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Postal codes in Pakistan. 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 ...
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The area codes in Pakistan consists of two to five digits; generally smaller the city, longer the prefix. All large cities have two-digit codes. The smaller towns might have six digital whereas big cities have seven digit numbers. Azad Kashmir telephone lines contain five digits. On 1 July 2009, telephone numbers in Karachi and Lahore were ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_postal_codes_in_Pakistan&oldid=1073242490"
Pakistan Post (Urdu: پاکستان ڈاک) is a state enterprise which functions as Pakistan's primary and largest postal operator. [1] 49,502 employees through a vehicle fleet of 5,000 operate traditional "to the door" service from more than 13,419 post offices across the country, servicing over 50 million people.
General Headquarters (Pakistan Army) / 33.600°N 73.033°E / 33.600; 73.033. John Kerry, then-Secretary of State, at the pavilion of the Army GHQ in 2015. The General Headquarters (abbreviated GHQ: 230 [2] [3] [4]) is the headquarters of the Pakistan Army, located in the Chaklala at the vicinity of Rawalpindi, adjacent to the Joint ...
In Pakistan, a tehsil is an administrative sub-division of a District . Here is a list of all the tehsils by provinces: List of tehsils of Azad Kashmir. List of tehsils of Balochistan. List of tehsils of Gilgit-Baltistan. List of tehsils of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. List of tehsils of Punjab, Pakistan. List of tehsils of Sindh.
Data Darbar (Urdu: داتا دربار, romanized: Dātā Darbār) is an Islamic shrine located in Lahore, Punjab. It is the largest Sufi shrine in South Asia.It was built to house the remains of al-Hujwiri, commonly known as Data Ganj Baksh or more colloquially as Data Sahab, a Sufi saint from Ghazni in present-day Afghanistan, who is believed to have lived on the site in the 11th century CE.