Saddar Town Explained

Saddar Town
Settlement Type:Constituent Town of Karachi
Subdivision Type:Town Chairman
Subdivision Name:Mansoor Ahmed Sheikh
Subdivision Type1:District
Subdivision Name1:Karachi District (South)
Subdivision Type2:Division
Subdivision Name2:Karachi Division
Subdivision Type3:Province
Subdivision Type4:Country
Subdivision Name4: Pakistan
Parts Type:Union Committees in Town Municipal Corporation
Parts Style:coll,para
Parts:13
P1:Bhim Pura-Ghanchi Para
Hassan Lashkari Village
Garden
Millat Nagar
Ranchor Line-Ghazdarabad
Nanakwara
Old Town Kharadar
City Railway Colony
Saddar
Hijrat Colony
Frere Town
Boat Basin
Clifton-Kehkshan
Government Type:Government of Karachi
Leader Title1:Constituency
Leader Name1:NA-241 Karachi South-III
Established Title:Established
Established Title1:Town status
Established Title2:Disbanded
Area Total Km2:35
Elevation Max M:62
Elevation Min M:-6
Elevation M:14
Population As Of:2023 Pakistani census
Population Total:159,363
Population Density Km2:4553.23
Population Demonym:Karachiite
Timezone:PKT
Utc Offset:+05:00
Timezone Dst:DST is not observed
Area Code Type:NWD (area) code
Area Code:021
Postal Code Type:ZIP Code
Postal Code:74400
Iso Code:PK-SD

Saddar Town (صدر ٹاؤن) lies in the Karachi District South that forms much of the historic colonial core of Karachi, in the Sindh province of Pakistan. According to the 2023 Pakistani census, Saddar Subdivision has a population 159,363.

Etymology

The word Saddar generally means the "center" (of a settlement) and also the "head" (of a group of people or an organisation). The word Saddar may loosely be translated into "Downtown" as it shares common characteristics with a Downtown of any particular city located in United States. This includes historic areas, attractions, being in the center etc.

Location

Saddar Town is located in the colonial heart of Karachi. It is bordered by Jamshed Town and Clifton Cantonment to the east, Kiamari Town and the Arabian Sea to the south and Lyari Town to the west.

Demographics

Languages

There are 159,363 people of which 75,605 spoke Urdu, 24,427 Punjabi, 18,280 Sindhi, 12,848 Pashto, 12,435 Hindko, 3,304 Saraiki, 1,291 Balochi, 760 Kashmiri & 10,413 others.

Religions

There are 139,240 Muslims, 11,407 Christians, 7,877 Hindus, 103 Ahmadiyya, 29 scheduled castes, 78 Sikhs, 501 Parsis & 128 others of total population 159,363 of Saddar sub-division.

History

Saddar Town contained much of the oldest parts of Karachi. The federal government under Pervez Musharraf, introduced local government reforms in the year 2000, which eliminated the previous "third tier of government" (administrative divisions) and replaced it with the fourth tier (districts). The effect in Karachi was the dissolution of the former Karachi Division, and the merging of its five districts to form a new Karachi City-District with eighteen autonomous constituent towns including Saddar Town as part of The Local Government Ordinance 2001, and was subdivided into 13 union councils. In 2011, the system was disbanded but remained in place for bureaucratic administration until 2015, when the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation system was reintroduced.[1]

In 2015, Saddar Town was re-organized as part of Karachi South.

In January 2022, the town system was restored by a Government of Sindh notification dividing Karachi South District into 2 towns including Saddar Town having 13 union councils.[2]

Neighbourhoods

Saddar Town was made up of the following:

See also

References

  1. Web site: Saddar Town. 13 June 2006. https://web.archive.org/web/20060613010729/http://karachicity.gov.pk/town/index.asp?txtTown=Saddar. City District Government of Karachi website. en-US. 2022-05-21.
  2. News: Division of Karachi South into 26 towns, 233 UCs notified (by the government). Tahir Siddiqui. 2022-01-08. Dawn (newspaper). en-US. 2022-12-31.
  3. Web site: KARACHI: Saddar: the VIP town. 5 August 2005. Dawn. Pakistan. 21 May 2022.
  4. News: Heritage Foundation calls for restoration of Calcutta House in Karachi. Faizah Malik. 28 March 2018. The Express Tribune (newspaper). 21 May 2022.

External links

24.8575°N 67.0028°W