Written by Madhavi Ravikumar Gen Z-led uprisings in 2025 against corruption and inequality across Asia and Africa have been propelled by viral TikTok and Discord campaigns. On Sunday, Delhi saw the first protest in years against the high AQI in the city. Mobilisation for this protest at Jantar Mantar was also achieved, in large part, through social media.

These digitally driven movements expose tensions between governments, platforms, and young activists. In Morocco, the โ€œGenZ 212โ€ movement erupted on September 27, after viral posts condemned billions spent on the 2030 FIFA World Cup stadiums amid failing public services. Protests across 10 cities left three dead, and over 500 people were arrested by early October.

Weeks earlier, Nepalโ€™s ban on 26 social media platforms sparked Gen Z-led unrest that killed over 70 and forced Prime Minister K P Sharma Oliโ€™s resignation. The protest wave spread to Madagascar, where youth protests over power and water crises toppled the government. In Asia, too, Mongolia (democratic reforms), the Philippines (anti-elite rallies), and Indonesia (gig workersโ€™ welfare protests via Telegram) saw large-scale mobilisation for various reasons.

These โ€œGen Z protestsโ€, orchestrated through memes, reels, and encrypted chats, reveal the viral contagion of digital dissent and call for urgent dialogue between states and platforms to balance freedom and stability in what may be remembered as the โ€œyear of protest. โ€ Advertisement The 2010โ€“2011 Arab Spring marked social mediaโ€™s rise as a global force for activism.

Platforms like Facebook and Twitter enabled rapid mobilisation โ€” Egyptโ€™s โ€œWe Are All Khaled Saidโ€ page โ€” advocating against police brutality โ€” drew 4,00,000 followers. A 2013 study by Philip N Howard and Muzammil M Hussain (The International Journal of Press/Politics) titled โ€˜Democracyโ€™s Fourth Wave? Digital Media and the Arab Springโ€™, found these platforms lowered barriers to collective action, creating โ€œcritical massโ€ through real-time coordination. Yet, as researcher Deen Freelon (2016) observed, social media facilitated rather than caused change; politics drove transformation, pixels accelerated it.

This duality endures with Gen Z (born 1997โ€“2012), digital natives who harness short-form content for viral activism, from Delhiโ€™s AQI protest to Nepalโ€™s anti-corruption reels, blending satire and solidarity. Gen Zโ€™s activism thrives on TikTok and Instagram, where memes and reels act as satirical tools of dissent. In Morocco, viral videos exposing extravagant World Cup spending amid a healthcare and unemployment crisis sparked protests marked by the One Piece โ€œStraw Hat Pirateโ€ flag.

In Nepal, videos exposing โ€œnepo-kidsโ€ fueled outrage over inequality, with the country seeing 20 per cent youth unemployment and heavy reliance on remittances. A 2023 United Way NCA survey shows 66 per cent of Gen Z activism is digital, and focused on inflation, healthcare and housing. A BBC (2022) report highlights social mediaโ€™s global reach โ€” from Hong Kongโ€™s 2019 Telegram-led protests to the 2020 US Black Lives Matter movement, where TikTok drew 15โ€“26 million participants.

In South Asia, Sri Lankaโ€™s 2022 โ€œAragalayaโ€ used Facebook for 70 per cent of coordination, while Bangladeshโ€™s 2024 quota protests, which toppled Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, relied on WhatsApp and saw deepfakes incite deadly riots. Iranโ€™s 2022 hijab protests leveraged Instagram Reels to evade censors.

Mongolian students used Discord for โ€œflash occupationsโ€ against unemployment and pollution, and Filipino activists on X spread deepfake exposรฉs of nepotism, echoing Nepalโ€™s โ€œnepo-kidsโ€ movement. These examples validate social mediaโ€™s power to mobilise Gen Z, tackling โ€œcollective action problemsโ€, as professor Yannis Theocharis (2022) noted in Sageโ€™s New Media and Society, by indicating safety in numbers.

Yet this power has drawbacks: Engagement-driven algorithms foster echo chambers and polarisation. In Morocco, unmoderated Discord clashes grew from 3,000 to 1,50,000 users; in Nepal, post-ban arson calls turned activism chaotic, and digital mobilisation culminated in doxxing in the Philippines.

Platforms like Meta and ByteDance, while promoting free expression, prioritise ad revenue, enabling misinformation that fuels unrest, seen in Hong Kongโ€™s doxxing waves and BLMโ€™s outrage cycles. Evgeny Morozovโ€™s The Net Delusion (2011) warns against โ€œcyber-utopianismโ€, noting governmentsโ€™ use of these technologies for surveillance, as in Nepalโ€™s post-uprising crackdown disguised as anti-corruption reform. Advertisement Governments facing digital activism often resort to bans that backfire.

Nepalโ€™s blackout, framed as tax enforcement, cut economic lifelines and radicalised youth, while Moroccoโ€™s throttling and arrests echoed Tunisiaโ€™s pre-Arab Spring censorship, sparking resistance in Indonesia where gig workers rallied via Telegram. A Brookings report (2023) critiques such protests as having โ€œlarge bark but no biteโ€ without offline structures, yet Nepal and Morocco show that bans can unite opposition, even toppling Madagascarโ€™s government and forcing Mongolian concessions. States must treat platforms as quasi-public utilities and negotiate rather than suppress.

Collaborative moderation frameworks, noted by Rest of World (2021), and regulatory models like the EUโ€™s Digital Services Act, promoting algorithmic transparency without stifling dissent, offer direction. Indiaโ€™s IT Rules (2021) stirred censorship debates; tripartite dialogues among governments, platforms, and civil society might foster โ€œprotest parity,โ€ maintaining access while mitigating harm.

For Gen Z, social media and networking platforms are lifelines. It uses social media for political education and civic engagement. However, digital disparities exacerbate elite capture, marginalising rural youth in Morocco, Nepal, and Indonesia.

Instead of suppression, governments should invest in digital literacy and pursue revenue-sharing models where platforms fund local infrastructure in exchange for regulatory compliance, reducing incentives for bans. Looking ahead, by 2030, Gen Z will make up 40 per cent of the global population (UN projections), driving up โ€œphygitalโ€ activism which blends AI-deepfakes, bots, and fragmented โ€œsplinternetsโ€. Shared symbols like Indonesiaโ€™s Straw Hat Pirate flags from Yogyakarta to Kathmandu signal the next digital flashpoint.

As Clay Shirkyโ€™s Here Comes Everybody (2008) asserts, revolutions are inevitable in networked societies; therefore, UN-led norms for ethical AI and bilateral tech accords are vital to prevent chaos. Fragile democracies must favour collaboration over confrontation. Platforms should prioritise social impact, governments should prioritise dialogue, and Gen Z should channel digital power towards reform.

Without negotiation, as seen in Morocco and Nepal, the next uprising may consume more than parliaments. The writer is professor, University of Hyderabad.