Pakistan Natural Beautiful

Thursday, 7 May 2026

SOUTH WAZIRISTAN KPK PAKISTAN

 South Waziristan District (Urdu: ضلع جنوبی محسود وزیرستان) was a district in the Dera Ismail Khan Division of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, before splitting into the Lower South Waziristan District and the Upper South Waziristan District on 13 April 2022. South Waziristan was in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's southwest. The Gomal River to the south and the Tochi River to the north separated it from the other river. The Mahsud tribe, led by Mulla Powinda, who assumed the name Badshah-i-Taliban, launched an attack at Wana in 1894, which prompted the British to launch an expedition against the tribes during the cold season of 1894-1895. As a result, the agency of South Waziristan was established, with its headquarters located in Wanna. 

 The Wazir tribe ruled South Waziristan, while the Mahsud tribe ruled North Waziristan. Both of these tribes are subgroups of the Waziri tribe, after whom the region is named "Waziristan," and share a common Waziristani dialect. South Waziristan was the largest agency in the former FATA region; it became a district in 2018 when FATA was merged into the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. It was established in 1895 and covered 6,619 km2.  It was bordered by the North Waziristan district to the north, Bannu and Lakki Marwat districts to the northeast, Tank and Dera Ismail Khan districts to the east, Zhob District of Balochistan to the south and by Afghanistan to the west.




History

                     Before 500 B.C., the Persian Achaemenid Empire annexed the region as part of a far-flung satrapy. It was close to Harappa and the Indus Valley civilization. The Macedonians under Alexander the Great marched on the area around 330 B.C., the later Greco-Bactrians establishing an independent Indo-Greek Kingdom following a split with the Seleucid Empire to the west.  It was then ruled by the Mauryans. Before the Indo-Parthians of Arsacid ancestry ruled under Gondophares until about AD, the Saka arrived around 97 B.C. 75.  At least some Kushan, Ephthalite, Kidarite, and Sassanian Persian rule existed for the next few centuries A.D., with the last one falling under the control of the Arab Rashidun Caliphate, which introduced Islam to the East Iranian borderlands in the seventh century. The Saffarid dynasty, led by Ya'qub-i Laith Saffari, expanded Islam further east into the Khyber hinterlands. Ghaznavid, Ghorid, and Babar ruled the region over the following centuries. Later, Pashtoon tribes in and around the Hindu-Kush fought British India northwest of the Punjab. From then onward, the region remained under British Indian Empire rule after the 1893 Durand Line agreement, until the state of Pakistan was created.

 Since the Sikhs took control of the Frontier, the Deputy Commissioner of Dera, Ismail Khan, and Bannu controlled all political matters in Waziristan until 1895. After the Amir of Afghanistan signed a treaty in November 1893 reneging on all claims to these territories, the British did not take control of these areas. A Political Agent for South Waziristan was appointed permanently, with headquarters in Wanna, following an attack on the Delimitation Commission Escort in 1894, and another was appointed for the Tochi area (North Waziristan), with headquarters in Miramshah. The post of Resident in Waziristan was created in 1908.  The resident, who was directly accountable to the Chief Commissioner of North Western Frontier Province, was the Political Agent in North Waziristan's subordinate. In 1900, a local militia was established in place of the regular armed forces as the Indian government moved into settled districts. However, the Political Agent and Militia Commandant at Sarwakai was murdered in 1904 as a result of large-scale disturbances. Later, a plot to murder all the British officers, seize the Wanna fort; and hand it over to Mullah Powindah, the self-styled king of Waziristan, was discovered.  On the same night, the Political Agent and the Commandant disarmed and fired all of the Militia's Mahsuds. They were re-enlisted a few months later, but in 1906, they were disbanded once more. In 1925 the Royal Air Force pacified Mahsud tribesmen by means of the Pink's War bombing campaign.

 Even though he was based in Gurwek, North Waziristan, Mirzali Khan (Faqir of Ipi) had many followers from South Waziristan in the 20th century.

Geography

 Map of agencies and frontier regions in northwest Pakistan's FATA and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa *Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, FATA, and South Waziristan Most of the district is made up of rough and complicated hills and ridges. There are no regular alignments of the mountains. The land rises gradually from south and east to north and west.  The dominating range is the Preghal in the west along the border with Afghanistan.  It is the highest peak which is 3,515 metres high.  Zarmelan, Wanna, Shakki, Zalai, Spin and Tiarza are the main plains of the district.

 Direction of water courses, in general, are from west to south i.e. from the watersheds of Sulaiman Mountains to the Indus.  Gomal of Luni and Tank Zam are the district's two main rivers. Khaisora, Shaktu, Siplatoi, Toi Khwla, Shuza, Shinkai, and Shahur are all significant rivulets. The remaining are mountain streams that can become dangerous and impassable when it rains a lot, as it often does in July and August. In the Barmal District of Afghanistan, the Gomal River splits into two branches on the eastern slopes of the western Sulaiman range, not far from where the Tochi River gets its name. At Dwa Toi, south of Razmak, the Tauda China and Baddar Toi meet to form the Tank Zam.

Climate

 The district has hot summers and very cold winters.  In winter, temperatures go below freezing point in places of high altitude.  May marks the beginning of summer, which lasts until September. June is generally the warmest month when the mean maximum temperature rises slightly over 30 degrees Celsius.  The winter starts in October and continues until April.  December, January and February are the coldest months.  The mean maximum and minimum temperatures for this period are 10 and −2 degrees Celsius, respectively.  Despite being outside the monsoon zone, the district receives some precipitation at higher elevations. South Waziristan District has an arid climate, receiving minimal precipitation.  Due to its high altitude, the western portion, which borders Afghanistan, receives more rain than the eastern portion, which touches Tank and D.I.Khan districts. A small area in the southeastern corner receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation annually, while the majority of the district receives a mean annual rainfall of 6 inches.

Demographics

 Historical population

 Year Pop. ±% p.a.

 1972 307,514 —    

 1981 309,454 +0.07%

 1998 429,841 +1.95%

 2017 675,215 +2.41%

 2023 888,675 +4.68%

 Sources:

 As of the 2023 census, South Waziristan District has 178,636 households and a population of 888,675.  The sex ratio in the district is 107.08 males to 100 females, and the literacy rate is 31.96%—42.63 percent for males and 20.38 percent for females. 295,611 (33.26% of the surveyed population) are under 10 years of age.  All of the people live in rural areas. In the 2023 census, 1,694 (0.19%) people in the district were from religious minorities, mainly Christians.[ 13] Pashto was the predominant language, spoken by 97.99% of the population.  1.85% speak other languages, possibly Ormuri.

 The two main tribes of the district are the Ahmadzai Wazir and the Mahsud.  The other significant tribal populations are the Ormur (Burki or Baraki), Dotani, Sulaimankhel, Ghilji, Khomia and Taji.  Some Bettani tribal people live in a strip on the south-east border, while the Ghilji are mainly settled in the south-west corner. Toi Khwla and Gulkuch are home to the majority of the Dotani and Sulaimankhel tribes.


Tourists

South Waziristan, a ruggedly scenic district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, offers unique, off-the-beaten-path tourism focused on nature and landscapes.  
Top Tourist Spots in South Waziristan
Shawal Valley: Known as the princess of Waziristan, this area offers lush scenery, pleasant summer temperatures, and a good road, making it very accessible .
Gomal Zam Dam and its lake, the picturesque 
Shawal Valley, and the strenuous trekking peak of Pir Ghar (3,515 meters). 
Gomal Zam Dam and Lake: A significant feat of engineering with a vast lake surrounded by mountains 1.1.1. 
Pir Ghar (preghal) offers challenging trekking opportunities . 

Wana Cricket Stadium, which serves as a community hub, are the Wana and Shakai Plains. 
Gul Kha Jan Garden is a tranquil, scenic spot in the  region. Key Travel InformationLocation: Wana is the headquarters of South Waziristan. The best time to visit is during the summer, when temperatures are pleasant and snow falls in higher elevations. Access: Many areas now have improved roads, but travel can still be rugged 1.1.6. Culture: Due to the region's recent rise in tourism 1.1.4, it is advised to observe privacy and cultural norms.



Friday, 28 February 2020

Pakistan Natural Beautiful: Natural Beauty of Muzaffarabad (Azad Kashmir)

Pakistan Natural Beautiful: Natural Beauty of Muzaffarabad (Azad Kashmir): Muzaffarabad:             The city is situated in Muzaffarabad District close to the conjunction of the Jhelum and Neelum streams. The...

Pakistan Natural Beautiful: Natural Beauty of Muzaffarabad (Azad Kashmir)

Pakistan Natural Beautiful: Natural Beauty of Muzaffarabad (Azad Kashmir): Muzaffarabad:             The city is situated in Muzaffarabad District close to the conjunction of the Jhelum and Neelum streams. The...

Natural Beauty of Muzaffarabad (Azad Kashmir)


Muzaffarabad:


            The city is situated in Muzaffarabad District close to the conjunction of the Jhelum and Neelum streams. The area is limited by the territory of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa in the west, by the Kupwara and Baramulla locale of Indian-directed Jammu and Kashmir in the east, and the Neelum District of Azad Kashmir in the north.




History:

          Muzaffarabad was established in 1646 by Sultan Muzaffar Khan head of the Bomba which governed Kashmir. Sultan Muzaffar Khan additionally finished Muzaffarabad's Red Fort that equivalent year to avert invasions from the Mughal Empire.  



Tourism:  

         Being the capital city Muzaffarabad isn't just the center of political and social exercises yet it likewise fills in as a base camp for the voyagers. It has different spots of recreation. View point Sathra, an open spot, disentangles the display of the whole city before a viewer. The intersection purpose of the stream Neelum and Jhelum presents a majic stunner from here. Lohar Gali, arranged 9 kilometers from Muzaffarabad on Abbottabad street. The Red fortification is an observer to the antiquated history of this incredible city. The neighborhood advertise in Muzaffarabad can be investigated for pecan carvings, kashmiri shawls and other customary painstaking work. It is constantly conceivable to get a decent deal. It has other than legitimate structures; homesteads, parks and noteworthy fortification remaining on the bank of the Neelum. Shopping is an energizing action in Muzaffarabad and you can search for Kashmiri shawls and pecan carvings. 
Visiting in the city is likewise simple and helpful as there are wide methods of transportation accessible. Explorers who wish to visit Muzaffarabad ought to have appropriate data about the city and remember the movement tips for a protected and pleasant visit. 




              Past the Red post, crossing Neelum waterway at Ghori, a couple of km way is 'Makra mountain' 3,890 meters which is unmistakable from Muzaffarabad and proceeds to Shogran in the Kaghan Valley. This is a brilliant short trek, in spite of the fact that you have to camp medium-term midway. 


                  



Thursday, 21 June 2018

Natural Beauty of Kumrat Pakistan

KUMRAT VALLEY, DIR KOHISTAN




Kumrat Valley is a beguiling valley in Upper Dir area of KPK territory in Pakistan. It is one of the lovely valleys of Pakistan, and a beautiful spot for voyagers. Each late spring season a large number of sightseers from various territories of the nation visit to Kumrat valley and appreciate the immaculate greenery and cool climate.



Dissimilar to Kalam district of Swat valley, Kumrat is secured with rich green fields, snow clad mountains, spouting waterway Panjkora, mesmeric foggy hills and sentimental woodlands are regularly charming attractions of the locale, which fill in as natural surroundings for assortment of verdure and fauna. It is situated in the Upper Dir Kohistan locale at the rear of which Swat Kohistan territory of Gabral is found.



The following is a rundown accumulated to help vacationers in making their next trek to Kumrat Valley an item one. Must visit these vacationer goals while your visit to this valley.


Thursday, 5 October 2017

BALAKOT Natural Beauty in Pakistan

Balakot (Urduبالاکوٹ ‎)

                   is a town in Mansehra District in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa region of Pakistan. The town was demolished amid the 2005 Kashmir seismic tremor, yet was later modified with the help of the Government of Pakistan and Saudi Public Assistance for Pakistan Earthquake Victims (SPAPEV), a Saudi alleviation association.



Topography:


Balakot is situated on the banks of the Kunhar River before it enters the Kashmir Valley.



Atmosphere 


Balakot has a moist subtropical atmosphere (Köppen atmosphere grouping Cfa) with sweltering summers and cool winters. Precipitation in Balakot is considerably higher than in most different parts of Pakistan. The heaviest precipitation happens either in pre-spring (February– March) related with frontal frameworks, or in the storm season (June– August); in any case, all months see huge precipitation overall.



Administration


Balakot valley Regulatory subdivisions of Mansehra District. 
Balakot is one of the principle urban areas of Mansehra District. It fills in as the main city of Balakot Tehsil, which is the biggest Tehsil of Mansehra District. It has likewise a Union Council and controls the many encompassing littler towns and villages.



History

The Sikhs endeavored to free Mansehra in the 1818 however were met with protection from the possessing armed force. As the Mansehra district fell under Sikh control, it was added to Punjab. The development put Waziristan, the Mohmand nation past Kunhar, Chitral and Yusufzai tribes inside the control and duty of the Indian government. Syed Ahmad Barelvi and Shah Ismail Shaheed, with the assistance of the Mujahadeen, including the neighborhood tribes of tehsil Balakot from Kaghan to Garhi Habibullah drove many revolts and assaults against the Sikhs. Finally on 6 May 1831, amid a savage fight, Syed Ahmad Shaheed and Shah Ismail Shaheed alongside several their devotees were murdered. The focal mosque of Balakot is named after Syed Ahmed Barelvi. The territories incorporates differing gatherings, particularly Pashtuns and Hindko speakers. 

The town or town of Balakot is possessed principally by Khankhel Swati family, Gujjar, Awan, Swati, Syed, Turk, Mughal and Hanki tribes.


EarthQuake:

The town was totally pulverized in a dangerous seismic tremor on 8 October 2005. The blame practically goes through the principle bazar of Balakot. It takes after the sloping range toward the north up to Allai and prompts the Bagh in Azad Jammu and Kashmir from the towns of Balakot like Kanshian and Jabri Kaleesh. The United Arab Emirates has volunteered to reconstruct this town into an enhanced one with lodging provinces, schools, healing centers, and other urban offices. However the Pakistan government has declared that the city will be relocated.[5] The town will be recreated around 20 km away at a more secure spot with more tremor confirmation structures. The slope town of Balakot, involving 12 union gatherings with a populace of 30,000 individuals, was totally decimated by the tremor on 8 October 2005. More than 90 for each penny of the houses were lessened to sloppy smears. The survivors will be moved to the New Balakot City, at present being created close Mansehra.

Monday, 25 September 2017

Natural Beauty of Pakistan about ATTOCK

ATTOCK:

                   (Punjabi, Urdu: اٹک) some time ago Campbellpur, is a city situated in northern piece of Punjab area of Pakistan (supposed Panjistan locale) the central command of Attock District. In the 1901 statistics, Attock was accounted for to have had a populace of 2866 individuals, a figure which has developed significantly amid the twentieth century with 69,588 detailed in the 1998 registration and contemporary assessments moving toward 100,000. 

It is situated on the bank of the Indus, 80 km (50 mi) from Rawalpindi, 100 km (62 mi) from Peshawar, and 10 km (6 mi) from the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex, Kamra.



HISTORY:

Gandhara was an antiquated kingdom reaching out to the Swat valley and the Potohar level locales of Pakistan and additionally the Jalalabad region of northeastern Afghanistan. Arranged on the back of the center Indus River, the locale had Takshashila and Peshawar as its main urban areas. It was vanquished by the Persian Empire and later in 327 BC by Alexander the Great. The area involved by Chandragupta, organizer of the Maurya realm, in the late fourth century BC, and under Ashoka was changed over in the mid-third century BC to Buddhism. It was a piece of Bactria from the late third century to the first century BC. Under the Kushan administration (first century– third century AD), and particularly under Kanishka, Gandhara built up a prominent school of figure, comprising principally of pictures of the Buddha and reliefs speaking to scenes from Buddhist writings, yet with checked Greco-Roman components of style. The work of art prospered in Gandhara until the fifth century, when the area was vanquished by the Huns. The entire district shaped piece of the Kingdom of Ederatides the Greek, who broadened his control over western Punjab. The Indo-Greek lords held the nation after him, being finally expelled (around 80 B.C.) by the Indo-Scythians. At the point when the Chinese explorer Xuanzang went to the Attock locale in 630 A.D. also, again in 643 A.D., he announced that Buddhism was declining in the locale. 




In the mid eleventh century, Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi propelled seventeen undertakings into South Asia. In 1001, he crushed Raja Jayapala of the Hindu Shahi Dynasty of Gandhara in the Battle of Peshawar and walked advance into Peshawar and, in 1005, made it the inside for his realm. Attock turned out to be a piece of the Ghaznavid Empire. 

The Attock fortification was finished in 1583 under the supervision of Khawaja Shamsuddin Khawafi, a priest of Emperor Akbar. 

The Battle of Attock occurred on 28 April 1758 between Indian Maratha Kingdom and the Durrani Empire. The Marathas under Raghunathrao Ballal Peshwa and Maharaja Tukojirao Holkar Bahadur were successful in the fight and Attock was caught. On 8 May 1758, the Marathas vanquished Durrani powers in the Battle of Peshawar and caught the city of Peshawar. Marathas had now achieved the Afghanistan outskirt. Ahmad Shah Durrani got frightened with this accomplishment of Marathas and began intending to recover his lost domains. 

After the decay of the Mughal Empire, the Sikhs attacked and involved Attock District. The Sikhs built up religious opportunity and regarded the local Muslims. The Sikh Kingdom (1799– 1849) under Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1780– 1839) caught the fortification of Attock in 1813 from the Afghan Kingdom. In 1849, Attock was vanquished by the British who made Campbellpur District. 



The city's establishments were laid in 1903, and it was named Campbellpur after Sir Colin Campbell. It was set up close Attock fortress that had watched the real courses towards Central Asia. The region was made in April 1904 by the merger of Talagang Tehsil in the Jhelum District with the Pindigheb, Fateh Jang and Attock tehsils from Rawalpindi District of the Punjab region of British Raj. 

Attock's first oil well was penetrated in Khaur in 1915. It has an oil and gas field Dakhini close Jand. Dhurnal and Sadkal in Tehsil Fateh Jang. 

The overwhelmingly Muslim populace upheld the Muslim League and the Pakistan Movement. After the freedom of Pakistan in 1947, the minority Hindus and Sikhs emigrated to India, while Muslim exiles from India settled in Attock. The Pakistani Government renamed Campbellpur as Attock in 1978.