Sabujbagh Thana

Sabujbagh (Bengali: সবুজবাগ) is a Thana of Dhaka District in the Division of Dhaka, Bangladesh. Its one of the mostly dense populated area in Dhaka.

Sabujbagh

সবুজবাগ
Thana
Sabujbagh
Location in Bangladesh
Coordinates: 23°44′N 90°26′E
Country Bangladesh
DivisionDhaka Division
DistrictDhaka District
Area
  Total18.18 km2 (7.02 sq mi)
Population
 (1991)
  Total354,989
  Density19,526/km2 (50,570/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+6 (BST)
Websitebangladesh.gov.bd/maps/images/dhaka/SabujbaghT.gif

Geography

Sabujbagh is located at 23.7333°N 90.4333°E / 23.7333; 90.4333 . It has 65517 households and total area 18.18 km².

Demographics

At the 1991 Bangladesh census, Sabujbagh had a population of 354989, of whom 201,739 were aged 18 or older. Males constituted 54.44% of the population, and females 45.56%. Sabujbagh had an average literacy rate of 60% (7+ years), against the national average of 32.4%.[1]

Education

Schools and Colleges in Sabujbagh

  • Sobujbagh Government College
  • Sobujbagh Government High School
  • Basaboo Boys' and Girls' High School,
  • Motijheel Model High School and College, Basaboo Branch,
  • Kadamtala Purbo Basaboo High School and college,
  • Madartek Abdul Aziz School and College,
  • Kamalapur School and College,
  • Central Ideal School And College
  • Mugda Para Kazi Zafor Ahmed High School
  • Ideal School and College, Mugdapara Branch,
  • Dharmarajika Orphanage Residential High School
  • Haider Ali High School and College, Manda
gollark: > Feeding and maintaining human slaves costs a lot more than running an autonomous robot that only requires electronic energy, which is easily harvested by solar panelsBut it doesn't require electricity only, it requires parts to be replaced.
gollark: I mean, you can't effectively use slaves for anything beyond menial labour, because then they need to do thinking and have some autonomy and actually receive stuff beyond bare necessities.
gollark: Although many tasks don't need generalized robots as much as big motors or something.
gollark: On the other hand, modern robot-y systems need microprocessors, which are stupidly expensive and hard to make, and humans wouldn't.
gollark: Currently they mostly can't, although the tech *is* improving and the logistics of supplying electricity and spare parts might be better than having to deal with food and everything else.

See also

References

  1. "Population Census Wing, BBS". Archived from the original on 2005-03-27. Retrieved November 10, 2006.


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