More than 35,000 Nepalese made a bid on Saturday to form the world’s largest “human national flag” as they sought to set a new international record.
As the national anthem played, participants held up crimson, blue and white cardboard for 10 minutes on open ground in Kathmandu’s city center to form the national flag.
Cries of “Nepal!” rang out as participants threw the cardboard pieces in the air to celebrate after the attempt.
Photo: AFP
Nepal’s flag is the world’s only one which is not a quadrilateral. Instead it is made of two triangles.
“We conceived this idea to spread the message that all our countrymen are united under one flag,” said Bhawesh Khanal, president of Human Values for Peace and Prosperity, the group that spearheaded the event.
Nepal is drafting a new constitution, a key step in a stalled peace process begun after the end of a 10-year civil war in 2006. Leaders have promised an inclusive constitution and federalism, ending gender and caste-based discrimination.
Numbered tickets were handed out to participants to keep a count of how many took part in the event.
“Our vision came true. Thousands of people came together to form our country’s flag and claim a new world record,” Khanal told reporters.
He said that the group would now submit its claim with photographic and video evidence for a new record to the headquarters of Guinness World Records in London.
They expect Guinness World Records to give a ruling on their submission within two months.
Among the participants was 15-year-old student Anita Gautam.
“It was an amazing experience,” she told reporters. “There is a patriotic vibe here ... a sense that we have to work together to build our country.”
Prominent banker Anil Shah was one of three official witnesses at the event.
“Watching it brought tears to my eyes. I felt proud to be a Nepali. I believe we’ve set a new record,” he said.
The current record for the world’s largest human national flag was set in February this year when 28,957 people gathered in Lahore, Pakistan, to create a Pakistani flag, according to Guinness World Records.
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