolved power structure – a model that mirrors India’s federal dynamics but is proving even more volatile in the Himalayan nation’s turbulent politics.
The complaints, voiced by ministers across Nepal’s seven provinces, highlight a perceived snub by Kathmandu’s technocratic administration. Lumbini Province Chief Minister Chet Narayan Acharya led the charge on Saturday, lamenting that the federal freeze on provincial allocations has stalled vital development projects, from road repairs to irrigation schemes. “This isn’t just about money; it’s about respect for federalism,” Acharya told reporters in Butwal. “Our hands are tied while we scramble to rebuild from the Gen Z arson attacks. How can we prepare for elections without federal dialogue?”
The unrest traces back to September’s cataclysmic “Gen Z protests,” a youth-driven anti-corruption uprising that claimed some 72 lives and forced the resignation of veteran Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Sparked by allegations of graft in federal contracts and youth unemployment soaring above 30 per cent, the demonstrations saw protesters torch government buildings across provinces, including provincial assemblies in Lumbini and Gandaki.
On September 12, President Ram Chandra Paudel, acting on Karki’s advice, dissolved the House of Representatives and called snap polls for March 5, 2026, thrusting the retired Chief Justice into the premiership as a neutral interim figure.
¯Criticism for Inaction
Karki’s government, formed per the agitators’ demands for a non-partisan cleanup crew, was meant to stabilize Nepal until the polls. Yet, six weeks in, it is facing a barrage of criticism for inaction on the protest fallout and now this fiscal clampdown. Provincial officials argue the budget freeze – imposed to audit federal spending amid corruption probes – has disproportionately hit subnational governments, which rely on Kathmandu for 70 per cent of their revenues under Nepal’s 2015 Constitution.
In Bagmati Province, Finance Minister Rajendra Shrestha echoed the frustration: “We’ve lost millions in stalled contracts. The federal team hasn’t even convened a single coordination meeting on election logistics, like voter rolls or security deployments.” Shrestha pointed to damaged infrastructure in Hetauda, where protesters razed the provincial secretariat, leaving repair bills in the crores of Nepali rupees (NPR). “Federalism in Nepal is built on cooperation, coordination, and coexistence,” he added, quoting constitutional principles that Nepali drafters borrowed from India’s playbook. “Ignoring provinces risks the entire system’s collapse.”
The grievances extend beyond finances. Provincial governments, led by a patchwork of parties – from Oli’s Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) in Lumbini to the Nepali Congress in Karnali – have continued functioning despite the federal upheaval, as the protests targeted Kathmandu’s elite. But with elections looming, leaders warn of logistical nightmares. Madhesh Province’s Land Minister Sarita Giri highlighted delays in procuring electronic voting machines and training poll officials, blaming the “top-down” approach. “Our border districts with India – Saptari, Siraha – need federal support for cross-border security during voting. Silence from Karki’s office is deafening,” Giri said, a nod to the 1,800-km open frontier that facilitates everything from trade to seasonal migration for millions of Nepalis.
Litmus Test
Nepal’s provinces, carved out post-2008 monarchy abolition to empower ethnic Madhesis, Tharus, and hill communities, were envisioned as engines of inclusive growth. Yet, chronic underfunding – provinces get just 15-20 per cent of the national budget – has bred resentment.
Karki, 68, a stoic jurist credited with landmark rulings on women’s rights, has vowed reforms. In a September address, she pledged to “fix the failures” that ignited the Gen Z fury, including youth job quotas and anti-graft laws. Her cabinet, expanded for the third time this week amid backlash, now includes technocrats from the private sector. But critics, including UML youth wing leaders, decry the moves as power grabs. “She’s apolitical on paper, but her delays smell of stalling the polls,” said protester-turned-activist Priya Tamang, 22, from Kathmandu’s streets.
Analysts see the provincial pushback as a litmus test for Nepal’s federalism. “If Karki doesn’t bridge this gap, March elections could see low turnout or violence in provinces,” warned Kathmandu-based political scientist Bhaskar Karki (no relation).
The federal finance ministry, tight-lipped, insists the freeze is temporary, tied to a forensic audit of NPR 500 billion in suspicious expenditures. A spokesperson promised “inter-tier dialogues” by November. Yet, with Gen Z groups threatening fresh marches and opposition parties like the Maoists eyeing provincial alliances, time is short.
Image: Wikimedia

