Falam, Burma

For the singer known as "Falam", see Fakhar-e-Alam.
Falam
ဖလမ်းမြို့
Palan[1]
Falam

Location in Burma

Coordinates: 22°54′49″N 93°40′40″E / 22.91361°N 93.67778°E / 22.91361; 93.67778
Country  Burma
Division Chin State
District Falam District
Township Falam Township
Population (2010)[2] 9,529
  Religions Christianity
Time zone MST (UTC+6.30)

Falam[3] (Burmese: ဖလမ်းမြို့; hpa. lam: mrui.) is a town in north-western Burma (Myanmar) near Burma's western border with the Indian state of Mizoram. The town was originally founded by the British in 1892, and became an important place for the British government to rule the whole Chin Hills at that time. After the formation of Chin State, it was the capital city until the administrative offices were moved to Hakha in 1974. It is still the regional capital of Falam District and of Falam Township. Falam is the headquarters of several important organizations. The Chin Baptist Convention (CBC) has its head office in Falam. The population, as of 2014, is 9,529.[2]

People who travel through the city take the Kalay-Falam-Hakha Road. The first school that ever existed in Chin State is the No.1 Basic Education High School in Falam, and it recently celebrated its 100th year. Many of the buildings in Falam reflect the British occupation and its former status as the state capital.

Ministries and Government Organizations

Many federal agencies still maintain offices in Falam, such as Forestry, Health, Agriculture, Customs and Education.[4]

Television

Radio

References

External links

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