Junichande Rural Municipality

Rural Municipality in Karnali Province, Nepal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Junichande (Nepali: जुनीचाँदे गाउँपालिका) is a rural municipality located in Jajarkot District of Karnali Province of Nepal.[1][2]

Country   Nepal
Established10 March 2017
HeadquarterMajhkot
Quick facts जुनीचाँदे गाउँपालिका, Country ...
Junichande
जुनीचाँदे गाउँपालिका
Junichande is located in Nepal
Junichande
Junichande
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 28.88°N 82.03°E / 28.88; 82.03
Country   Nepal
ProvinceKarnali Province
DistrictJajarkot
Wards11
Established10 March 2017
Government
  TypeRural Council
  ChairpersonMr. Bed Bahadur Shahi (CPN(UML))
  Vice-chairpersonMr. Birendra Bahadur Shahi (NC)
Area
  Total
346.21 km2 (133.67 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
  Total
21,733
  Density62.774/km2 (162.58/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (NST)
HeadquarterMajhkot
WebsiteOfficial website
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According to Ministry of Federal Affairs and General Administration, Junichande has an area of 346.21 square kilometres (133.67 mi2) and the total population of the rural municipality is 21,733 as of 2011 Nepal census.[3]

Majhkot, Garkhakot, Daha and Kortrang which previously were all separate Village development committees merged to form this new local level body. Fulfilling the requirement of the new Constitution of Nepal 2015, Ministry of Federal Affairs and General Administration replaced all old VDCs and Municipalities into 753 new local level bodies.

The rural municipality is divided into total eleven wards and the headquarters of this newly formed rural municipality is situated at Majhkot.

Demographics

At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, Junichande Rural Municipality had a population of 21,733. Of those, 95.6% spoke Nepali, 3.2% Kham, 1.1% Magar and 0.1% Maithili and 0.1% other languages as their first language.[4]

In terms of ethnicity/caste, 38.7% were Chhetri, 22.9% Kami, 21.4% Thakuri, 5.6% Damai/Dholi, 4.9% Magar, 2.9% Sanyasi/Dasnami, 1.3% Hill Brahmin, 1.1% Sarki, 0.5% Badi, 0.3% Kathabaniyan, 0.1% other Dalit, 0.1% other Terai, 0.1% Tharu and 0.1% others.[5]

In terms of religion, 98.0% were Hindu and 2.0% Christian.[6]

In terms of literacy, 53.0% could read and write, 5.6% could only read and 41.2% could neither read nor write.[7]

References

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