Pandav Gufa Rural Municipality

Jagannath Rural Municipality (Nepali: जगन्नाथ गाउँपालिका) is the newly formed rural municipality in Bajura District in the Sudurpashchim Province of Nepal.[1] It was formed in March 2017, when Government of Nepal decided to restrict all old administrative structure and announced 744 local level units in line with the Constitution of Nepal 2015.[2]

Jagannath Rural Municipality
जगन्नाथगाउँपालिका
Jagannath Rural Municipality is located in Nepal
Jagannath Rural Municipality
Jagannath Rural Municipality
Location in Nepal
Coordinates: 29.45°N 81.62°E / 29.45; 81.62
CountryNepal
ProvinceSudurpashchim Province
DistrictBajura
Rural MunicipalityJagannath Rural Municipality
No.of wards6
Government
  TypeGaunpalika Rural Council
  MayorKali Bahadur Shahi
  Deputy MayorAina Giri
Area
  Total171.72 km2 (66.30 sq mi)
Population
 (2017/18)
  Total9,432
  Religion
Hindu
Time zoneUTC+5:45 (Nepal Time)
Postal code
10600
Headquarterjuddi
Websitejagannath.gov.np

History

It was formed by merging previous VDC named Gotre, and ward no 1 to 8 of Jagannath.[3] First it was named as PandavGufa rural municipality, later on the name was changed to Jagannath Rural municipality. Jagannath Rural Municipality has an area of 171.72 square kilometres (66.30 sq mi) and the population of this municipality is 9,432. It is the third smallest rural municipality in terms of population and area. It is divided into six wards and the headquarter of this newly formed municipality is at Juddi. It is unique in its unity in diversity.

Demographics

At the time of the 2011 Nepal census, Jagannath Rural Municipality had a population of 9,432. Of these, 99.7% spoke Nepali and 0.3% other languages as their first language.[4]

In terms of ethnicity/caste, 43.1% were Chhetri, 16.6% Sarki, 13.4% Thakuri, 10.8% Damai/Dholi, 5.5% Sanyasi/Dasnami, 5.2% Kami, 3.9% Lohar, 0.9% Hill Brahmin, 0.2% Dhanuk, 0.1% Tharu and 0.2% others.[5]

In terms of religion, 99.7% were Hindu and 0.3% Christian.[6]

In terms of literacy, 53.5% could read and write, 2.5% could only read and 44.0% could neither read nor write.[7]

References

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