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Board Established Jurisdictions Website Refs Hyderabad: 1961 Hyderabad District, Matiari District, Jamshoro District, Tando Allahyar District, Tando Muhammad Khan District, Thatta, Badin District, Sujawal District [17] [18] Karachi (Intermediate) 1974 Karachi Division [19] [20] Karachi (Secondary) 1950 [21] Larkana: 1995 Larkana Division [22] [23]
Nazimabad Town (Urdu: ناظم آباد ٹاؤن) is an administrative subdivision within Karachi, Pakistan [4] in the northern part of the city. It is named after the suburb of Nazimabad, which is named after the second Governor General of Pakistan Khawaja Nazimuddin.
North Nazimabad Town (Urdu: شمالی ناظم آباد ٹاؤن) lies in the northern part of the city of Karachi, Pakistan, and was named after the suburb of North Nazimabad. North Nazimabad Town was formed in 2001 as part of the Local Government Ordinance 2001, and was subdivided into 10 union councils and North Nazimabad Town was re ...
Their recruitment and appointment in respective services adhere to the specifications outlined in the 1973 Constitution of Pakistan. Appointment and selection of appointees do not discriminate based on gender, ethnicity, race, or sectarian factors.
The Quota system in Pakistan was established to give every region of the country representation in institutions according to their population. [1] The Quota System was first introduced in Pakistan in 1948 [2] [3] [4] The Civil Service of Pakistan selects only 7.5% of the applicants by merit, education, qualification and experience.
North Nazimabad (Urdu: نارتھ ناظم آباد) is a suburb of Karachi, Pakistan.North Nazimabad was developed in the late 1950s as a residential area for the employees of the federal government of Pakistan, and was named after Khawaja Nazimuddin who was the second Governor-General of Pakistan and later the second Prime Minister of Pakistan.
Before the independence of Pakistan, the area of the present day Nazimabad was semi-arid land with small Sindhi and Balochi villages nearly 10 KM from downtown Karachi. The Government of Pakistan bought the land in 1950 from the local landlord and tribal leader Masti Brohi Khan in order to resettle the Muslim refugees that were living in tent cities in central Karachi.
After the 1958 Pakistani coup d'état, the military decided to forcibly resettle the katchi abadis of Karachi into freshly created townships such as New Karachi. [1] The federal government under the ruling of Pervez Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup d'etat, introduced local government reforms in the year 2000, which eliminated the previous "third tier of government" (administrative ...