Dear Nepal,
I want to speak to you directly about what’s happening in your country now.
My name is Kazi Mamun. I study geopolitics out of passion. You may not have seen my interviews with global leaders like Dr. Mahathir Mohamad or Dr. Shirin Ebadi, but I ask you to listen carefully to me for the next few minutes.
1. The Organization at the Center: Hami Nepal
On September 8, 2025, young people filled your streets. The protest was organized by Hami Nepal, a nonprofit born out of the 2015 earthquake crisis (Al Jazeera
).
At first glance, it looks like youth power. But you must always ask: who funds these movements?
2. The Barbara Foundation Connection
Hami Nepal has a long connection with the Barbara Foundation, chaired by Dr. Sanduk Ruit (Barbara Foundation
).
The foundation is named after Barbara Adams, an American activist and writer who lived in Nepal. After her death in 2016, the foundation was restructured, but its early donation pipeline included a U.S. mailing address (Nepali Times Obituary
).
The Barbara Foundation has even hosted Hami Nepal in its office space (Barbara Foundation Gallery
).
3. Following the Money
In 2021, the Barbara Foundation announced a special award of NRs 10 million to frontline health workers during COVID, funded by Suhrid and Aditi Ghimire (MyRepublica
).
Its chair, Dr. Sanduk Ruit, has strong global NGO ties. He worked with the Fred Hollows Foundation (Australia) to expand cataract surgery across Asia (Fred Hollows Foundation
).
He also co-founded the Himalayan Cataract Project (USA), now Cure Blindness, a U.S.-registered nonprofit that channels Western donations into Nepal and beyond (CureBlindness.org
).
So while the faces may be Nepali, the funding networks often trace back to the West.
4. Patterns You Cannot Ignore
This is not unique to Nepal. In Bangladesh, foreign-backed NGOs and civil society groups played a key role in unrest, destabilizing the government under the banner of democracy and rights (The Diplomat
).
The pattern is clear: local groups, fueled by foreign money, create instability that foreign powers can exploit.
5. Why Nepal Matters in the Global Chessboard
Why now? Because your country sits between China and India.
The United States is engaged in tariff wars and strategic clashes with China, India, and Russia. For Washington, Nepal is not just a small Himalayan state—it is a strategic wedge (Brookings – US-China Tariffs
).
And history shows: they don’t always need tanks or soldiers. They use money, NGOs, and foundations as their entry point.
6. The Warning
This is not an attack on your youth. Their frustration is genuine.
This is not an attack on Hami Nepal. Their origins were noble.
But when foreign money mixes with local anger, it rarely ends well for your nation. Nepal must learn from Bangladesh, and from others before you.
7. The Call to Awareness
So I ask you, Nepal:
When you see protest banners, ask: who paid for the printing?
When you see NGO offices, ask: who funds the rent?
When you hear slogans for change, ask: whose change, and whose benefit?
The truth is simple: foreign-backed organizations, directly or indirectly, are playing a role in today’s uprising.
Nepal, you cannot afford to be blind.
This is the moment to see clearly, to protect your sovereignty, and to unite against foreign manipulation.
Say it loud: you will not be pawns in another nation’s geopolitical game.
Wake up now.
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