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Articles that mention Ngangla
Batoo Tshering
Lieutenant General Batoo Tshering is the Chief Operations Officer of the Royal Bhutan Army, appointed in November 2005. He commanded the Dewathang sector during Operation All Clear in 2003 and is one of the longest-serving military commanders in Bhutanese history.
Nganglam
Nganglam is a border town in southeastern Bhutan, in Pema Gatshel District near the Assam frontier. It is the site of Dungsam Cement Corporation Limited, Bhutan's largest cement manufacturer, and serves as a trade gateway between eastern Bhutan and India.
Pema Gatshel Town
Pema Gatshel Town is the administrative capital of Pema Gatshel District in southeastern Bhutan, known as the "Land of the Lotus." Situated at approximately 1,700 metres elevation on a mountain ridge, the small town is home to Pema Gatshel Dzong and serves as the hub for one of the more isolated districts in eastern Bhutan.
Dungkhag Courts of Bhutan
The Dungkhag Courts are the lowest tier of Bhutan's four-level formal judiciary, functioning as sub-district trial courts of first instance in selected dungkhags (sub-districts) below the twenty dzongkhag courts.
Prison System of Bhutan
The Bhutanese prison system is administered by the Royal Bhutan Police under the Prison Act of 2009 and comprises a central long-term facility at Chemgang, a small number of regional prisons, one minors' facility, and dzongkhag police lockups that also serve as pretrial detention.
Road Network of Bhutan
Bhutan's road network is the backbone of domestic connectivity in a landlocked Himalayan kingdom with no railways and limited domestic air services. The national highway system, anchored by the 562-kilometre east-west lateral road, links the twenty dzongkhags across some of the most challenging mountain terrain on Earth. Built largely with Indian assistance through Project DANTAK beginning in the 1960s, the road network has expanded from virtually zero paved roads to over 18,000 kilometres of motorable roads by 2023, though monsoon damage, single-lane mountain stretches, and ongoing construction continue to shape the travel experience for residents and visitors alike.
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