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By Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan [4] [5] June 2013 Pakistan bombings: 30 June 2013 Quetta: 52 One attack near a Muslim mosque in Hazara Town, Quetta in which at least 28 people killed. Another attack near the Badhaber Police Station in Peshawar in which 18 people killed.
The Tis Hazari Courts Complex was inaugurated in 1958 by Chief Justice A.N. Bhandari, the then Chief Justice of Punjab, [5] since Delhi was under the jurisdiction of High Court of Punjab at the time. [6] Tis Hazari was the principal court complex in Delhi, since Delhi consisted of only one district. [5]
The above are seven physical locations of the district courts, whereas actually there are eleven district courts headed by individual District Judges. The Tis Hazari complex, Rohini complex and Saket complex hosts two districts each while the Karkardooma complex hosts three districts and the remaining complexes host one district court each.
Central Delhi and West Delhi: Tis Hazari Courts Complex 2 1977 New Delhi Patiala House Courts Complex: 3 1993 East Delhi, North-East Delhi and Shahdara Karkardooma Courts Complex 4 2005 North Delhi and North-West Delhi Rohini Courts Complex 5 2008 South-West Delhi Dwarka Courts Complex 6 2010 South Delhi and South-East Delhi Saket Courts ...
The trial of the case was transferred by the Supreme Court of India in 2002 from Ghaziabad to a Sessions Court at the Tis Hazari complex in Delhi, [74] [75] where it was the oldest pending case. [76] On 21 March 2015, all 16 men accused in the Hashimpura massacre case of 1987 were acquitted by Tis Hazari Court due to insufficient evidence. [77]
Tis Hazari Court (Kashmere Gate) Central & West Delhi 1958 14 courts (11 MM + 3 CJ) 2 Patiala House Court: New Delhi: 1977 7 courts (7 MM) 3 Karkardooma Court (Anand Vihar) East, North-East & Shahdara: 1993 6 courts (6 MM) 4 Rohini Court North-West & North Delhi 2005 2 courts (2 MM) 5 Dwarka Court South-West Delhi 2008 3 courts (3 MM) 6 Saket Court
This is a list of violent incidents in Pakistan from 2006 to 2009. Violence increased in 2006, in part because the US/ NATO strategy from 2005 of attacking the Taliban in their stronghold in South Afghanistan (including Helmand ), lead to incidents on the Pakistani side of the border.
Acts of violence involving Sunni Muslims and their Shia counterparts in Pakistan have been evident since the 1980s. They are generally considered to have arisen from attempts by the then national leader, Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, to legitimise his military dictatorship and from the influx of weapons into the country following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.