Chhededaha Rural Municipality

Place in Sudurpashchim Province, Nepal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Khaptad Chhededaha (Nepali: खप्तड छेडेदह गाउँपालिका) is a newly formed rural municipality in Bajura District in the Sudurpashchim Province of Nepal.[1] It was formed in March, 2017 in line with the Constitution of Nepal 2015[2] as per the requirement of Ministry of Federal Affairs and General Administration. The name of this municipality is originated after the name famous taal and khaptad NP of this area Chhededha Taal.

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Khaptad Chhededaha Rural Municipality
Khaptad Chhededaha Rural Municipality is located in Nepal
Khaptad Chhededaha Rural Municipality
Khaptad Chhededaha Rural Municipality
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 29.42°N 81.25°E / 29.42; 81.25
Country   Nepal
ProvinceSudurpashchim Province
DistrictBajura
MunicipalityChhededaha
No.of wards7
Government
  TypeRural Council
  MayorNar Bahadur Rawal
  Deputy MayorKunti Devi Saud (Budha)
Area
  Total
135.08 km2 (52.15 sq mi)
Population
 (2017/18)
  Total
18,575
  Religion
Hindu
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (Nepal Time)
Postal code
10600
HeadquarterDogadi
Websitechhededahamun.gov.np
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History

It is formed by merging previous VDCs named Kanda, Jayabageshwari, Gudukhati, Atichaur and Dogadi.[3]

Khaptad Chhededaha Rural Municipality has an area of 135.08 square kilometres (52.15 mi2) and the population of this municipality is 18,575. It is the biggest rural municipality in terms of population and fourth biggest on the basis of area. It is divided into seven wards and the headquarter of this newly formed rural municipality is at Dogadi.

Demographics

At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, Khaptad Chhededaha Rural Municipality had a population of 18,741. Of these, 99.9% spoke Nepali and 0.1% other languages as their first language.[4]

In terms of ethnicity/caste, 73.4% were Chhetri, 8.2% Kami, 3.7% Sarki, 3.3% Sanyasi/Dasnami, 2.8% Damai/Dholi, 2.6% Thakuri, 1.6% Hill Brahmin, 1.4% other Dalit, 1.4% Badi, 0.7% Tharu, 0.3% Lohar, 0.3% Kumal, 0.1% other Terai and 0.2% others.[5]

In terms of religion, 99.8% were Hindu, 0.1% Buddhist and 0.1% others.[6]

In terms of literacy, 49.0% could read and write, 1.9% could only read and 49.1% could neither read nor write.[7]

References

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