Tuesday, June 30th, 2026

Deputy Mayor breaks inscription after finding her name missing



DHANGADHI: Saturday saw a video of the inauguration ceremony of a Ward Office go viral.

The viral video displays Mayor Mamata Prasad Chaudhary being pushed aside by irate Deputy Mayor Prem Kumari Thapa immediately after he removes the red cover.

When the Mayor inaugurates the Ward Office Building of Ghoda Ghodi Municipality’s ward no 7 and DM Thapa sees her name missing she tries to break the inscription.

She protests shouting ‘down with the administration’ for not including her name in the inscription. The Mayor is seen trying to pacify Thapa and requests her to calm down, however, the DM gets further angry and spits on the petrograph.

DM Thapa is seen taking the issue as an insult to the DM just because she is a woman. She is seen provoked by some people standing behind her.

“There is the name of Mayor, Ward Chair and Ward Members but my name is deliberately skipped,” she says, “ They have deliberately not included my name in the inscription, just because the DM is a woman.”

However, Mayor Chaudhary defended the inscription saying generally the name of the person who inaugurates the building or program is included in the inscription.

“Generally, the name of the person who inaugurates the building is included,” he said, “ In case of the ward members, the ward committee makes the decision in this regard.”

Publish Date : 17 October 2020 21:19 PM

Finance Committee expresses concern over Nepal Rastra Bank report

KATHMANDU: The parliamentary Finance Committee has expressed serious concern over

Equipment and teams on standby to keep Narayangadh–Muglin road open during monsoon

KATHMANDU: With the onset of the monsoon season, authorities have

Indian Embassy concludes second Indian Ambassador’s Cricket Tournament in Kathmandu

KATHMANDU: The Embassy of India in Kathmandu successfully organized the

Home Ministry warns of strict action against hotels, restaurants serving substandard food

KATHMANDU: Following widespread public complaints over poor food quality and

87% of election misinformation spread via social media, study finds

KATHMANDU: A new study has found that 87 percent of