2017_Nepalese_local_elections

2017 Nepalese local elections

2017 Nepalese local elections

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The 2017 Nepalese local elections were held in Nepal in three phases on 14 May, 28 June and 18 September in 6 metropolitan cities, 11 sub-metropolitan cities, 276 municipalities and 460 rural municipalities.[1] It was the first local level election to be held since the promulgation of the 2015 constitution.[2]

Quick Facts 6 Metropolitan Cities 11 Sub-Metropolitan Cities 276 Municipalities 460 Rural Municipalities, Turnout ...

Background

Local elections were held in 53 municipalities in February 2006 under regime of King Gyanendra but were boycotted by the major political parties and saw low voter turnout.[3] Prior to 2006, the previous elections was held in 1997 with a mandate of five years. Elections were supposed to be held on 2002 but were delayed due to the then ongoing Nepal Civil War.

With the promulgation of the new constitution in 2015, a three-tier governance system was introduced, with national, provincial and local levels of governance. A Local Body Restructuring Commission was established as required by the constitution under the chairmanship of Balananda Paudel. The commission proposed 719 local structures which was revised to 753 by the government. The new local levels were formed by changing the existing cities and village development council and came into existence on 10 March 2017.[4]

Electoral system

Local levels will have a Chairperson/Mayor and a Deputy chairperson/mayor. Local levels are further subdivided into wards which will have a ward chairperson and 4 members. Out of the 4 members 2 must be female. All terms are for a total of 5 years. The elections are direct in nature and with the one getting the most ballots is declared the winner.[5]

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Results

Overall Results

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Results by province

Province No. 1

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Province No. 2

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Province No. 3

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Province No. 4

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Province No. 5

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Province No. 6

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Province No. 7

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Cities

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Incidents

The first phase of election was largely peaceful but there were sporadic instances of violence. A CPN-UML activist was killed in Gaurisankar Village Council, Dolakha on the eve of election.[6] Another person was killed in Namobuddha municipality, Kavre on the day of election, the incident is still under investigation.[7] One person died after security personnel opened fire during a clash between the cadres of Nepali Congress and CPN-UML in Melung Rural Municipality of Dolakha district on election day.[8] A candidate from Rastriya Prajantantra Party died in Naraharinath Village Council, Kalikot after police opened fire when cadres of Netra Bikram Chand led CPN tried to capture the ballot boxes.[9]

A reelection took place in one ward of Bharatpur after a CPN-Maoist Centre vote count representative tore 90 ballot papers when the count was in progress.[10]

In the second phase, a UML cadre died after being hit by a stone in his testicles during a clash with Nepali Congress cadres at Chededaha Village council Bajura. A cadre of Netra Bikram Chand-led CPN Maoist died in Dhangadi, Kailali after a bomb carried by him exploded prematurely on June 26.[11]


References

  1. "Grassroots democracy". Nepali Times. Himal Media. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
  2. Koirala, Kosh Raj. "Local polls after 20 years, finally". My Republica. Nepal Republic Media. Retrieved 2 April 2017.
  3. "Nepal Assessment 2006". South Asian Terrorism Portal. Institute for conflict management. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  4. "New local level structure comes into effect from today". THT online. International Media Network Nepal (Pvt) Ltd. 10 March 2017. Retrieved 2 April 2017.
  5. "APF accused of killing youth in Kavre". The Himalayan Time. 15 May 2017. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  6. "Chief Commissioner speech" (PDF). Election Commission of Nepal. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  7. "One injured from police bullets died in Kalikot". My Republica. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  8. "CPN Maoist cadre dies after bomb explodes prematurely". ekantipur. Kantipur Publications. Retrieved 23 August 2017.

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