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Sushil Koirala cabinet

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Sushil Koirala cabinet

Cabinet of Nepal
February 2014–October 2015
Date formed25 February 2014
Date dissolved12 October 2015
People and organisations
PresidentRam Baran Yadav
Prime MinisterSushil Koirala
Deputy Prime MinisterPrakash Man Singh
Bam Dev Gautam
Total no. of members27 appointments
Member party
  •   Nepali Congress
  •   CPN (UML)
  •   RPP
  •   RPP-N
  •   CPN (ML)
Status in legislatureMajority (coalition)
433 / 599 (72%)



Opposition partyUCPN (Maoist)
Opposition leaderPushpa Kamal Dahal
History
Election2013
Legislature term2013–15
PredecessorRegmi interim cabinet
SuccessorFirst Oli cabinet

On 25 February 2014, following the 2013 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, the Nepali Congress Party formed a government out of the 2nd Nepalese Constituent Assembly led by Sushil Koirala and backed by the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist). The cabinet consisted of 11 ministers from the Nepali Congress Party, 11 ministers from the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist), one minister of the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), two ministers of the Rastriya Prajatantra Party and five ministers from other parties.[1][2]

Cabinet

[edit]
Portfolio Minister Party Assumed office Left office
Prime Minister[3]
Minister for Defence
Minister for Peace and Reconstruction
Minister for Science, Technology and Environment
Minister for Cooperatives and Poverty Alleviation
Sushil Koirala Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Deputy Prime Minister
Minister for Local Development
Prakash Man Singh Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Deputy Prime Minister
Minister for Home Affairs
Bam Dev Gautam CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Finance Ram Saran Mahat Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Forest Mahesh Acharya Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Information and Communications Minendra Rijal Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Urban Development Narayan Khadka Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Law Narahari Acharya Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Education Chitra Lekha Yadav Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Irrigation Narayan Prakash Saud Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Physical Planning and Construction Bimalendra Nidhi Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Foreign Affairs Mahendra Bahadur Pandey CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Energy Radha Gyawali CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Youth and Sports Purusottam Poudel CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Agriculture Hari Parajuli CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for General Administration Lal Babu Pandit CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Industries Karna Bahadur Thapa CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 14 September 2014[4]
Mahesh Basnet CPN (UML) 14 September 2014[5] 12 October 2015
Minister for Tourism and Civil Aviation Bhim Acharya CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 13 September 2014
Deepak Chandra Amatya CPN (UML) 14 September 2014[5] 22 May 2015
Kripasur Sherpa CPN (UML) 23 May 2015[6] 12 October 2015
Minister for Health and Population Khagaraj Adhikari CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Land Reforms and Management Dal Bahadur Rana CPN (UML) 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister for Women, Children and Social Affairs Nilam K.C. CPN (ML) 7 April 2014[3] 12 October 2015
Minister for Commerce and Supplies Sunil Thapa RPP 7 April 2014[3] 12 October 2015
Ministers of State
Minister of State for Labour Tek Bahadur Gurung Congress 25 February 2014 12 October 2015
Minister of State for Commerce and Supplies Giri Bahadur K.C. RPP-Nepal 7 April 2014[3] 12 October 2015


References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Meet the new cabinet of ministers". Nepali Times. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  2. ^ "Sushil Koirala becomes new Nepal prime minister". Livemint. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d "PM expands Cabinet; 3 ministers sworn in". The Kathmandu Post. 7 April 2014. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
  4. ^ "Acharya, Thapa were preparing to resign: Oli". The Kathmandu Post. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  5. ^ a b "महेश बस्नेतले छोपे एमालेभित्रको रहस्य". Online Khabar. Retrieved 19 December 2024.
  6. ^ "Sherpa appointed new tourism minister". The Kathmandu Post. Retrieved 12 October 2017.