Karnali Province


Karnali Province is one of the seven federal provinces of Nepal formed by the new constitution, which was adopted on 20 September 2015. The total area of the province is, making it the largest province in Nepal with 18.97% of the country's area. According to the 2011 Nepal census, the population of the province was 1,570,418, making it the least populous province in Nepal. The province borders the Tibet Autonomous Region of China to the north, Gandaki Province to the east, Sudurpashchim Province to the west, and Lumbini Province to the south. Birendranagar with a population of 154,886 is both the province's capital and largest city.

Etymology

The province's name is derived from the Karnali River, which flows through the province. A meeting of the provincial assembly on 25 February 2018 adopted the name Karnali for the province.

History

Karnali is an old civilization connected with the Karnali River Archaeological sites found in Jumla, Surkhet and Dailekh infer that the area was part of the old Khasa kingdom, established during the 11th century. The capital of the Khas Kingdom was Sinja in present-day Jumla district. The kingdom expanded to a great extent in the 13th and 14th century; expanding to Garhwal in the west, Mansarowar and Guge regions of Tibet in the north, Gorkha-Nuwakot regions in the east and Kapilvastu with large areas of Terai in the south. After the late 14th century, the Khas empire collapsed and was divided into the Baise Rajya in Karnali-Bheri region.
Before the unification of modern Nepal, a part of Karnali was in the Sanghiya Baise Rajya. The principalities were sovereign but intermittently allied among themselves until they were annexed during the unification of modern Nepal from 1744 to 1810.

Geography

Karnali is the largest province of Nepal with an area of. The province is surrounded by Gandaki Province in east, Lumbini Province in south-east and south, Sudurpashchim Province in the west and Tibet Autonomous Region of China in north.
The province has occupied higher mountains land of north and mid-hills of Nepal. It contains Kubi Gangri, Changla and Kanjiroba mountains in north. The Shey Phoksundo National Park with Phoksundo lake is the largest national park of Nepal and Rara lake is the largest lake of Nepal which are located in Karnali Province. Karnali River is the biggest river of the province which is thought to be the longest river in Nepal. Seti River and Bheri River are tributaries of Karnali, and Kupinde Daha is a lake of Karnali.
LocationAugust
August
January
January
Annual
Precipitation
Kharpunath488.99.5−12.5209.5/8.2
Simikot54.912.717.6−8304.2/12
Chandannath60.81629.7−1.3728.9/28.7
Narayan71.822.145.37.41252.3/49.3
Birendranagar78.425.853.211.81651/65

Demographics

According to the 2021 Census of Nepal, Karnali Province has a population of 1,688,412 comprising 864,651 females and 823,761 males. The province has the lowest population in the country, having 5.93% of the population on 19.74% of the land. The population density of the province is 56 people per square kilometer. 10.00% of the population is under 5 years of age. It has a literacy rate of 76.08%.

Ethnic groups

Khas people make up a majority of the population with 72% of the population. Chhetris are the largest single caste. Khas Dalits make up 23% of the population within the Khas group, of which the Kami are the largest caste. Hill Janjatis make up 13% of the population, nearly all of which are Magars with 10% of the population. A few Tibetic groups which live in the high mountains are also living in this province.

Languages

Of the population, 88.85% of the population spoke Nepali, 6.34% Khash and 1.60% Magar as their first language. The dialect of Nepali spoken most in the province is variously known as Khash or by local names.
The Language Commission of Nepal has recommended Magar as an additional official language in the province. The most spoken language is Nepali, which is known with its original name Khas Bhasha in the province.

Religion

is the most followed religion in the province with 95.34% of the people identifying as Hindus. Buddhism is the largest minority religion, being followed by 3.09%, and Christianity is the second-largest minority religion, being followed by 1.30% of the population.

Government and administration

The Governor acts as the head of the province while the Chief Minister is the head of the provincial government. The Chief Judge of the Surkhet High Court is the head of the judiciary. The present Governor, Chief Minister and Chief Judge are Govindra Prasad Kaulani, Jeevan Bahadur Shahi and Hari Kumar Pokharel respectively. The province has 40 provincial assembly constituencies, 12 House of Representative constituencies and eight National Assembly seats.
Karnali has a unicameral legislature, like all of the other provinces in Nepal. The term length of the provincial assembly is five years. The Provincial Assembly of Karnali Province is temporarily housed at the Irrigation Division Office in Birendranagar.

Administrative subdivisions

Karnali is divided into ten districts.
DistrictsHeadquartersPopulation
Western Rukum DistrictMusikot155,383
Salyan DistrictSalyan242,444
Dolpa DistrictDunai36,700
Humla DistrictSimikot50,858
Jumla DistrictChandannath108,921
Kalikot DistrictManma136,948
Mugu DistrictGamgadhi55,286
Surkhet DistrictBirendranagar350,804
Dailekh DistrictNarayan261,770
Jajarkot DistrictKhalanga171,304

A district is administered by the head of the District Coordination Committee and the District Administration Officer. The districts are further dived to municipalities or rural municipalities which are further divided into wards. There are 25 municipalities and 54 rural municipalities in the province. The capital and largest city of the province is Birendranagar. It is only city in the province with a population of over 50,000.

Economy

Karnali Province has the lowest growth rate in the country with an annual economic growth rate of 5.7% and is also contributes the least to the GDP at 4.1%. The province is among the poorest in Nepal with an estimated 28.9% of people living under absolute poverty and 51.7% of the people are multidimensionally poor. The unemployment rate in the province stands at 9.7% which is the third-lowest in the country.

Agriculture

Karnali is the largest producer of barley in the country and accounted for 43% of the country's total share of barley production in 2018/19.

Environment

It is estimated in 2023, or the year 2078 in Nepal, that more than 96 percent or 1,644,022 of the citizens of Karnali province are forced to drink contaminated water, and only 3 percent or 50,847 of citizens in the province have access to clean drinking water, according to Nepalnews.