Jalbani

The Jalbani is a Baloch tribe that lives in Sindh, Punjab, Balochistan. The chief of the Jalbani tribe is Sardar Mir Agha Ali Nawaz Khan Jalbani Baloch.

History

The Jalbani tribe is a subdivision of the Baloch tribe of Rinds in the Sindh province of Pakistan.[1][2] A Jalbani tribal chief, Rato, encamped in Ratodero.[3] Tribal members lived in the Sindh town of Jhirk and the Karachi district.[4]) Jalbani tribe is also lived in Dera Ghazi Khan and Balochistan(Sibi,Makran)speaks Balochi ,SAraiki and Sindhi,<<

Tribal leadership

Sardar Ali Nawaz Khan Jalbani
Personal details
Born 1982 (age 3334)
Nationality Pakistani
Residence Masu Dero, Ratoderp, Pakistan
Occupation Sardar LandLord
Religion Islam

Sardar Agha Khan Jalbani is the tribal chief of the Jalbani Baloch tribe, he hails from Village "MasuDero" Taluka Ratodero, District Larkana Sindh.[5]

Agha Ali Nawaz Khan Jalbani, or Agha Jalbani, was made the tribal leader in the village of Masudero in 2003; He succeeded his father Sardar Mir Allah Bukhsh Khan Jalbani. He urged tribal members to educate their children and put an end to feuds.[6] In 2001 the Jalbani tribal chief, also interested in resolving long-standing disputes, successfully mediated a dispute between the Syeds and the Kohkhars. Eleven people had been killed during the course of the dispute.[7]

Notable members

References

  1. Albert William Hughes. A gazetteer of the province of Sindh. 1874. p. 289, 583.
  2. Anṡārī ʻAlī Sher ʻAlī. A short sketch, historical and traditional, of the Musalman races found in Sind, Baluchistan and Afghanistan, their genealogical sub-division and septs, together with an ethnological and ethnographical account. Printed at the Commissioner's press; 1901. p. 18.
  3. Sir William Wilson Hunter. Imperial Gazetteer of India.. Clarendon Press; 1908. p. 259.
  4. Albert William Hughes. A gazetteer of the province of Sindh. 1874. p. 289, 738, 761.
  5. Sardar Haji Agha Ali Nawaz Khan Jalbani (Chief of Jalbani) With Mohtarma. First Post. Retrieved 2014-1-25.
  6. "Tribal chief vows to resolve disputes". Dawn.Com. 2003-08-25. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  7. Pakistan: The tribal justice system. Amnesty International. Retrieved 2014-1-24.
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