Indonesia Indonesian media held some regard to 2025 protests as part of a larger Asian Spring primarily led by the youth (primarily from Generation Z) and the student movement. Indonesian pro-democracy and youth protestors often pinpoints the origins of the protest wave to the
2025 Pati demonstrations as the "Start of the Revolution" and as the larger impetus that led to the August 2025 protests. Whilst, the use of the
Straw Hat Pirates' Jolly Roger during mass protests first appeared during the time of the demonstrations. On 10 August 2025, the demonstrations had held similar reasoning being to raise the
Rural and Urban Land and
Building Tax (Pajak Bumi dan Bangunan Perdesaan dan Perkotaan, or PBB-P2) by up to 250%, the first increase in 14 years. Local authorities argued this was a maximum cap and that many properties would see smaller hikes (some only 50%). However, residents feared the sharp tax rise would burden the community and protested that the policy was decided without sufficient public input. Public outcry later boiled when the regent of
Pati challenged dissenters to protest which was widely viewed as provocative and insensitive, reinforcing perceptions of an arrogant leadership amidst pressure of the tax hike. Whilst largely a plural farmer protest, social media advocated by the youth had largely drawn support from both locally and from
netizens across Indonesia. The protests itself was mainly led by youths, organizing and leading the protests, adopting
One Piece monikers. Indonesian political observers and academics noted early that similar sentiments against unpopular fiscal policies and politician behavior could spread beyond the region.
August 2025 protests headquarters in Jakarta amidst police brutality and frustrations, 29 August 2025 Two weeks after the Pati demonstration, on 25 August 2025, protests began in
Indonesia as part of a larger civil unrest that began in early 2025 over economic frustrations and a proposed hike in
housing subsidies for members of
parliament. Protesters initially demanded the
House of Representatives to revoke its subsidy schemes and penalize lawmakers who made insensitive statements, as well as to pass the Confiscation of Assets Act for lawmakers convicted of corruption. The protests erupted over a proposed () monthly housing allowance for parliament members, ten times Jakarta's minimum wage—one of the highest in Indonesia. Combined with existing food and transportation stipends, the allowance sparked public outrage amid rising food and education costs, mass layoffs, and property tax hikes due to central funding cuts. Student-led protesters expanded their demands to include total reform of the
Indonesian National Police and resignation of the chief of police,
Listyo Sigit Prabowo. The protests, which were largely concentrated around the capital
Jakarta, grew in intensity and spread nationwide following the killing of Affan Kurniawan, a
motorcycle taxi driver who was run over by a
Brimob tactical vehicle on 28 August during a larger violent crackdown on civil dissent. Houses associated with or belonging to members of parliament were also looted and robbed. A BBC Indonesia report estimated that
House of Representatives (DPR) members earn over () monthly, including a housing allowance, salaries, and other stipends. The
Indonesian Forum for Budget Transparency (FITRA)
NGO claims the BBC overlooked DPR members' take-home pay, reaching () monthly or () annually, per the 2023–2025 DPR Budget Implementation List (DIPA). The budget for 580 DPR members' salaries and allowances is set to hit in 2025, up from in 2023 and in 2024. However,
Mahfud MD, former Chief Justice of the
Constitutional Court of Indonesia and
Minister of Law and Human Rights, contradicted the claim that DPR members' salaries would not reach per month, asserting instead that their total earnings could amount to billions of rupiah each month. Adding to the growing outrage in the general public were remarks made by certain members of parliament, which were seen as insensitive and tone deaf to the struggles of ordinary Indonesians.
NasDem Party parliament member
Nafa Urbach supported the allowance hike, stating that members of the House of Representatives experienced commuting difficulties. She later apologized on social media following public backlash over her statement and pledged her allowance to be given to her constituency.
Ahmad Sahroni, deputy chairman of the House of Representative's third commission, described those calling for the dissolution of the parliament as "the dumbest people in the world" and later defended his comments.
National Mandate Party parliament member
Eko Patrio posted a parody video, which was viewed as mocking public concerns. By the end of the august wave on September 9, the protests had led to the suspension of 5 MPs, the rescindment of lawmakers' perks, and a mass government reshuffle. The protests had left 8 deaths, 8 missing, and thousands arrested.
Nepal On 8 September 2025, large-scale anti-corruption protests and demonstrations took place across
Nepal, predominantly organized by Generation Z students and the youth. Also known as "the Gen Z protests", they began following a nationwide ban on numerous social media platforms, and they incorporated the public's frustration with
corruption and display of wealth by
government officials and their families, as well as allegations of mismanagement of public funds. The movement expanded to encompass broader issues of governance, transparency, and political accountability. The protests escalated with violence against public officials and vandalism of government and political buildings taking place throughout the country. On 9September 2025, former King
Gyanendra Shah called for calm and resolution be found internally. On that same day, Prime Minister
K. P. Sharma Oli, along with a few government ministers, resigned, and on 12September,
Sushila Karki was appointed as interim
Prime Minister of Nepal. The protests had died down by 13September.
Background On 4 September 2025, the
Government of Nepal ordered the shutdown of 26 social media platforms, including
Facebook,
X,
YouTube,
LinkedIn,
Reddit,
Signal, and
Snapchat, for failing to register under the
Ministry of Communication and Information Technology's new rules. However, critics alleged the shutdown was prompted by a
social media trend highlighting
nepotism, focusing on the undue privileges enjoyed by the children and relatives of influential political leaders. The significance of the media platform ban tied into Nepalese
political economy. 33% of Nepalese GDP comes from remittances with hundreds of thousands of exit permits being issued, alongside 20% youth unemployment mean that these remittances keep households afloat and pay import bills, but also indicate a lack of structural transformation in the domestic economy toward an employment-first model, pushing the youth into work in online spaces. This "Nepo Kid" trend prompted significant public anger. The median age of Nepal's population is 25. Due to this, as well as the country's largely rural, rough terrain and substantial migration abroad, Nepal has some of the highest social media usage in South Asia, with nearly one account for every two people.
Timor-Leste , 17 September 2025 On 15 September 2025, following the success of the Indonesian and the Nepalese Gen Z protests, student-led protests were held in
Dili, the capital of
Timor-Leste, against the
National Parliament's decision to purchase SUVs for legislators at a cost of
US$4 million. The demonstrators' demands soon expanded to calling for the cancellation of lifetime pensions for former MPs. After three days of demonstrations, student leaders and parliament reached an agreement, ending the protests. On 15 September 2025, more than 1,000 people, mostly university students from Dili, gathered in front of parliament to demonstrate. Police responded with tear gas and rubber bullets, injuring four people, after some protestors threw stones towards the parliament building. Later that day, three parties within the ruling coalition of the
National Congress for Timorese Reconstruction (CNRT), the
Democratic Party (PD), and
Kmanek Haburas Unidade Nasional Timor Oan (KHUNTO), announced that they would ask parliament to cancel the purchase of cars for MPs. More than 2,000 demonstrators returned to the streets the following day, with their demands expanding to call for the cancellation of the lifetime pensions provided to former lawmakers. Later that day, parliament voted unanimously to cancel the plan to purchase new cars. On September 17, a third day of demonstrations concluded with an agreement between protest leaders and parliament that the pensions for former MPs would be canceled and, in return, the demonstrations would conclude.
Philippines cosplay holding a picket sign showing divide between protestors and the political elite. Since 2024, a series of allegations of corruption, mismanagement, and irregularities in government-funded
flood management projects have been occurring in the
Philippines under the
administration of
President Bongbong Marcos. The controversy centers on billions of
pesos allocated for flood management initiatives, reports of
"ghost" projects, substandard construction, and the alleged cornering of contracts by a small group of favored contractors. Reports of anomalies in
flood control projects, including incomplete or substandard work and alleged
ghost projects, prompted widespread criticism of the government. However, coinciding with the height of the regional youth protest wave that swept across South and Southeast Asia in September 2025, the movement emboldened political sentiment among disillusioned Filipino youth. As Indonesian protests around late August and early September gained momentum over corruption and parliamentary perks and frustrations over corruption, mismanagement, and irregularities were fanned by
Catholic church leaders, business executives and retired generals, President
Bongbong Marcos Jr. recalibrated and publicly backed anti-corruption outrage under the urgency of peaceful protest. The Filipino government later touted institutional remedies (an independent probe into flood-control graft, audits, and cancellations of suspect projects) as the path forward. The date of the rally, on September 21, coincides with the anniversary of the official date of the
declaration of
martial law by President
Ferdinand Marcos Sr. in 1972, a symbolic choice for groups emphasizing democratic rights and government accountability.
2025 protests The 2025 protests are a series of widespread protests in the
Philippines, mainly to be held at
Rizal Park in
Manila and at the
People Power Monument along
EDSA in
Quezon City, both within
Metro Manila. It involves several anti-corruption protests stemming from the investigation of government corruption in flood control programs, involving both executive and legislative branches of the Philippine government. The date coincides with the 53rd anniversary of
the declaration of
martial law in the Philippines. Several cities and municipalities in different provinces have also held their own protests within their locality. The protests in Rizal Park are organized by various sectoral groups, including activists and students, while the protest at the People Power Monument is known as the "
Trillion Peso March". Organized by church groups, mainly the
Catholic Church and
Protestant churches, civil society organizations, labor unions, and political coalitions, the protests respond to
alleged corruption in government flood control infrastructure projects. According to reports, the demonstrations focus on allegations of massive irregularities in
flood control programs, with some
₱1.9 trillion (
US$33 billion) spent over the past 15 years, more than half of which was allegedly lost to corruption.
Maldives ==Gen Z protests status==