Kathmandu. These rooms belong to 31-year-old Anil Pariyar of Kushma Parbat, who was just recovering from the Gen G movement that began on September 7 and was shot dead on September 7.
Anil, who was usually busy in the tailoring profession, was not aware of the cause of the Gen G movement on September 23, who he was and what it was, he was angry with the love of the younger student brothers who died in police firing and angered by the cruelty.

As he did not have vehicles to go to the protest, he also joined a group that had moved towards the house of Nepali Congress President Sher Bahadur Deuba. The bullet passed through Anil’s left armpit and left him unconscious.

Anil, who lost his wife a year and a half ago, had been raising his only child, nine-year-old son, by paying room rent and education. Now that he has reached such a situation, it is difficult for him to run the household every day.

He was shot at around 6 pm on May 24 and when he regained consciousness, he came to Manmohan Cardiothoracic Vascular and Transplant Hospital Maharajgunj. C. He was in the U. The news of his death had already spread after he regained consciousness at around 3 am on the 25th.

Sangita said that when her sister-in-law Sangita Pariyar and other relatives reached the hospital, the hospital staff had to hear that her man had died during the operation last evening and had informed them to come after 10 am to receive the body.

They returned home disappointed and asked for a call from a nurse at the hospital at around 8.30 am on the 25th and Anil himself called them and informed them that he had just been shifted from the ICU to the ward and now his condition is fine. He was discharged on September 12 after a four-day stay in the hospital.

Dr Anil Bhattarai said that the situation could not have arisen if he had been delayed to bring him to the hospital after undergoing open heart surgery. “The situation was very critical when we were brought there, the bullet shrapnel had also affected the heart, so if we had delayed, my brother could have died,” said Dr Bhattarai.
Anil is recovering well under the care of his sister-in-law Sangita Pariyar, but bullet shrapnel is still left in his body which will last a lifetime. She now has a big worry about how to run the house, how to educate and raise her son.

The interim government of Nepal has now forwarded its works. The government has already formed a commission for an impartial investigation into the Gen G movement, and the government has already decided to declare those who died during the movement as martyrs and provide financial assistance.

But the government has not been able to take any concrete decision for those who were shot and injured like Anil Pariyar in the same movement. The injured had also staged a sit-in in the premises of Singha Durbar on September 20 due to lack of proper support and support.
Anil was also troubled by the fact that he was not even a Gen G, he was not even a party to the government, but the shooting of innocent students, the corruption in the country, due to which Nepalis had to go abroad, now he wants a new Nepal, change, and a situation to live and work in the country in an easy way.
{{TAG_OPEN_strong_49}Photo: Prakash Chandra Timilsena/Nepal Photo Library






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