Welcome To Layyah City
In Layyah City You Can view and Search Layyah District Business and Departments. Layyah City,Chowk Azam,Choubara,Fatehpur,Karor,Kot sultan,Jamanshah many other Areas.
Click on Area to View Business Categories
Area | No of Records |
---|---|
Layyah | 9947 |
Chowk Azam | 4032 |
Karor Lal Esan | 3922 |
Fatehpur | 2899 |
Kot Sultan | 1817 |
Chobara | 898 |
Wara Sehran | 737 |
Union Council Samtiya | 727 |
433 TDA | 725 |
Rajan Shah | 687 |
Nawa kot | 662 |
Shah Pur | 568 |
Qazi Abad | 530 |
Union Council Roshan Shah | 493 |
Chak Saaho Wala | 453 |
Union Council Grey | 449 |
Union Council Shoukatabad | 410 |
union council tibbi khurd | 380 |
Union Council 110 TDA | 375 |
364 TDA | 374 |
Union Council 93 ML | 355 |
Ada 217 | 337 |
Union Council 112 ML | 315 |
Union Council 98 ML | 313 |
Union Council Rural Fatehpur | 299 |
Area | No of Records |
Showing 1 to 25 of 318 entries
Click on Area to View Department Categories
Area | No of Records |
---|---|
Layyah | 5000 |
Karor Lal Esan | 615 |
Chowk Azam | 327 |
Chobara | 301 |
Fatehpur | 255 |
Kot Sultan | 100 |
Mozu Sadeeq Rad | 66 |
Nawa | 53 |
Shah Pur | 46 |
Chak 393 TDA | 43 |
Union Council Rural | 32 |
Chak No 433 TDA | 30 |
453 TDA | 25 |
Rafique Abad | 25 |
433 TDA | 24 |
325 TDA | 20 |
Chak No 339 TDA | 20 |
Union Council Samtiya | 19 |
Union Council 98 ML | 19 |
Wara Sehran | 18 |
279 TDA | 18 |
Jamanshah | 17 |
Qazi | 16 |
Union Council 93 ML | 15 |
union council tibbi khurd | 15 |
Area | No of Records |
Showing 1 to 25 of 56 entries
About Layyah
Previously a Tehsil of Muzaffargarh, Layyah gained the status of being a district in 1982. The district name is derived from a commonly grown shrub, ‘Layyan’ (Tamarisk dieica) used as fuel wood which covered the area at one time. The District of Layyah comprises of three tehsils which include Layyah, Chaubara and Karor Lal Esan. .
District Layyah has been of a particular interest for development interventions for the project due to the organizational priority focus upon the most vulnerable population groups in the district. These groups include the landless peasants and workers, including the women and some religious minorities whose basic human rights have been constantly violated due to the existing socio-economic inequalities in the area.