Fifth French PM quits in three years: Can Macron survive, and what’s next?

French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu has plunged France further into a political deadlock after he resigned just hours after forming a cabinet as Paris struggles to plug its mounting debt.

Lecornu – whose tenure, which ended on Monday, was the shortest in modern French history – blamed opposition politicians for refusing to cooperate after a key coalition partner pulled support for his cabinet. He joins a growing list of French prime ministers who since last year have taken the job only to resign a short time later.

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Opposition parties in the divided French Parliament have increased pressure on President Emmanuel Macron to hold snap elections or even to resign – as have politicians and allies in his own camp. Analysts said Macron now appears to be caught on the back foot since Lecornu was widely seen as his “final bullet” to solve the protracted political crisis.

Here’s what to know about Lecornu’s resignation and why French politics are unstable:

French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu delivers a statement at the Hotel Matignon in Paris on October 6, 2025, after submitting his government’s resignation to the president [Stephane Mahe/ AFP]

What happened?

Lecornu and his ministers resigned on Monday morning after he had named a new government the previous day.

Lecornu took up his office on September 9 after his predecessor Francois Bayrou stepped down. His tenure lasted 27 days, the shortest since 1958 when France’s Fifth Republic began. He was France’s fifth prime minister since 2022 and its third since Macron called snap elections in June last year. He was formerly the minister of the armed forces from 2022 until last month.

In an emotional television address on Monday morning, Lecornu blamed political leaders from different ideological blocs for refusing to compromise to solve the crisis.

“The conditions were not fulfilled for me to carry out my function as prime minister,” the 39-year-old Macron ally said, adding that things could have worked if some had been “selfless”.

“One must always put one’s country before one’s party,” he said.

Macron, in what appeared to be a final attempt at stability, then asked Lecornu on Monday evening to stay on until Wednesday as the head of a caretaker government and to hold “final negotiations” with political parties in the interests of stability. It’s unclear what exactly these talks might entail or whether Lecornu might still emerge as prime minister at the end of them.

In a statement late on Monday on X, Lecornu said he accepted Macron’s proposal “to hold final discussions with the political forces for the stability of the country”. He added that he will report back to Macron by Wednesday evening and the president can then “draw his own conclusions”.

France expert Jacob Ross of the Hamburg-based German Council on Foreign Relations said the caretaker agreement was a “bizarre” one, even if legal, and underscored Macron’s desperation to project some form of control even as his options appear to be running out.

“For me, this really secures the narrative that Lecornu was Macron’s last bullet” to solve the current crisis, Ross said.

Why did Lecornu quit?

France has a deeply divided parliament that makes consensus difficult. Far-right and left-wing parties together hold more than 320 seats in the 577-seat lower house and abhor each other. Macron’s centrist and conservative bloc, which has tried to win conditional support from the left and right to rule, holds 210. No party has an overall majority.

After forming his government on Sunday, Lecornu immediately lost the support of the right-wing Republicans party (LR), which holds 50 seats, because of his choice for defence minister — former Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire.

LR President Bruno Retailleau, who was set to be interior minister in the government, announced on X on Sunday evening that his party was pulling out of the coalition because it did not “reflect the promised break” from pro-Macron ideologies initially assured by Lecornu. He said later on the broadcaster TF1 that Lecornu did not tell him Le Maire would be part of the government.

Le Maire is seen by many critics as representing Macron’s pro-privatisation economic policies and not the radical shifts that Lecornu promised in the three weeks of negotiations before forming a cabinet. Others, meanwhile, hold Le Maire responsible for overseeing the large public deficit during his term as finance minister from 2017 to 2024.

Lecornu’s exit affected the markets with stocks of prominent French companies dropping sharply by about 2 percent on the CAC 40, France’s benchmark stock index, although it has somewhat recovered since then.

Ministers who were supposed to form the government will now remain as caretakers until further notice. “I despair of this circus where everyone plays their role but no one takes responsibility,” Agnes Pannier-Runacher, who was set to be reappointed as ecology minister, said in a post on X.

protests france
Demonstrators march during a protest called by major trade unions to oppose budget cuts in Nantes in western France on September 18, 2025 [Mathieu Pattier/AP]

Why has France’s politics become unstable?

The issues go back to the snap elections in June 2024, which produced a hung parliament consisting of Macron’s centrist bloc as well as left and far-right blocs. With Macron failing to achieve a majority and with parliament consisting of such an uncomfortable coalition, his government has faced hurdles in passing policies.

Added to the political impasse are Macron’s attempts to push through deeply unpopular austerity measures to close widening deficits that resulted from COVID-19-era spending.

Bayrou, who was prime minister from December to September, proposed budget cuts in July to ease what he called France’s “life-threatening” debt burden and cut public spending by 44 billion euros ($52bn) in 2026. His plans included a freeze on pensions, higher taxes for healthcare and scrapping two holidays to generate economic activity. However, they were met with widespread furore in parliament and on the streets and resulted in waves of protests across France. Parliament eventually rejected Bayrou’s proposals in September, ending his nine-month run.

Lecornu, meanwhile, had abandoned the holiday clause and promised to target lifelong privileges enjoyed by ministers. He had negotiated with each bloc for three weeks, hoping to avoid a vote of no confidence. By Monday, it was clear that his approach had not worked.

Public anger has increasingly also been directed at Macron since he first imposed higher fuel taxes in 2018 – and later scrapped them after large-scale protests. In April 2023, Macron again drew popular anger when he forced through pension reforms that raised the retirement age from 62 to 64. That policy was not reversed despite large protests led by trade unions. At present, the French president’s popularity in opinion polls has sunk to record lows.

“There is a numb anger in the voter base, a sense that politicians are playing around, and a huge part of the French electorate is disgusted,” Ross said. “My fear is that it is a potentially promising starting position to call for new elections but also a referendum on topics like migration and even France staying on in the European Union.”

Macron
President Emmanuel Macron speaks to members of the media at the EU summit in Copenhagen, Denmark, on October 2, 2025 [Leonhard Foeger/Reuters]

What’s next for Macron?

Macron, due to be in office until April 2027, is increasingly under pressure. Opposition groups are capitalising on Lecornu’s resignation, and his own allies are publicly distancing themselves from him in a bid to boost their standing in the next elections, analysts said.

The anti-immigrant and anti-EU National Rally (RN) on Monday urged Macron to hold elections or resign. “This raises a question for the president of the republic: Can he continue to resist the legislature dissolution? We have reached the end of the road,” party leader Marine Le Pen told reporters on Monday. “There is no other solution. The only wise course of action in these circumstances is to return to the polls.” The RN is expected to gain more seats if elections are held.

Similar calls came from the left with members of the far-left France Unbowed party asking for Macron’s exit.

The president, who has not made a public statement but was spotted walking alone along the River Seine on Monday, according to the Reuters news agency, is also isolated within his own camp. Gabriel Attal, prime minister from January to September 2024 and head of Macron’s Renaissance party, said on the TF1 television channel that he no longer understood Macron’s decisions and it was “time to try something else”.

Edouard Phillipe, a key ally of Macron and prime minister from 2017 to 2020, also said Macron should appoint a caretaker prime minister and then call for an early presidential election while speaking on France’s RTL Radio. Phillipe, who is running in the 2027 elections under his centrist Horizons party, slammed what he said is a “distressing political game”.

France needs to “emerge in an orderly and dignified manner from a political crisis that is harming the country”, Philippe said. “Another 18 months of this is far too long.”

“People are seriously speculating that he might step down, and his allies are seeing him as political [dead] weight,” Ross said.

Macron, he added, has three options: elect yet another prime minister who might still struggle to gain parliamentary consensus, resign or more likely call for snap parliamentary elections – which could still fail to produce a majority government. All three options would come with their own challenges for the president, he noted. Macron has repeatedly ruled out stepping down.

Pope Leo plans symbolic debut foreign trips to Turkiye and Lebanon

Pope Leo XIV has chosen Turkiye and Lebanon as the destinations for his first trip abroad as pontiff.

The Vatican said on Tuesday that Leo, the first pope who hails from the United States, will travel to Turkiye from November 27-30, followed by Lebanon from November 30-December 2.

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The choice of the two Muslim-majority destinations is viewed as symbolic and rich in meaning for both Christians and Muslims. Both countries are home to ancient Christian communities, and the late Pope Francis had hoped to visit them before his death.

Leo’s visit to Turkiye will come during the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, the first ecumenical council, held in what is now the Turkish city of Iznik.

He is expected to meet with Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual leader of the world’s 260 million Orthodox Christians, for celebrations marking the council, which established key tenets of the Christian faith.

Reverend John Chryssavgis, an adviser to Bartholomew, called the visit “profoundly symbolical”.

“Pope Leo is doubtless seeking to express and affirm his identity as a Christian in a world of many different creeds, where all people, regardless of religion and race, are called to live together in mutual understanding,” Chryssavgis told the Reuters news agency.

A view of Iznik town centre, where Pope Leo is expected to visit for celebrations of the 1,700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicaea, in Iznik, Turkiye, October 6 [Murad Sezer/Reuters]

In Lebanon, Leo plans to commemorate the 2020 Beirut port explosion that killed 200 people. The country of six million people has the largest ratio of Christians in the Middle East and is the only Arab nation with a Christian head of state, President Joseph Aoun.

The visit will offer Leo – elected to head The Holy See on May 8 – a platform to appeal for peace in the Middle East and address the plight of the region’s Christians.

Like his predecessor, Leo has repeatedly called for peace and dialogue in the region, including calling for a ceasefire in Gaza to end the “terror, destruction and death”.

On Sunday, he spoke optimistically about ongoing negotiations to end the war in Gaza, saying “significant steps” had been made and urging “all those in positions of responsibility to commit themselves to this path.”

Myanmar activists to sue Norway’s Telenor for handing data to military

A group of civil society organisations in Myanmar plans to take legal action against Norwegian telecoms firm Telenor, accusing it of passing customer data to the country’s military government for use in repression.

The activists sent Telenor a notice of intent to sue on Monday, according to a statement from the Netherlands-based nonprofit Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO), which is backing the case. The case states that the data shared by the telecoms giant was used by the military following its 2021 coup to trace and target civilians.

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The claimants allege that Telenor, majority-owned by the Norwegian government, disclosed data from millions of customers to the military authorities, which, after toppling the country’s elected government, embarked on a campaign of violence and repression.

They say the information helped the military target anti-coup activists, several of whom were tortured in detention and one of whom was executed.

Telenor, which has previously faced investigations over its actions from Norwegian authorities, asserts it was trapped by the situation in Myanmar with “no good options”.

One claimant, Thazin Nyunt Aung, said she is “terribly disturbed and shocked” by the data disclosures, which occurred weeks before her husband, lawmaker Phoe Zeya Thaw, was arrested and executed.

Ko Ye, another claimant, said she feels “betrayed” by a company that had a reputation for integrity.

“We were in danger, in struggle, in a very difficult position. But Telenor did not protect us. On the contrary. Our data was used as a weapon against us”, said Ye.

Jan Magne Langseth, a lawyer with Norwegian firm Simonsen Vogt Wiig representing the clients, said Telenor “should never have handed over this information” and “must be held accountable for its failures”.

‘ No good options ‘

Facing pressure from Myanmar’s government to implement surveillance technology that could have provoked European Union sanctions, Telenor ultimately sold its business in Myanmar in 2021 to Lebanese investment firm M1 Group and majority-owner Shwe Byain Phyu, a local conglomerate whose chairman has a history of military ties. The claimants say the sale gave the military “unfettered access” to customer data.

Langseth said Telenor “should have deleted all sensitive data before selling its operations and exiting Myanmar”.

Telenor said in a statement to the Reuters news agency that the legal notice raises issues that have already been addressed, including those that have been the subject of previous Norwegian police and court investigations.

Following the coup, the business said it had “no good options” for dealing with “the situation” in Myanmar because obeying military orders would have “been perceived as terrorism and sabotage, and would have put employees in immediate danger.

Telenor Myanmar was legally required to provide traffic data to the authorities, according to the business.

Since the coup and subsequent military crackdown, which led to a nationwide armed uprising, Myanmar has experienced crisis.

Is Donald Trump trying to dial back tensions with Brazil?

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva asked United States President Donald Trump to lift the 40 percent additional trade tariff imposed by the US government on Brazilian imports, in a phone call on Monday.

The leaders spoke for 30 minutes. During the call, they exchanged phone numbers in order to maintain a direct line of contact, and President Lula reiterated his invitation for Trump to attend the upcoming climate summit in Belem, according to a statement from Lula’s office.

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The apparently friendly call may signal a turnaround in relations between the two, which have been strained in recent months, experts say. It also follows Trump’s comment that he had “excellent chemistry” with his Brazilian counterpart after the two had a brief, unscheduled meeting and even exchanged a hug on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York last Tuesday.

“I was surprised indeed,” Lula said about embracing the US president. “I was going to get my papers and leave, then Trump came to my side. A very friendly face, very nice, you know? I think there was some chemistry indeed.”

Since then, both sides have suggested that a formal, in-person meeting between the two could happen later this month.

Trump and Lula have been at loggerheads since July, when the US leader imposed tariffs totalling 50 percent on Brazilian exports (the 40 percent tariff plus a 10 percent standard tariff imposed by the current administration in Washington on all nations). In announcing those tariffs on Brazil, Trump cited what he described as a “fraudulent” prosecution of former President Jair Bolsonaro, who was recently sentenced to 27 years in prison for attempting to overturn the 2022 presidential election which he lost to Lula.

Why have tensions been building between Trump and Lula?

Although the US has a trading surplus with Brazil – meaning it exports more to Brazil than it imports – Trump nevertheless imposed a total 50 percent tariff on a number of Brazilian exports in July. In general, Trump has said that tariffs imposed on other countries’ exports are designed to redress the balance of a US trading deficit. That is not the case here.

Known as the “Trump of the Tropics”, Bolsonaro, a former army captain, led Brazil for a single term, from 2019 to 2023. Last month, Bolsonaro was sentenced to 27 years in prison for orchestrating an attempted military coup, following his 2022 electoral defeat to Lula.

Trump, who said he had many “shared values” with Bolsonaro, similarly claimed to have lost a “fraudulent” election to Joe Biden in 2020. There is no evidence to support this claim.

In his letter to Brazil to announce the new tariffs in July, Trump wrote: “The way that Brazil has treated…  Bolsonaro, a Highly Respected Leader throughout the World during his term, including by the United States, is an international disgrace.

“This trial should not be taking place,” he added. “It is a Witch Hunt that should end IMMEDIATELY!”

In addition to sky-high tariffs, Trump tried to further pressure Lula to drop the case by hitting supreme court justices with visa bans and slapping financial sanctions on the judge overseeing the case – Alexandre de Moraes.

He also revealed in his tariff letter to Brazil that he had directed US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer to investigate Brazil for unfair practices under the Trade Act of 1974.

Ultimately, however, Brazil went ahead with Bolsonaro’s prosecution, and the former president was convicted.

And even though Trump voiced surprise at Bolsonaro’s verdict – describing him as a “good man” on the day he was sentenced – the US president has since then not escalated further tariffs or other penalties against Brazil.

In mid-September, Lula described Trump’s tariffs in an interview with the BBC as “eminently political”, and told US consumers they would face higher prices for Brazilian goods as a result.

Why might Trump be softening his stance towards Lula now?

In an unplanned exchange on the sidelines of the UNGA in New York last Tuesday, the two presidents spoke in person for the first time. “At least for 39 seconds, we had excellent chemistry,” Trump said after their encounter.

“He seemed like a very nice man, actually,” Trump told reporters. “He liked me, I liked him.” His comments have been interpreted by some analysts as a potential thawing in recent US-Brazil relations.

However, Trump’s softer tone may have been prompted by hard economic realities, according to Pantheon Macroeconomics’ chief Latin America economist, Andres Abadia. The US depends heavily on Brazil for its coffee and meat imports, and both have taken a hit amid the tariff war. The result: Prices have shot up.

Brazil is the largest source of imported coffee for the US – responsible for $1.33bn out of the $7.85bn total coffee imports by the US in 2023, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity (OEC). But since the 50 percent tariffs kicked in, Cecafe, Brazil’s council of coffee exporters, said exports to the US fell by 46 percent in August and had dropped 20 percent more by September 19.

Amid that supply crunch, coffee prices in the US rose 21 percent in August compared with a year earlier, even as overall food price inflation hovered at about 3 percent, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

“The prospect of higher coffee prices,” Abadia said, “would be bad for Trump.”

Brazil is also the US’s third-largest source of imported meat, behind Australia and Canada, according to the US Department of Agriculture. “As with coffee, higher beef prices would hit Trump,” Abadia told Al Jazeera.

Beef and veal prices rose by almost 14 percent in August compared with a year earlier, according to the BLS.

By contrast, Brazil appears to have weathered Trump’s tariffs better than the US might have expected: Its overall exports grew in September, compared with a year earlier, as it expanded its offerings to other markets, including China and Argentina.

According to a new survey published on September 29 by The New York Times and Siena University, Trump’s approval ratings have fallen recently, with 58 percent of respondents saying they think the country is headed in the wrong direction.

“Inflation is definitely biting in the US,” says Abadia. “And anything that can be done to ease the pain, especially as we approach the holiday season, would be seen as positive.”

What’s in it for Lula?

Even though Brazil’s exports, on the whole, have not fallen, its declining access to the US – a critical market – could hurt the interests of its export-oriented industries.

Lula, experts say, may at least seek additions from Trump to a long list of Brazilian goods already exempt from tariffs – including civilian aircraft and orange juice. At the moment, meat and coffee are both tariffed at 50 percent.

But the Brazilian president may not be willing to offer the same sorts of one-sided concessions that Japan and the European Union agreed to – such as tariff reductions and investment pledges – to get their own trade deals through, say analysts.

Indeed, for his part, Lula’s feud with Trump has boosted his popularity, and Washington’s interventions in Brazilian politics have put the country’s conservatives on the back foot. Before next year’s presidential election, Lula is currently polling ahead of his top opponents, though the 79-year-old has not formally announced his bid. Lula was also the country’s president from 2003 to 2011.

Still, Abadia believes an opportunity for rapprochement is there. The most fertile area for compromise may lie in rare earth minerals. Brazil has the world’s second-largest reserves behind China. And for now, they remain largely untapped.

“Critical minerals are one area where bilateral interests align,” he said. “The US wants to diversify away from China and play an important role in the Brazilian market.”

Trump has shown a clear interest in rare earths, placing them at the heart of his deal with Ukraine, for instance. Brazil, on its part, wants to emerge as an exporter and supplier of these minerals.

What caused Nepal’s devastating flood damage and how was it contained?

Heavy rains have resulted in severe flooding and landslides in Nepal and India’s eastern Himalayan city of Darjeeling in the past few days.

Dozens of people have been killed in landslides in Nepal’s eastern hilly district of Ilam, which borders India. Local media reported that 41 families have been displaced in Nepal.

However, the government of Nepal’s interim Prime Minister Sushila Karki was praised for its response to the floods. Experts credited it with keeping deaths and destruction to a minimum.

Here is what we know.

How much rain has Nepal had?

Heavy downpours began on October 3, and data from the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology (DHM) show that some parts of Nepal experienced heavy rainfall. While the overall rainfall was slightly lower than last year, the destruction has still been bad because of “ultra-localised” heavy rains.

Pawan Bhattarai, an assistant professor at the civil engineering department of Kathmandu-based Tribhuvan University, told Al Jazeera that several districts in the central-eastern Terai plains and eastern hills bore the brunt of the storm, with weather stations in Rautahat and Ilam recording more than 330mm and 300mm of rain, respectively, on Saturday and Sunday.

Rainfall is normally considered extremely heavy if there is more than 150mm in 24 hours.

In the capital, Kathmandu, some districts received slightly more than 145mm of rain on Sunday compared with roughly 240mm in late September last year, when Kathmandu Valley experienced its heaviest deluge since 2002. Some parts of Kathmandu recorded as much as 322.2mm of rain last year, when the floods killed more than 200 people.

(Al Jazeera)

What caused the floods and landslides this year?

Various factors triggered the devastating floods this year.

Monsoon winds

Bhattarai explained that the flooding and landslides were an outcome of “an exceptionally intense and concentrated monsoon downpour”, which was caused by moisture-laden monsoon winds entering Nepal from the Bay of Bengal through the Indian states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

As a result, very high amounts of rain fell in a short period of time in ultra-localised areas. Some areas received a lot of rainfall over a short duration, while other parts remained largely dry.

Topography

Compounding this, the topography of some regions in the country is not suited to heavy downpours, Bhattarai said. “The massive volume of water overwhelmed the flat plains of districts like Rautahat, Bara and Parsa, causing widespread flooding.”

These three districts are in the Madhesh province in the mid-south of Nepal, bordering India. They are situated on the Terai plains – a flat, arable area – making it vulnerable to flooding because they have little to no elevation to redirect floodwater.

“Simultaneously, the same intense rainfall destabilised the steep slopes of hilly districts like Ilam, triggering the fatal landslides. In contrast, other areas like Kathmandu received significantly less rain, highlighting the localised nature of this extreme weather event,” he added.

Poor infrastructure

“Unscientific infrastructure development – such as road expansions that destabilise slopes – and encroachment on natural landscapes have amplified the damage,” Bhattarai said.

He explained that the recurring landslides on the Narayangadh-Mugling highway have been exacerbated by inadequate planning, poorly designed roadwork and a lack of proper safeguards.

The Narayangadh-Mugling highway in central Nepal experiences landslides fairly frequently, with the last one reported on September 23, causing regular traffic disruptions.

Climate change

While the amount of rain that fell in Nepal was not unusually high this year, the increased frequency of intense weather in the country is most likely linked to climate change, Bhattarai said.

“Such extreme monsoon events are highly unusual and a major concern. This pattern of back-to-back intense flooding – last September and again this year – is consistent with the effects of climate change, which is intensifying the hydrological cycle and making severe weather events more frequent.”

Nepal flood
Army personnel help people retrieve their belongings and move to a safe area at a flooded street along the bank of overflowing Bagmati River following heavy rains, in Kathmandu, October 4, 2025 [Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters]

How has the government responded to the flooding?

Nepal has been contending with a difficult political situation in recent weeks.

On September 8, protests erupted in Kathmandu and other cities against corruption and nepotism. These “Gen Z” protests led by young people resulted in violence, numerous deaths and, ultimately, the resignation of Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. The army was deployed, and former Chief Justice Sushila Karki, 73, was chosen as interim PM.

She has been praised for the interim government’s preemptive response to the floods. Experts say the government responded promptly to weather forecasts from the meteorological department, issuing early warnings, ordering road closures and halting traffic on main roads and highways in advance of the flooding.

The actions that won appreciation in particular included:

  • Police in Kathmandu announced on loudspeakers that areas outside the city were vulnerable to flooding and landslides, and urged people not to leave the city.
  • Energy Minister Kulman Ghising, who oversees the Ministry of Urban Development, inspected the highways that were badly damaged by the floods last year. Ghising issued a directive to restrict vehicular movement across these routes.
  • The government stationed technical personnel and excavators in advance in vulnerable areas.
  • A two-day national holiday was declared on Sunday and Monday as a precautionary measure.
  • Army personnel were dispatched to help people move their belongings to other areas.

Damage was still extensive, however, said Bhattarai. “These efforts continue to face significant logistical challenges. Widespread damage to critical infrastructure has inherently hindered rebuilding and relief operations. While the political will for a coordinated response was present, the sheer scale of the physical destruction remains a major obstacle to recovery,” he said.

How could the disaster response be improved?

“While timely warnings and evacuation systems can significantly reduce human casualties from floods, this event highlights a critical gap in mitigating landslide fatalities, which are far more sudden and deadly,” Bhattarai said.

“To prevent future disasters, a major shift in policy and practice is urgently needed. This must prioritise comprehensive watershed management, focusing on stabilising slopes and managing water run-off, which has been a persistently neglected area in our current approach to disaster risk reduction.”

How does this compare with the government’s response last year?

The interim government’s response has been praised by many, including Sumana Shrestha, a minister in the previous government. She said the interim government performed much better than the Oli government’s response last year, The Kathmandu Post reported.

When the floods hit Nepal last year, Oli was in New York to attend the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA). He was criticised for not returning home to deal with the flooding.

When he returned, he said it was pointless to criticise the government for any delays in rescue operations, arguing that even weather forecasters could not precisely predict the locations of landslides.

However, Shanti Mahat, a spokesperson for the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority (NDRRMA), cautioned against drawing quick conclusions about the previous year’s response as rainfall had been higher. She added that a smaller amount of rain might have prevented flooding altogether.

Furthermore, Anil Pokhrel, the former executive director of NDRRMA, said while some precautions were taken last year, government orders to close roads and halt traffic were not fully enforced.

“Last year, too, we had decided to close roads to reduce risk, but because those decisions were not enforced, the country suffered heavy human losses,” Pokhrel told The Kathmandu Post.

This year, the public had memories of last year’s floods and took government orders seriously. “The fresh experiences from last year made it easier for the government this time to make quick decisions, which helped keep the damage lower,” Pokhrel said.

“This time, people seem to have learned from last year’s experience, which made the situation somewhat easier to handle,” Mahat told The Kathmandu Post.

What is the current situation in Nepal?

The amount of rain in Nepal had reduced significantly by Tuesday.

Districts in Kathmandu have received less than 5mm of rain in the 24 hours since Monday. The highest amount of rain recorded on Tuesday was more than 84mm in the Marin Khola station at Kusuntar in the Sindhuli district in the southeastern hills of Bagmati province.

Nepal flood
A man carries a bag as he wades through a flooded street along the bank of the overflowing Bagmati following heavy rains, in Kathmandu, October 4, 2025 [Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters]

What happened in India?

The downpours also resulted in deaths and destruction across the border in northeastern India.

Officials said 28 people were killed in storms. The city of Darjeeling in West Bengal was hit the hardest.

“Landslides have been reported from 35 locations in the hills of Darjeeling and more than 100 houses have been destroyed,” Praween Prakash, a West Bengal state police official, told the AFP news agency.