Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Awam (Urdu: روزنامہ عوام) is an Urdu language daily newspaper based in Karachi, Pakistan. [1] This newspaper was started in 1994. [2] It is an evening daily newspaper published by Jang Group of Newspapers. The Sindhi version of Awam is the most circulated newspaper in interior Sindh.
Urdu Lahore, Islamabad, Karachi, Peshawar 1997 32 The Express Tribune: English Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Peshawar 2010 33 Daily Dunya: Urdu: Lahore, Karachi, Faisalabad, Gujranwala, Multan, Islamabad 2012 34 Daily Nizam [4] (Urdu: روزنامہ نظام) Islamabad 2017 Authentic continuously published Urdu language newspaper in Pakistan 35 ...
Postal codes in Pakistan were introduced on 1 January 1988 to speed sortation and delivery. Pakistan have 5 digits code . [1] and These codes are for the delivery post office in whose jurisdiction the residential, office, industrial, rural, or PO Box address falls. Non-delivery post offices also are assigned pseudo-codes for audit and ...
Daily Imroze is an Urdu language newspaper in Pakistan published daily from Karachi. This is one of the oldest newspapers of Pakistan that originally started publishing from Lahore in the newly independent Pakistan soon after 1947. It had distinguished people like Maqbool Jahangir, Ahmad Nadeem Qasmi, Intezar Hussain and Shafqat Tanvir Mirza among its journalists, columnists and editors from ...
Pages in category "English-language newspapers published in Pakistan" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
This Lahore-based daily was started in December 1997 by Akbar Ali Bhatti. This was the first newspaper of Pakistan that came in a colored form. He suffered many hardships and was put behind the bars due to some clashes with the government for some time. The newspaper was then handed over to Mujeeb ur Rehman Shami.
It is the oldest newspaper of Pakistan in continuous publication since its foundation in 1939 from Delhi, British India, [2] first published during World War II, hence the name (Jang) translating to "war" in Urdu. [5] After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, then young Mir Khalil-ur-Rahman became one of the pioneering publishers in Karachi ...
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.