Nepal: From Digital Protest to Accountability

Published on March 30, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The recent arrest of former Nepalese Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli and his former Interior Minister marks a turning point. Their prosecution, recommended by an official report, is due to alleged negligence during the massive September 2025 protests. Those demonstrations, triggered by the government's ban on social media and fueled by youth discontent, left 76 dead in two days and forced Oli's resignation. This case exemplifies how modern political crises are born in the digital realm and demand accountability in the physical world.

Former Nepalese Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli before a court, with background of protesters and blocked social media screens.

3D Visualization for Complex Political Narratives 🗺️

This case, with its timeline of events, flows of responsibility, and geography of the protests, is ideal for analysis using 3D technologies. We could model an interactive environment that shows the temporal progression of the demonstrations, overlaying social media data, security forces deployment, and critical conflict points. Beyond reconstruction, 3D simulation allows exploring alternative scenarios: how would the crisis have evolved with different management protocols? These tools transform dense reports into visual narratives accessible to the public, facilitating understanding of intricate judicial and political processes.

Transparency as a Social Rendering Code ⚖️

The pursuit of justice in Nepal underscores a global need: making accountability tangible. Just as 3D gives shape to abstract concepts, democracy requires mechanisms that make the consequences of political decisions visible. Data visualization is not just a technical tool; it is a bridge between institutional complexity and citizenship. By modeling past crises, we not only document history but encode lessons for future, more resilient and transparent governance systems.

Do you think 3D visualization can help reduce polarization by showing objective data?