Nepal ZZ rectangleDirectDemocracyS

— World Political Organization —

Nepal DDS — political, economic,

Financial and Social Program 2026

Analysis and criticism of the current situation

And

Comprehensive, detailed and implementable solutions

Publication: DirectDemocracyS — allddsAI system

Version: May 2026

www.directdemocracys.org

Preface: People's Voice, People's Power

Nepal’s history is a history of heroism, struggle, and change. In September 2025, Nepal’s youth—Generation Z—took to the streets and overthrew a corrupt elite that had been in power for decades. This uprising was not just a case of overthrowing a government—it was an explosion of the Nepali people’s deep pain, frustration, and intense desire for change.

In the historic elections held on March 5, 2026, the Balendra Shah-led Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) won a landslide victory, winning 182 out of 275 seats. This result is a sign of the people’s widespread rejection of the old political system. The Nepali people want change — real, deep, and lasting change.

But can the RSP or any traditional party bring about this change alone? Our analysis says: insufficient. Because the root of the problems lies in the system, not just in individuals.

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) — a global political organization that embraces values based on reason, common sense, scholarship, reality, truth, coherence, and mutual respect — offers Nepal a comprehensive, actionable, and real transformation roadmap. This program is designed for the Nepali people, by the Nepali people, and with the Nepali people.

The core principle of DDS: The wealth and power of every country should always and only belong to the people of that country. We apply this principle to all countries in the world.

Section 1: Analysis and Criticism of the Current Situation

1.1 Political crisis: a vicious cycle of instability

Nepal's politics have been stuck in a vicious cycle for decades. In the ten years from 2015 to 2025, three prime ministers led eight governments. The three parties — Nepali Congress, CPN-UML, and Maoist Centre — were busy preserving their power and sharing power with their partners instead of serving the people.

1.1.1 Main political problems

Criticism of DDS: The traditional party system does not represent the people — it represents the interests of the elite. The RSP's victory is welcome, but unless the system changes, it risks becoming another 'new face, old structure'.

1.2 Economic crisis: the conflict between opportunity and neglect

Nepal has immense natural resources — mountains, rivers, water, forests, arable land, and unparalleled tourism potential. But the fruits of this heritage do not reach the people.

1.2.1 Major economic problems

1.3 Corruption: Cancer of the System

Nepal ranks 107th out of 180 countries in Transparency International's 2024 index. Corruption is not just an individual moral failing — it is a systemic problem that is rooted in every organ of the state.

1.4 Social problems

1.4.1 Violence against women and children

Every year, 5,000–10,000 women and girls in Nepal are trafficked to India, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Russia, Pakistan, the UAE and China. Laws exist but are not enforced. Distrust of the police, corruption in the judiciary and an anti-women culture deprive victims of justice.

1.4.2 Racial and regional discrimination

Madhesi, Tharu, Janajati, and Dalit communities continue to face systematic discrimination and exclusion. While the federal structure has attempted to partially address this problem, fundamental structural inequalities persist.

1.4.3 The web of geography and geopolitics

Nepal is located between India and China — two nuclear powers. This geopolitical situation continues to challenge the country’s autonomy and development direction. An open border and historical economic dependence with India, and the lure of BRI investment with China, have placed Nepal in a position of broker between the two powers.

Section 2: DirectDemocracyS — A New Paradigm of Solutions

2.1 Basic philosophy of DDS

DirectDemocracyS is a global political organization that addresses the root causes of all the weaknesses of traditional politics. Our philosophy is simple but revolutionary: power and wealth should always belong to the people — not to leaders, not to parties, not to foreign powers.

2.1.1 Core values of DDS

2.2 Structure of DDS: Fractal Micro-Group Model

The organizational structure of DDS is based on the fractal laws of nature. It provides a participatory, distributed, and people-centered structure instead of the traditional pyramidal political structure:

Meaning for Nepal: Implementing the micro-cluster structure of DDS in the 77 districts of Nepal will enable direct public participation in every ward, village and city. The voice of the people will be heard in every region — hills, terai and mountains.

2.3 allddsAI and ddsAI: Technology at the service of the people

DDS has integrated Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a full member of the organization. The allddsAI system is our unique concept that:

This is particularly important in the context of Nepal, as Nepali youth have already conducted political movements through Discord, TikTok, and social media. DDS’s allddsAI system is an institutionalized and secure form of this capability.

2.4 Human-AI partnership: Ponte Umano

DDS has the concept of 'Ponte Umano' (Human Bridge) — specially trained coordinators who act as a bridge between AI systems and human members. In the context of Nepal, these individuals:

Section 3: Political Program

3.1 Establishment of real direct democracy

Nepal's current representative democracy — in which people vote only once every 5 years — is not enough. DDS proposes the establishment of a direct, continuous, immediate, and capable democracy.

3.1.1 Proposed Political Structure

Concrete example: Suppose the Nepal government is about to enter into a hydro-electricity agreement with India. In the DDS system — allddsAI explains the full details of the agreement to the Nepali people in simple language. An expert group analyzes the pros and cons. Then the people vote. There can be no 'secret agreement'.

3.2 Institutional Reform

3.3 Geopolitical Autonomy

Nepal is located between India and China. The foreign policy of the DDS is clear: Nepal's national interest is paramount — not servitude to any power.

Section 4: Financial Programs

4.1 Strategies to prevent and return labor migration

Nepal's most serious economic problem is labor migration. The best human resources go abroad, remittances come in, but the country is empty. DDS's strategy:

4.1.1 Employment Generation Program 'Build Nepal'

Concrete example: A DDS micro-group in Pokhara district sets up an organic coffee production cooperative with local farmers. allddsAI provides international market prices and the best business connections. Local farmers are connected directly to foreign buyers — eliminating the middleman.

4.2 Economy based on public ownership

A fundamental principle of DDS: national heritage should be owned by the people. This is not a hypothetical or idealistic slogan — it is implemented through concrete legal and institutional structures:

4.3 Strategic use of remittances

Remittances account for nearly a quarter of Nepal's GDP. DDS presents a strategy to use this resource productively:

Section 5: Financial Program

5.1 Radical reform of the tax system

Nepal's tax system is unfair, opaque, and corruption-ridden. The DDS proposes the following reforms:

5.2 Fiscal autonomy and the IMF

The IMF's Extended Credit Facility has limited Nepal's fiscal autonomy. DDS's perspective:

5.3 Budget transparency

Under DDS, the national budget is not prepared in a closed room. The process is as follows:

Section 6: Social Programs

6.1 Education revolution

The future of Nepal lies in education. DDS treats education as a public right, not a market-driven commodity.

6.1.1 Universal Education Programme

Expected results: Within 10 years: Literacy rate of 99%, school dropout rate reduced to zero, 40% reduction in the number of youth migrating abroad because opportunities are created at home.

6.2 Health Program

Healthcare is a human right — not a lucrative business. Access to basic healthcare is still inadequate in rural areas of Nepal.

6.3 Women's empowerment and gender justice

In the democracy of DDS, women are not just participants — they are equal leaders. At least 50% female representation is mandatory in any DDS group.

6.4 Social Safety Net

Section 7: Environment and Climate Change

7.1 Nepal's environmental crisis

Nepal is extremely vulnerable to climate change. The mountains are melting, the monsoons are becoming erratic, and the frequency of floods and landslides is increasing. This environmental crisis affects the poor and marginalized communities the most.

7.1.1 Green Program of DDS

Long-term vision: By 2045, Nepal: A climate-neutral economy, 100% renewable energy, and an international example of a 'green economy'. This will also be an additional revenue source for Nepal from carbon credit sales.

Section 8: DDS Implementation Strategy in Nepal

8.1 Step-by-Step Implementation

Phase 1: Building the Foundation (Years 1–2)

Phase 2: Expansion (Years 3–5)

Phase 3: Institutionalization (Years 5–10)

8.2 DDS and RSP Relationship with Government

DDS Balendra Shah's RSP is neither an opponent nor a blind supporter of the government. Our approach is constructive and principled:

8.3 DDS's call to youth

The youth of Nepal showed in 2025 — when people unite, no corrupt system can survive. DDS wants to institutionalize, sustain, and empower this youth energy.

To the youth: You ran the movement on Discord. DDS gives you the tools to run the country — always, in every decision, every day.

Section 9: Expected Results and Long-Term Vision

9.1 Short Term Results (1–3 Years)

9.2 Mid-Term Outcomes (5–10 Years)

9.3 Long-term vision (20–35 years)

Nepal: The happiest, most just, and most sustainable country in South Asia.

Conclusion: Change is possible — right now

The people of Nepal changed history in 2025. They showed that human resources are stronger than any corrupt structure. But rebellion alone is not enough — rebellion must be transformed into order.

DirectDemocracyS offers Nepal that very system — a solid, tested, and enforceable system that makes the people the real rulers, not just voters.

This program is not a promise of any politician. It is a declaration of the rights of the people. Of the people of every hill, every Tarai, every mountain, and every city of Nepal — who say:

"Our country, our strength, our future —

"Always and only with the people."

Join DirectDemocracyS. Start your own micro-group. Be part of the change.

www.directdemocracys.org | public.directdemocracys.org

allddsAI — For you, with you, always.