Minister of Home Affairs (Nepal)
Appearance
Minister of Home Affairs | |
---|---|
गृहमन्त्रालय | |
since 15 July 2024 | |
Ministry of Home Affairs | |
Style | His Excellency |
Member of | Council of Ministers |
Reports to | Prime Minister |
Seat | Singha Durbar, Nepal |
Nominator | Home Minister |
Appointer | The President |
Term length | No fixed term |
Inaugural holder | B. P. Koirala |
Formation | 21 February 1951 |
The Minister of Home Affairs (or simply, the Home Minister, (Nepali: गृहमन्त्री, romanized: Gṛha Mantrī) is the head of the Ministry of Home Affairs of the Government of Nepal. One of the senior-most officers in the Federal Cabinet, the chief responsibility of the Home Minister is the maintenance of Nepal's internal security; the country's large police force comes under its jurisdiction. Occasionally, they are assisted by the Minister of State of Home Affairs and the lower-ranked Deputy Minister of Home Affairs.[1][2]
List of ministers of home affairs
[edit]This is a list of former Ministers of Home Affairs since Nepal was declared Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal:
# | Name | Term of office | Prime Minister | Minister's Party | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bam Dev Gautam | 18 August 2008[3] | 25 May 2009 | 280 days | Pushpa Kamal Dahal | CPN (UML) | ||
2 | Bhim Bahadur Rawal | 25 May 2009 | 6 February 2011 | 1 year, 257 days | Madhav Kumar Nepal | |||
3 | Krishna Bahadur Mahara | 6 February 2011 | 29 August 2011 | 204 days | Jhala Nath Khanal | Maoist Centre | ||
4 | Bijay Kumar Gachhadar | 4 September 2011 | 14 March 2013 | 1 year, 191 days | Baburam Bhattarai | MJFN (L) | ||
5 | Madhav Ghimire | 14 March 2013 | 11 February 2014 | 334 days | Khil Raj Regmi | Independent | ||
6 | Bam Dev Gautam | 25 February 2014 | 12 October 2015 | 1 year, 229 days | Sushil Koirala | CPN (UML) | ||
7 | Shakti Bahadur Basnet | 19 October 2015[4] | 4 August 2016 | 290 days | KP Sharma Oli | Maoist Centre | ||
8 | Bimalendra Nidhi | 4 August 2016[5] | 7 June 2017 | 307 days | Pushpa Kamal Dahal | Nepali Congress | ||
9 | Janardan Sharma | 7 June 2017[6] | 17 October 2017 | 132 days | Sher Bahadur Deuba | Maoist Centre | ||
10 | Ram Bahadur Thapa | 26 February 2018[a] | 20 May 2021 | 3 years, 83 days | KP Sharma Oli | Maoist Centre | ||
11 | Khagaraj Adhikari | 10 June 2021 | 22 June 2021 | 12 days | CPN (UML) | |||
12 | Bishnu Prasad Paudel | 24 June 2021 | 13 July 2021 | 19 days | ||||
13 | Bal Krishna Khand | 13 July 2021 | 26 December 2022 | 1 year, 166 days | Sher Bahadur Deuba | Nepali Congress | ||
14 | Rabi Lamichhane | 26 December 2022 | 27 January 2023[7] | 32 days | Pushpa Kamal Dahal | RSP | ||
15 | Narayan Kaji Shrestha | 31 March 2023 | 4 March 2024 | 339 days | Maoist Centre | |||
16 | Rabi Lamichhane | 6 March 2024 | 15 July 2024 | 131 days | RSP | |||
17 | Ramesh Lekhak | 15 July 2024 | Incumbent | 98 days | KP Sharma Oli | Nepali Congress |
Explanatory Note
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "गृह मन्त्रालय". moha.gov.np (in Nepali). Retrieved 2022-01-29.
- ^ "Council of Ministers | Office of the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers". Retrieved 2022-01-29.
- ^ "Meet the new cabinet of ministers". Nepali Times. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
- ^ "Nepal's Prime Minister KP Oli Expands Cabinet, Inducts 9 New Ministers". NDTV. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
- ^ "13 new ministers take oath from President". The Himalayan Times. 26 August 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ^ "Sher Bahadur Deuba sworn-in as Nepal's 40th prime minister". Xinhua. Archived from the original on March 30, 2019. Retrieved 1 March 2019.
- ^ "रवि लामिछानेको सांसद पद खारेज". OnlineKhabar. Retrieved 27 January 2023.