Bajaur District

Prior to 2018, Bajaur Agency was the northernmost component of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), a semi-autonomous region along the Afghanistan–Pakistan border.It lies at a high elevation to the east of the Kunar Valley of Afghanistan from which it is separated by a continuous line of rugged frontier hills.The Nysains placed their dead in cedar coffin in the trees - some of which Alexander accidentally set on fire - and made wine from grapes, unlike other tribes in the area.[7] The Acuphis, the chief man of the city, who has been sent to them along with other thirty leaders, begged him not to harm their towns as they were descendants of settlers that the god Dionysus placed their generation before.[10] As the Bajauris were rebels and inimical to the people of Islam, the men were subjected to a general massacre and their wives and children were made captive.It still hosts a large population of Afghan refugees sympathetic to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a mujahideen leader ideologically close to the Arab militants.An aerial attack, executed by the United States targeting Ayman al-Zawahiri, took place in a village in Bajaur Agency on January 13, 2006, killing 18 people.[citation needed] On October 30, 2006, 80 people were killed in Bajaur when Pakistani forces attacked a religious school they said was being used as a militant training camp.[15] There are many unconfirmed reports that the October attack was also carried out by the United States or NATO forces, but was claimed by Islamabad over fears of widespread protest similar to those after the US bombing in January 2006.The TNSM had led some 5,000 men from the Pakistani areas of Dir, Swat and Bajaur across the Mamund border into Afghanistan in October 2001, to fight US-led troops.[citation needed] In what is thought to be a reprisal for the October strike in Bajaur, in November, a suicide bomber killed dozens in an attack on an army training school in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.[17] Loi sum is on a strategic location, road come from four sides, (khar, Nawagi, Tangai and Inzari), so approach was easy from Charmang and Ambar.[19] The offensive was launched in the wake of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's visit to Washington in late July, and is believed by some to be in response to U.S. demands that Pakistan prevent the FATA being used as a safe haven by insurgents fighting American and NATO troops in Afghanistan.[20] The bloody bombing of Pakistan Ordnance Factories in Wah on August 21, 2008, came according to Maulvi Omar, a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban, as a response to the Bajaur offensive.Army continues there journey, control the main road of Bajaur from Khar to Nawagi, and the peripheral areas were still in the hold of Taliban.To date, more than 180,000 IDPs have returned to their homes in Bajaur Agency, facing widespread destruction to their lives, livelihoods and massive unemployment.[23] From 2008 through 2010, Al Jazeera English produced multiple features of the ongoing conflict between Pakistani military forces and Taliban militants in the agency.Bajaur is inhabited near exclusively by Tarkanri (Mamund, Kakazai, Wur and Salarzai) Pashtuns, as well as a smaller population of Utmankhel, Wazir, Safi, and Yousafzai tribes.The mother tongue of the majority of Bajauris are expectedly 99.85% Pashto, reflective of the indigenous Pashtun (also 'Pakthtun') population that inhabits much of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK, for which the province derives its name) and eastern Afghanistan.The Koh-i-Mor has been identified as the Meros of Arrian's history—the three-peaked mountain from which the god issued For hiking, like Jahaz Banda and Fairy meadow, kon-I-mor is the best, it is about four hours trekking non-local and two and a half for locals.Potato, tomato, onion, lady fingers, spinach, and orange parsimon, etc Marbles are found in various regions, mainly in Inzari and Nawagai.It exports mainly to China, The Chinese thought so too, and for thousands of years, nephrite articles had a special value and signature and skilled artisans carved increasingly intricate designs.
Map of Bajaur District tehsils
DistrictKhyber PakhtunkhwaPakistanProvinceDivisionMalakandDeputy CommissionerDemonymTime zonePashtoTehsilsMalakand DivisionPakistan's western borderAfghanistanKunar ProvinceTorkham border crossingJalalabadPeshawartehsilKurram AgencyKunar ValleyKhyber PassMohmandPanjkora RiverSwat DistrictNawagaiPanjkoraGandharaApracaAspasioiAshvakasAlexander the GreatKushanKujula KadphisesAlexanderDionysusBacchusBajaur casketIndravarmareliquaryScythianMughal-Afghan WarsBajaur massacreJhelumTaimurPashtunBattle of Malandari Pass (1586)Zain Khan KokaAkbar the GreatSoviet invasion in the 1980smujahideenAfghan refugeesGulbuddin HekmatyarDamadola airstrikeChenagai airstrikeAyman al-ZawahiriUnited StatesTalibanTanzim Nifaz Shariat MohammadiMamundNawagiTehrik-e-Talibanthe initial battleYousuf Raza Gilanibombing of Pakistan Ordnance Factories in WahMaulvi OmarPakistani TalibanAl Jazeera EnglishVICE NewsShane SmithFrontier CorpsBajaur ScoutsIslamic State's Khorasan ProvinceMamund TehsilSalarzai TehsilKhar Bajaur TehsilUtman Khel TehsilNawagai TehsilBarang TehsilBar Chamer Kand Tehsil2023 census2017 Pakistan Census2023 Pakistan CensusPakistaniFemaleTransgenderTarkanriKakazaiSalarzaiPashtunsUtmankhelYousafzaiGujaranSwatisTarkalanrimother tonguefirst-languageBalochiSindhiKashmiriSaraikiBrahviPunjabiHindkoMuslimChristianAhmadiProvincial Assembly of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa2024 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial election2023 digital censusISIS-KPK-19 Bajaur-IHamid Ur-RehmanIndependentPK-20 Bajaur-IIWahid GulJamaat-e-Islami PakistanSardar KhanPK-22 Bajaur-IVPakistan Tehreek-e-InsafCivil EngineeringNA-40 Tribal Area-IGul Dad KhanNA-41 Tribal Area-IIGul Zafar KhanBismillah KhanShahabuddin KhanPakistan Muslim League (N)Shaukatullah KhanAkhundzada ChitanBajaurJahaz BandaFairy meadowshepherdsMarblesmarbleNephriteChineseBajaur Campaign1961 Pakistani Bombing of BatmalaiBajaur offensiveEncyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.)Pakistan Bureau of StatisticsUniversity of PennsylvaniaCouncil on Foreign RelationsDaily TimesWorld Socialist Web SiteThe Christian Science MonitorReutersCNN InternationalPakistan Herald Publicationspublic domainHoldich, Thomas HungerfordChisholm, HughEncyclopædia BritannicaDistricts of Khyber PakhtunkhwaLakki MarwatNorth WaziristanDera Ismail KhanLower South WaziristanUpper South WaziristanHazaraAbbottabadBattagramHaripurKolai-PalasUpper KohistanLower KohistanMansehra TorgharKurramOrakzaiCentral DirLower ChitralLower DirShanglaUpper DirUpper ChitralMardanCharsaddaNowsheraKhyberChitralSouth Waziristan