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The "chief nazim," or district nazim, is elected by the nazims of Union Councils, Union Councillors, and Tehsil Nazims, who themselves are elected directly by the votes of the local public. The "chief nazim," or district nazim, is elected by the nazims of Union Councils, Union Councillors, and Tehsil Nazims, who themselves are elected directly by the votes of the local public.


Pakistan originally had a system inherited from the time of ] rule, in which a ] was the head of a ]. Under the ], however, the role of the nazim became distinct from that of a ], with more power. The nazim system was introduced after the commissionerate system, imposed during British rule, was lifted by the government of Pakistan. Now there is no ] for any of the divisions, ] for the ]s, or ]s, since the ] act was imposed in the country in 2001. The one exception is ], the federal capital, where the commissionerate system remains in effect. Pakistan originally had a system inherited from the time of ] rule, in which a ] was the head of a ]. Under the ], however, the role of the nazim became distinct from that of a ], with more power. The nazim system was introduced after the commissionerate system, imposed during British rule, was lifted by the government of Pakistan. Now there is no ] for any of the divisions, deputy commissioner for the ]s, or assistant commissioners, since the ] act was imposed in the country in 2001. The one exception is ], the federal capital, where the commissionerate system remains in effect.
In 2009, the new government restored the commissionerate system in the divisions but the nazims also remain in power. In 2009, the new government restored the commissionerate system in the divisions but the nazims also remain in power.



Revision as of 04:24, 1 April 2010

This redirect is about the Pakistani position in local government. For use as a given name, see Nazim (name).

A nazim (Template:Lang-ur, from the word for "organizer" or "convenor") (similar to mayor) is the coordinator of cities and towns in Pakistan. Nazim is the title in Urdu of the chief elected official of a local government in Pakistan, such as a district, tehsil, union council, or village council.

The name which is used for the president of Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba, the Islamic Union of Students in Pakistan, is Nazim-e-ala. The nazim-e-ala is elected for one year, and after completing that tenure, all the members of IJT who are called (Arkaan) elect a new one. The "chief nazim," or district nazim, is elected by the nazims of Union Councils, Union Councillors, and Tehsil Nazims, who themselves are elected directly by the votes of the local public.

Pakistan originally had a system inherited from the time of British rule, in which a Mayor was the head of a district. Under the Local Government Act, however, the role of the nazim became distinct from that of a Mayor, with more power. The nazim system was introduced after the commissionerate system, imposed during British rule, was lifted by the government of Pakistan. Now there is no commissioner for any of the divisions, deputy commissioner for the districts, or assistant commissioners, since the Local Government act was imposed in the country in 2001. The one exception is Islamabad, the federal capital, where the commissionerate system remains in effect. In 2009, the new government restored the commissionerate system in the divisions but the nazims also remain in power.

See also

References

  1. Wajahat Ijaz (October 22, 2002). "Their way to parliament passed through Nazim's office". Pakistan Dawn.
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