He warned that the 10-point agreement reached with the government was not a bargain but a commitment obtained through public pressure and should be fully implemented without delay.
Madhesi youth have made public a clear political stance with a written commitment demand before the House of Representatives elections, focusing on the issues of federalism, inclusiveness and structural reforms.
Various Gen-G youth and committees have issued a joint statement, describing Madhesh as the backbone of Nepal's economy, labor force and democratic movements, and have stated that the planned neglect in the state has not ended yet.
Remembering the Madhesh movement, Tharuhat movement and Muslim movement as historical struggles for identity, proportional representation and state restructuring, pressure has been put on to implement their unfulfilled demands.
The youth have demanded the actual implementation of federalism, transfer of power to the provinces and formation of the provincial police, publicizing the reports of various commissions and taking action against the guilty, including Madhesh and identity movements in the curriculum, restructuring of constituencies according to population, agricultural-irrigation reforms, protection of the Chure region, re-opening of closed industries (including the Janakpur cigarette factory), ensuring language rights, resolving citizenship issues, expanding health infrastructure and completing projects such as the postal highway on time.
The youth have given a clear message, warning that the 10-point agreement with the government is not a bargain but a commitment obtained through public pressure and should be fully implemented without delay - Madhesh no longer wants promises, but implementation, not symbolic representation, but real power sharing.
