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Nepal Internet Disrupted Amidst Protests

Picture of Robbie Mitchell
Communication and Tech Advisor, Internet Society
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September 9, 2025

Nepal’s Internet users are experiencing disrupted Internet connectivity and access to web services following the Ministry for Communication and Information Technology’s orders to the Nepal Telecommunication Authority last week to make unregistered social media sites inactive until they are registered in Nepal under the Social Media Directives 2080.

First reports of disruptions came to light on Thursday, 4 September, following the midnight deadline. The orders were reportedly given in a bid by the government to tackle misinformation, fraud, and hate speech. Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Instagram, Reddit, WhatsApp, X, and YouTube were among a list of 26 services asked to register.

See the Pulse Internet Shutdown Tracker

Protestors took to the streets of Kathmandu on Monday, 8 September, to voice their opposition to the bans and anger towards the government over “corruption and a weak economy.” The resulting unrest and letters of petition from the community led the Ministry to reneg on its orders on Tuesday, 9 September.

Figure 1 — Letter from the Internet Society Nepal Chapter/ Open Internet Nepal condemning the actions against the protestors and urging for the ban on social media sites to end. Source: LinkedIn

However, Pulse has been informed by local contacts that Internet connectivity has been disrupted. IODA and Cloudflare Radar data (below) show slight to moderate disruptions to Internet connectivity and Cloudflare traffic in Nepal.

Figure 2 — IODA data shows a drop in Internet connectivity in Nepal on Wednesday, 9 September from 2:15—4:50 UTC. Source: IODA
Figure 3 — Cloudflare Radar data shows a 50% drop in Cloudflare traffic in Nepal compared to 24 hours before. Source: Cloudflare Radar.

Google Transparency Report is also showing a drop in Google search traffic, but it does show YouTube traffic returning.

Figure 4 — Google Web Search traffic in Nepal was noticeably down at its peak (13:00 local time) compared to the previous eight days. Source: Google Transparency Report.
Figure 5 — YouTube traffic was impacted from 7 to 9 September but has surged since 6:00 local time. Source: Google Transparency Report.

To be clear, we cannot verify whether these recent connectivity disruptions are due to actions of the Nepal government, or due to network outages, or excessive traffic. (Read more: BBC Live)

Internet shutdowns have far-reaching technical, economic, and human rights impacts. They undermine users’ trust in the Internet, setting in motion a whole range of consequences for the local economy, the reliability of critical online government services, and even for the reputation of the country itself. Policymakers need to consider these costs alongside security imperatives.