Dhekiajuli

Dhekiajuli is a town and a municipal board in Sonitpur district in the state of Assam, India.

Dhekiajuli
Town
Dhekiajuli is located in Assam
Dhekiajuli
Dhekiajuli
Location in Assam, India
Dhekiajuli is located in India
Dhekiajuli
Dhekiajuli
Dhekiajuli (India)
Coordinates: 26.7°N 92.5°E / 26.7; 92.5
Country India
StateAssam
DistrictSonitpur
Government
  BodyDhekiajuli Municipal Board
Elevation
100 m (300 ft)
Population
 (2001)
  Total19,743
Languages
  OfficialAssamese
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
ISO 3166 codeIN-AS
Vehicle registrationAS

Demographics

As of 2011 India census,[1] Dhekiajuli has a population of 21,579. Males constitute 51.42% of the population and females 48.58%. Dhekiajuli has an average literacy rate of 81.41%, higher than the national average of 74.04%. Male literacy rate is 85.07% while female literacy rate is 77.54%. 9.58% of the population is under 6 years of age. The town is fairly active in commercial trade centres. There is a daily market and weekly market hosting numerous shop vendors and people who sell their own as well as the local produce. The weekly market is open on Sundays. The town and its shops, except for medical centres and other public services, are officially closed on Tuesdays for restocking supplies.

Languages

Languages spoken in Dhekiajuli town (2011)[2]

  Bengali (49.81%)
  Assamese (24.63%)
  Hindi (18.67%)
  Nepali (1.54%)
  Others (5.36%)

Bengali is spoken at 10,748, Assamese at 5,314, Hindi by 4,028 people, Nepali at 332 and 1,157 people speaks other languages.[2]

Geography

Dhekiajuli is located at 26.7°N 92.5°E / 26.7; 92.5.[3] It has an average elevation of 100 metres (328 ft). There are several tea estates in its vicinity. Some of the major ones include Sapoi, Julia, Dibru-Darrang, Tinkhuria and Deckiajuli TE, Panbari TE run by Kanoi Groups of Companies) etc. Orang National Park is 31.7 km west of the main town of Dhekiajuli. The river Brahmaputra crosses the town.

Government

Dhekiajuli is part of Tezpur (Lok Sabha constituency).

Currently, the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party) is the ruling party of Dhekiajuli.

MLA: Ashok Singhal (BJP)

Education

Name of Institution Head of Institution Address Type Medium of Instruction
Dhekiajuli Boys High School Ward No. 8, Dhekiajuli, Assam Govt. Boys High School (SEBA) Assamese
Debendra Green Grove English High School Mr. Biplab Dey Monojuli, Dhekiajuli, Assam Private Co-ed High School (SEBA) English
Dhekiajuli Girls High School Ward No. 8, Dhekiajuli, Assam Govt. Girls High School (SEBA) Assamese
Little Angels High School Ward No. 8, Dhekiajuli, Assam Private Co-ed High School (SEBA) English
Lokanayak Omeo Kumar Das College Dr. Sukdev Adhikari[4] LOKD College Road, Dhekiajuli, Assam Govt. Higher Secondary (AHSEC) and Degree College English, Assamese, Bengali, Hindi
Netaji Bidya Mandir Mr. Chaitanya Bhadra Netaji Road, Dhekiajuli, Assam Govt. Co-ed High School (SEBA) Bengali
Saraswati Public School Near LOKD College, Dhekiajuli, Assam Private Co-ed High School (CBSE) English
St. Ursula High School Private Co-ed High School (SEBA) English
Tea Buds High School Private Co-ed High School (SEBA) English
Vivekananda Sister Nivedita Mr. Prithis Chandra Dey Private Co-ed High School (SEBA) English

Transport

Dhekiajuli Road railway station is a railway station on Rangiya–Murkongselek section under Rangiya railway division of Northeast Frontier Railway zone.[5]

Assam Violence in December 2014

In December 2014, a series of attacks by militants resulted in deaths of more than 75 people in Assam. The attacks took place in Chirang, Sonitpur and Kokrajhar districts on 23 December 2014. They have been attributed to the Songbijit faction of National Democratic Front of Bodoland, also known as NDFB(S).

The tribal people are mostly work in tea plantations. Some of them are the descendants of labourers brought to Assam by the British colonial rulers, while others are relatively recent migrants from other parts of India. The NDFB claims to represent the Bodo people, who are native to Assam. It has fought a secessionist war with the government for the establishment of a sovereign Bodoland. Although a number of NDFB militants had agreed to ceasefire and peace talks in the 2000s, the NDFB(S) faction led by I. K. Songbijit has refused to give up their militancy.

In May, the government had attributed a similar attack on Muslim migrants to NDFB(S). The December attacks, described as one of the worst massacres in the history of North-East India, led to widespread protests by tribal people. The protests turned violent leading to three more deaths in the hands of the police. The tribal people also killed fourteen Bodos in retaliation. On 26 December, the Government of India declared the launch of Operation All Out to eliminate the Bodo militants and deployed as many as 9,000 soldiers of the Indian Army and the Central Reserve Police Force.

References

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