Barshore

Pakistani administrative area From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Barshore, (Pashto: برښور), (Urdu: برشور), is a tehsil (sub-divisions) of Karezat District in Balochistan, Pakistan.[1] On 13th march 2026 CM Balochistan Sarfaraz Bugti, declared a notification for the formation of Barsho a separate district of Balochistan.[2][3]

It cover an area of over 1,700 square kilometres, tehsil Barshore is predominantly mountainous, with long, narrow valleys intersecting the terrain. At the northern end of the Tehsil, the great plateau of Toba Kakar Range drains northward to the Kadanai river in Afghanistan.[4][5]

Area colored green represents Bashore Tehsil

History

Karezat and Barshore tehsils were separated from Pishin in 2022 to form the newly created Karezat District. However on 22 November 2022, Tehsil Barshore was removed from the newly created district and merged again in the district Pishin via a notification.[6]

Earthquakes and droughts

The most recent drought, which spanned nearly six years from 1998 to 2004, is regarded as one of the worst in the recorded history of Pishin. Barshore tehsil was severely impacted by this drought, while Pishin tehsil experienced moderate effects.[7]

Population

The Kakar tribe is the largest tribe in the Quetta and Pishin districts. When Quetta-Pishin was a single district, the 1901 census recorded 35,452 Kakars, making up 53% of the Afghan population and 42% of the total indigenous population.[8] The Taragharai (or Taraghzai ) clan is numerically the strongest in these districts. Most Taraghzai Kakars live in Pishin District, particularly in the Barshore valley, Toba Kakari and Karezat.

In 1901, Barshore Tehsil had a population of around 13,000, with the Barakzai Kakars being the largest group at 6,643, followed by the Ahmadkhail Kakars at 3,077, and the Sulemankhail Kakars at 3,055.[9] According to the 1998 census, Barshore's population had grown to 95,132.[10]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI