Himali Rural Municipality

Himali (Nepali: हिमाली गाउँपालिका) is a rural municipality in Bajura District in the Sudurpashchim Province of Nepal. It was formed in March 2017, when Government of Nepal announced 744 local level units in line with the Constitution of Nepal 2015.[1] It lies in the northern region of Bajura District and is also considered to be the remote place of this district.

Himali Rural Municipality
हिमाली गाँउपालिका
Himali Rural Municipality is located in Nepal
Himali Rural Municipality
Himali Rural Municipality
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 29°32′N 81°40′E / 29.53°N 81.67°E / 29.53; 81.67
Country   Nepal
ProvinceSudurpashchim Province
DistrictBajura
MunicipalityHimali Rural Municipality
No.of wards7
Government
 • TypeRural Council
 • MayorGovinda Bahadur Malla
 • Deputy MayorChandra Devi Buddha
Area
 • Total
830.33 km2 (320.59 sq mi)
Population
 (2017/18)
 • Total
9,214
 • Religion
Hindu Buddhist
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (Nepal Time)
Postal code
10600
HeadquarterDhulachaur
Websitehttp://himalimun.gov.np/

History

edit

It is formed by merging previous VDCs named Bichhiya, Rugin and ward no. 1 to 7 of Baddhu VDC.[2] There is snowfall throughout the year in this region.

Himali Rural Municipality has an area of 830.33 square kilometres (320.59 sq mi) and the population of this municipality is 9,214. It is the second smallest rural municipality of Bajura district in terms of population. It is divided into 7 wards and the headquarter of this newly formed municipality is situated at Dhulachaur.

Demographics

edit

At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, Himali Rural Municipality had a population of 9,229. Of these, 95.9% spoke Nepali, 3.0% Sherpa, 0.8% Tamang, 0.1% Maithili and other languages as their first language.[3]

In terms of ethnicity/caste, 57.5% were Chhetri, 12.3% Hill Brahmin, 9.4% Sarki, 5.3% Thakuri, 3.5% Lohar, 3.2% Bhote, 2.7% Kami, 2.3% Damai/Dholi, 1.3% other Dalit, 0.8% Tamang, 0.6% Teli, 0.5% Badi, 0.2% other Terai, 0.1% Sanyasi/Dasnami and 0.2% others.[4]

In terms of religion, 96.0% were Hindu and 4.0% Buddhist.[5]

In terms of literacy, 51.8% could read and write, 3.2% could only read and 44.9% could neither read nor write.[6]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "New local level structure comes into effect from today". The Himalayan Times. March 10, 2017.
  2. ^ "Final District 1-75 Corrected Last for RAJAPATRA" (PDF). mofald.gov.np (in Nepali).
  3. ^ NepalMap Demographics [1]
  4. ^ NepalMap Demographics [2]
  5. ^ NepalMap Demographics [3]
  6. ^ NepalMap Literacy [4]