Gen Z in South Asia Redefines Political Dissent with Humor and Digital Activism
Gen Z Redefines Political Dissent in South Asia

What began as memes, hashtags, and sarcastic online outrage is now spilling onto the streets across South Asia. From Sri Lanka’s Aragalaya movement to Bangladesh’s July Uprising to Nepal’s youth protests and India’s viral Cockroach Janata Party (CJP), Gen Z is reshaping the language of dissent.

The Rise of the Cockroach Janata Party

The CJP emerged after remarks attributed to India’s Chief Justice Surya Kant comparing young Indians online to ‘cockroaches’ and ‘parasites’ sparked backlash. Within days, Abhijeet Dipke, a Boston University student and former political strategist, launched the satirical movement, which quickly exploded online. By Thursday, the CJP’s Instagram page had crossed nearly 13.5 million followers in five days. What began as parody through fake campaigns, spoof manifestos, and AI-generated posters soon evolved into a wider expression of political fatigue and distrust in institutions, even spilling offline through a Yamuna clean-up drive by volunteers dressed as cockroaches.

Why It Became a Gen Z Movement

Gen Z turned humour and internet culture into a form of political protest and collective frustration.

Wide Pickt banner — collaborative shopping lists app for Telegram, phone mockup with grocery list

Sri Lanka’s Aragalaya Movement (2022)

The Aragalaya movement in Sri Lanka began during the country’s worst economic crisis in decades, marked by fuel shortages, inflation, power cuts and shortage of essential goods. It soon became a nationwide protest demanding the resignation of leaders, including then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

Why It Became a Gen Z Movement

Youth frustrated by economic uncertainty and mismanagement used digital activism to demand a system change in the country.

Bangladesh’s July Uprising (2024)

Triggered by protests against a controversial government job quota system, Bangladesh’s July Uprising quickly grew into a wider movement against unemployment, censorship, police crackdowns, and governance issues. Led largely by students, the protests spread rapidly through social media, with graffiti, protest songs, posters, and viral videos becoming symbols of the movement.

Why It Became a Gen Z Movement

Young people used digital platforms to transform a policy protest into a broader anti-establishment movement.

Nepal's Youth Protest Wave (2025)

Nepal’s youth-led protests were sparked by corruption allegations, political instability, unemployment, inflation, and frustration over limited opportunities. Organised largely through social media rather than party networks, the protests blended activism with music, satire, street art, and online campaigns.

Why It Became a Gen Z Movement

A digitally connected generation turned growing political and economic frustration into youth-driven demands for accountability.

Pickt after-article banner — collaborative shopping lists app with family illustration