The protesters vandalised the stage and set it on fire after Bhattarai cut short his speech in Janakpur. He was escorted out from the stage amid chaos.
The 61-year-old leader had barely addressed the gathering for about 10 minutes when Madhesi supporters began shouting anti-Constitution slogans and showed black flags.
Two leaders of the UCPN-Maoist, who accompanied Bhattarai to the venue, were manhandled during the programme.
Bhattarai said he came to Janakpur to bridge the gap between Kathmandu and the Madhes region. He also demanded that amendments be made in the constitution to ensure Madheshi peoples' rights are protected.
"I am of the opinion that the rights of Madhesis, Tharus and Janajati that are amiss should be included in the Constitution," he said.
Bhattarai, who spent his years as a student at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University and is said to have close ties with India, has been sympathetic to the Madhesi agitation demanding more rights and representation to the people residing in the southern plains of Nepal.
The former prime minister expressed solidarity to the ongoing agitation in the southern plains over splitting of the country into seven provinces.
But the angry protesters forced Bhattarai to cut-short his speech and leave the venue. They followed him to the Janakpur Airport, where security personnel struggled to escort him inside the airport.
Tear-gas shells were fired to disperse the protesters outside the airport. At least seven protesters were injured.
Bhattarai last week announced he had quit the UCPN-Maoist and also resigned from Parliament to form a new "political force" amid differences with the major Nepalese parties over the new Constitution.
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