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This map was made using QGIS and Inkscape, and the sources for it include raster data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics for internal divisional and most district borders, IPUMS' World Map GIS data for international borders, and pakresponse.info as well as this image file for the borders of four districts in Gilgit-Baltistan (Darel, Tangir ...
Own work based on: Pakistan adm location map.svg This file was derived from: Pakistan districts.svg; Pakistan tehsils.svg; Pakistan Distrikte 2010.svg; Gilgit-Baltistan map with tehsils labelled.png; Gilgit Baltistan Administrative divisions and districts.png; FATAmapPakistan.PNG; Map of Haveli.png; Author: Milenioscuro: Other versions
The map is accurate as of September 30, 2020 and has been made using data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics and UN OCHA's HumData Database (which citypopulation.de uses). Each color depicts a different administrative division (higher than a district but lower than a province). The same map with the district names not shown can be found here.
Districts and Divisions were both introduced in Punjab as administrative units by the British when Punjab became a part of British India, and ever since then, they have formed an integral part in the civil administration of the Punjab (this region today also covers parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the entire Islamabad Capital Territory, and parts of the Indian States of Chandigarh, Delhi, Haryana ...
Every district of Pakistan is administratively divided into several tehsils. Each tehsil is governed by a Tehsil Municipal Administration (TMA), which is focussed around a tehsil/taluka council. The head of each tehsil is a Tehsil/Taluka Nazim, assisted by a tehsil/taluka municipal officer (TMO) and a number of other officials, all of whom are ...
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The map is accurate as of September 30, 2020 and has been made using data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics and UN OCHA's HumData Database (which citypopulation.de uses). Each color depicts a different administrative division (higher than a district but lower than a province).
Rs. 20/- notes were added in 2005, followed by Rs. 5,000/- in 2006. Until 1971, Pakistan banknotes were bilingual, featuring Bengali translation of the Urdu text (where the currency was renamed taka), since Bengali was the state language of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). [7] The PSPC began issuing its own 1- and 5-rupee notes in the fiscal ...