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At the time of establishment of the High Court of West Pakistan the number of the Judges of the Karachi Bench was almost the same but subsequently it was increased to 15 and on separation of Sindh & Balochistan High Court's 12 Judges were allocated to the Sindh High Court and 3 Judges to Balochistan High Court. The present approved strength of ...
Lahore High Court Sindh High Court A Corner View of the Balochistan High Court Building, Quetta, Pakistan. There is a high court for the Islamabad Capital Territory and four provincial high courts. A high court is the principal court of its province. [1] The Lahore High Court in Lahore, Punjab, [10] with circuit benches at Bahawalpur, Multan ...
The Sindh Police (Urdu: سندھ پولیس, Sindhi: سنڌ پوليس), is a law enforcement agency established in 1843 under a proclamation issued by Sir Charles James Napier, who became the conqueror of the State of Sindh by defeating the forces of the Talpur rulers at the Battle of Miani near Hyderabad on 20 March 1843.
6th Chief Justice of Sindh High Court; In office 13 December 1989 – 4 November 1990: Preceded by: Ajmal Mian: Succeeded by: Saeed-uz-Zaman Siddiqui: Personal details; Born 17 February 1933 Karachi, Bombay Presidency, British India (now Pakistan) Died: 7 March 2017 (aged 84) Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan: Alma mater: S. M. Law College Lincoln's Inn
Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority Pay scales: EG-01 To EG -02 EG-03 To EG-04 EG-05 To EG-06 EG-07 To EG-08 EG-09 To EG-10 and ADG (Serving Air Vice Marshal (BPS-21) on deputation from Pakistan Air Force.) DG – – 12. Financial Monitoring Unit: FMU-1 & FMU-2 FMU-3 FMU-4 FMU-5 FMU-6 (Serving Executive Director (OG-8) on Deputation from State ...
As the province of West Pakistan was dissolved in 1970, three high courts were established: Lahore High Court, Peshawar High Court, and Sind and Balochistan High Court (with its principal seat at Karachi). [6] In 1976 the Sindh and Balochistan High Court was split into the High Court of Sind (Karachi) and the High Court of Balochistan (Quetta). [7]
The Government of Sindh (Sindhi: حڪومت سنڌ) (Urdu: حکومتِ سندھ) is the provincial government of the province of Sindh, Pakistan. Its powers and structure are set out in the provisions of the 1973 Constitution , in which 30 Districts of 7 Divisions under its authority and jurisdiction.
The Pakistan Peoples Party government temporarily removed him from the Bench in 1988 to send him off on deputation as the federal law secretary, a post he held until June 1990 when he returned to the Sindh High Court. [2] From January 1991 to the end of April of that year, he moved to the Supreme Court as an ad hoc Judge.