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Police Codes of Pakistan — Complete List

Pakistan police codes — commonly referred to as police radio codes or wireless codes — are the standardized shorthand signals used by Pakistani law enforcement officers during radio communications. These codes allow officers from the Punjab Police, Sindh Police, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) Police, Balochistan Police, Islamabad Capital Territory Police, and federal agencies such as the FIA (Federal Investigation Agency) and CTD (Counter Terrorism Department) to communicate critical information swiftly, clearly, and securely over radio frequencies without revealing sensitive operational details to unauthorized listeners.

With a population exceeding 240 million people across four provinces and several federal territories, Pakistan operates one of South Asia’s largest and most complex policing systems. Coordinating law enforcement across megacities like Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, and Peshawar — as well as vast rural and tribal regions — demands a robust radio communication framework. Police codes sit at the heart of that framework.

At Police Code, we are your global police code explorer, and Pakistan is one of our fastest-growing South Asian search destinations. This complete guide covers every category of police code used across Pakistan’s federal, provincial, and specialized law enforcement agencies — including 10-codes in both English and Urdu equivalents, signal codes, phonetic alphabets, incident codes, and emergency numbers.

A Brief History of Police Radio Communication in Pakistan

Pakistan’s police communication infrastructure has its roots in the British Indian Police system established under the Police Act of 1861. After independence in 1947, the newly formed Pakistani police forces inherited the British colonial policing model, including early wireless communication systems.

The wireless system in Punjab Police was started as far back as February 1945, initially with just three HF MK-111-19 Canadian wireless sets installed at key locations. The Punjab Police Telecommunication wing now handles the provision of all communication facilities for Punjab Police and administration, transmission of crime and law and order information, support for flood warnings and other emergencies, and the operation and maintenance of HF, VHF, and UHF wireless equipment.

Today, Pakistan’s police wireless infrastructure has grown significantly, incorporating digital radio networks, VHF/UHF systems, and GPS-enabled dispatch centers in major cities. The Police Wireless Training School in Bahawalpur continues to train new wireless operators across Punjab. Similar wireless training facilities exist in Sindh, KPK, and other provinces.

While Pakistan does not publish a single centralized, publicly available national code list, Pakistani police forces — like their counterparts in India, the United Kingdom, and Commonwealth nations — use an adapted version of the internationally recognized APCO 10-code system, modified to reflect local operational needs, Urdu language terminology, and provincial variations.

Pakistan’s Law Enforcement Structure

Understanding which agencies use police radio codes helps contextualize the system:

Provincial Police Forces:

Punjab Police — The largest police force in Pakistan with over 700,000 personnel, serving a province of 128 million people. Headquartered in Lahore.

Sindh Police — Covering Pakistan’s most populous city, Karachi, along with the broader Sindh province of 60 million residents. Established in 1843 under British administration, it remains one of South Asia’s oldest modern police forces.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) Police — Formerly known as the Frontier Police, established in 1889, serving 45 million people across one of Pakistan’s most strategically complex provinces.

Balochistan Police — Operating across Pakistan’s largest province by area, covering challenging terrain and significant security operations.

Federal / Specialized Agencies:

Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) Police — Policing the federal capital with its own dedicated communications infrastructure.

Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) — Handling cybercrime, immigration fraud, anti-corruption, and national security cases.

Counter Terrorism Department (CTD) — A specialized branch within each provincial police for counter-terrorism operations, with its own secure communications protocols.

Pakistan Rangers — Paramilitary forces operating in Sindh and Punjab alongside civilian police, particularly in Karachi.

Pakistan Police 10-Codes — Complete List

The 10-code system forms the operational backbone of Pakistani police radio communications. Below is the comprehensive list of 10-codes as adapted and used across Pakistani federal and provincial law enforcement agencies, presented with English meanings and common Urdu equivalents:

CodeEnglish MeaningUrdu / Local Equivalent
10-0Use cautionاحتیاط برتیں
10-1Poor radio reception / Cannot receive youریڈیو سگنل کمزور ہے
10-2Good reception / Receiving clearlyسگنل واضح ہے
10-3Stop transmittingٹرانسمیشن بند کریں
10-4Acknowledged / Message received / OKپیغام موصول / ٹھیک ہے
10-5Relay messageپیغام آگے پہنچائیں
10-6Busy — stand byمصروف ہوں — انتظار کریں
10-7Out of service / End of shiftڈیوٹی ختم / سروس سے باہر
10-8In service / Available / Start of shiftڈیوٹی پر ہوں / دستیاب ہوں
10-9Repeat last transmissionدوبارہ پیغام بھیجیں
10-10Continuing patrol / Negativeگشت جاری ہے / نہیں
10-11Animal incident / Speaking too fastجانور کا واقعہ
10-12Stand by / Phone call requiredانتظار کریں
10-13Report weather and road conditionsموسم اور سڑک کی صورتحال
10-14Escort / Convoyقافلے کی نگہبانی
10-15Suspect in custodyمشتبہ شخص حراست میں
10-16Pick up prisonerقیدی لے جائیں
10-17Pick up papers / evidenceکاغذات یا ثبوت اٹھائیں
10-18Complete assignment urgentlyفوری طور پر ڈیوٹی مکمل کریں
10-19Return to stationتھانے واپس آئیں
10-20Location / What is your location?آپ کی لوکیشن کیا ہے؟
10-21Call by phoneفون کریں
10-22Disregard last message / Cancelپچھلا پیغام منسوخ کریں
10-23Stand by / Arrived at sceneانتظار / جائے وقوع پر پہنچے
10-24Assignment completedڈیوٹی مکمل ہو گئی
10-25Meet with officerافسر سے ملیں
10-26Detaining suspectمشتبہ شخص روکا ہے
10-27Check driver’s licenseڈرائیونگ لائسنس چیک کریں
10-28Check vehicle registrationگاڑی کی رجسٹریشن چیک کریں
10-29Check for warrants / criminal recordوارنٹ یا پولیس ریکارڈ چیک کریں
10-30Violation of regulationsقوانین کی خلاف ورزی
10-31Crime in progressجرم ابھی ہو رہا ہے
10-32Person with weaponمسلح شخص
10-33EMERGENCY — all units respondہنگامی صورتحال — تمام یونٹ حاضر ہوں
10-34Serious disturbanceسنگین بدنظمی
10-35Confidential informationخفیہ معلومات
10-36Official time checkسرکاری وقت
10-37Suspicious vehicleمشکوک گاڑی
10-38Traffic stopٹریفک روکنا
10-39Urgent — use lights and sirenفوری — لائٹ اور سائرن استعمال کریں
10-40Radio silenceریڈیو خاموشی
10-41Beginning of duty / shift startڈیوٹی شروع
10-42End of duty / shift endڈیوٹی ختم
10-43Information requestمعلومات درکار ہیں
10-44Permission to leave areaعلاقہ چھوڑنے کی اجازت
10-45Dead body / fatality foundلاش ملی ہے
10-46Assist motoristگاڑی چالک کی مدد کریں
10-47Traffic accident — serious injuriesٹریفک حادثہ — شدید زخمی
10-48Traffic accident — minor injuriesٹریفک حادثہ — معمولی زخمی
10-49Proceeding to accident sceneحادثے کی جگہ جا رہے ہیں
10-50Vehicle collision / accidentگاڑی کا حادثہ
10-51Wrecker / tow truck neededکرین بھیجیں
10-52Ambulance neededایمبولینس بھیجیں
10-53Road blockedسڑک بند ہے
10-54Livestock on roadمویشی سڑک پر ہیں
10-55Drunk driver / DUIنشے میں ڈرائیونگ
10-56Intoxicated pedestrianنشے میں پیدل چلنے والا
10-57Hit and runٹکر مار کر فرار
10-58Direct trafficٹریفک کنٹرول کریں
10-59Escort neededمحافظ دستہ درکار
10-60Squad in vicinityدستہ قریب ہے
10-61Unidentified person in areaعلاقے میں نامعلوم شخص
10-62Reply to messageپیغام کا جواب دیں
10-63Prepare to copyلکھنے کے لیے تیار ہوں
10-64Local net activatedمقامی نیٹ ورک فعال
10-65Emergency net activatedہنگامی نیٹ ورک فعال
10-66Cancel messageپیغام منسوخ کریں
10-67All units complyتمام یونٹ عمل کریں
10-68Dispatch informationپیغام بھیجیں
10-69Message receivedپیغام موصول
10-70Fire alarmآگ کا الارم
10-71Report fireآگ کی اطلاع دیں
10-72Report fire progressآگ کی صورتحال بتائیں
10-73Speed check / speed trapرفتار چیک
10-74Negativeنہیں
10-75In contact withسے رابطے میں ہوں
10-76En route / On the wayراستے میں ہوں
10-77Estimated time of arrival (ETA)پہنچنے کا متوقع وقت
10-78Need urgent assistanceفوری مدد چاہیے
10-79Notify coroner / medical examinerطبی افسر کو اطلاع دیں
10-80Chase in progressتعاقب جاری ہے
10-81Breath test requestedبریتھ ٹیسٹ کی درخواست
10-82Reserve lodgingرہائش بک کریں
10-83School crossing / school zoneاسکول زون
10-84Advise phone numberفون نمبر بتائیں
10-85Delayed — approximately X minutesتاخیر — تقریباً X منٹ
10-86Officer on dutyافسر ڈیوٹی پر ہے
10-87Pick up / collectوصول کریں
10-88Advise present phone numberموجودہ فون نمبر بتائیں
10-89Bomb threatبم کی دھمکی
10-90Bank alarm / robberyبینک الارم / ڈکیتی
10-91Pick up prisoner / animalقیدی / جانور کو لے جائیں
10-92Improperly parked vehicleغلط پارک گاڑی
10-93Check my signal / frequencyمیرا سگنل چیک کریں
10-94Street racingغیر قانونی ریسنگ
10-95Prisoner / suspect in custodyملزم حراست میں
10-96Mental health / unstable personذہنی عدم استحکام والا شخص
10-97Arriving at sceneجائے وقوع پر پہنچ رہے ہیں
10-98Assignment completedڈیوٹی مکمل
10-99Warrant / record checkوارنٹ / ریکارڈ چیک
10-100Personal stop / bathroom breakذاتی وقفہ


Pakistan Police Signal Codes

In addition to 10-codes, Pakistani police agencies use signal-level codes to indicate response urgency. These are widely used by provincial police dispatch centers:

SignalEnglish MeaningUrdu Meaning
Signal 1Emergency — respond immediatelyہنگامی — فوری جائیں
Signal 2Urgent — respond quicklyضروری — جلدی جائیں
Signal 3Routine — no urgencyمعمول — جلدی نہیں
Signal 4Return to base/stationتھانے واپس آئیں
Signal 5Encounter with suspectمشتبہ شخص سے سامنا
Signal 6Vehicle stopگاڑی روکیں
Signal 7Pedestrian stopپیدل کو روکیں
Signal 8Vehicle pursuitگاڑی کا تعاقب
Signal 9Domestic disturbanceگھریلو جھگڑا
Signal 10Public disorder / fightعوامی بدنظمی / لڑائی


Pakistan Police Phonetic Alphabet (Police Alphabets)

Pakistani police officers use a phonetic alphabet to spell out names, CNIC numbers, license plate numbers, and other alphanumeric data clearly over radio. Pakistan uses a hybrid system drawing on both the NATO phonetic alphabet and locally adapted Urdu-friendly words:

LetterNATO / Standard CodePakistan Local Variant
AAlphaAdam / Anwar
BBravoBaker / Bashir
CCharlieCharlie / Chand
DDeltaDelta / Daud
EEchoEcho / Ejaz
FFoxtrotFoxtrot / Farooq
GGolfGolf / Ghulam
HHotelHotel / Hamid
IIndiaIndia / Imran
JJulietJuliet / Javed
KKiloKilo / Khalid
LLimaLima / Latif
MMikeMike / Muhammad
NNovemberNovember / Naeem
OOscarOscar / Omar
PPapaPapa / Pervez
QQuebecQuebec / Qasim
RRomeoRomeo / Rashid
SSierraSierra / Saleem
TTangoTango / Tariq
UUniformUniform / Usman
VVictorVictor / Vikram
WWhiskeyWhiskey / Waqar
XX-rayX-ray
YYankeeYankee / Yasir
ZZuluZulu / Zafar


Pakistan Police Incident / Crime Classification Codes

Pakistani police dispatch systems use numeric incident codes to classify the nature of a call for service. While these vary across provinces, the following represent the most commonly used classifications in urban dispatch centers including Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad:

CodeIncident TypeUrdu Description
A-1Street robbery / muggingاسٹریٹ ڈکیتی
A-2Armed robberyمسلح ڈکیتی
A-3Vehicle theftگاڑی چوری
A-4House burglaryگھر میں چوری
A-5Shoplifting / petty theftچھوٹی چوری
B-1Physical assault / fightمار پیٹ
B-2Serious bodily harmشدید جسمانی نقصان
B-3Murder / homicideقتل
B-4Attempted murderقتل کی کوشش
B-5Kidnapping / abductionاغوا
C-1Drug trafficking / narcoticsمنشیات
C-2Illegal weapons possessionغیر قانونی اسلحہ
C-3Terrorism-related activityدہشت گردی کی سرگرمی
C-4Extortion / bhattaبھتہ خوری
C-5Cybercrime / fraudسائبر کرائم / دھوکہ دہی
D-1Traffic accident — injuriesٹریفک حادثہ — زخمی
D-2Traffic accident — fatalٹریفک حادثہ — ہلاکت
D-3Hit and runٹکر مار کر فرار
D-4Dangerous driving / DUIخطرناک ڈرائیونگ / نشہ
E-1Domestic violenceگھریلو تشدد
E-2Child abuse / missing childبچے سے زیادتی / بچہ گم
E-3Sexual harassment / assaultہراسگی / جنسی حملہ
E-4Missing personلاپتہ شخص
F-1Fire — residentialآگ — رہائشی
F-2Fire — commercial / industrialآگ — تجارتی / صنعتی
F-3Gas leakگیس لیک
F-4Explosion / blastدھماکہ
G-1Public protest / gatheringعوامی احتجاج
G-2Riot / mob violenceفساد / ہجوم کا تشدد
G-3VIP security / escortوی آئی پی سیکیورٹی
G-4Crowd control requiredہجوم کنٹرول


Pakistan Police Status Codes

Officers communicate their availability and current status to dispatch using standardized status calls:

StatusEnglishUrdu
In ServiceOn active patrolڈیوٹی پر / گشت میں
Out of ServiceOff duty / unavailableڈیوٹی سے باہر
At SceneArrived at incident locationجائے وقوع پر
AvailableReady for assignmentدستیاب / کال کے لیے تیار
BusyAttending a callمصروف
Off AirNo radio contactریڈیو رابطہ نہیں
With DetaineeTransporting arrested personملزم کے ساتھ
At StationAt the police stationتھانے میں
On BreakPersonal breakوقفے میں


Province-Specific Code Variations in Pakistan

One of the defining characteristics of Pakistan’s police communication system is provincial variation. Because each province operates its own police force with significant administrative autonomy, code meanings and supplemental signals can differ meaningfully from one region to another.

Punjab Police (Lahore HQ) Punjab Police, with its extensive wireless infrastructure established since 1945, follows a structured 10-code framework closely aligned with the standard APCO system. The province’s size and population density mean dispatch centers in Lahore, Faisalabad, Rawalpindi, and Multan handle extremely high call volumes, requiring tight code discipline. Punjab also uses U-codes for unit identification and T-codes for transport and vehicle tracking.

Sindh Police (Karachi HQ) Sindh Police, headquartered in Karachi — Pakistan’s largest city — operates one of the country’s most complex policing environments. Sindh Police launched its own radio FM 88.6 in Karachi for traffic flow updates, situation reports, route diversions, and traffic education. Sindh Police supplementary codes include special identifiers for Rangers coordination (a significant feature of Karachi’s security apparatus) and sea/coastal patrol signals through the Sindh Maritime Security Agency.

KPK Police (Peshawar HQ) The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Police, formerly known as the Frontier Police, was formed in 1889 and serves a jurisdiction of approximately 45 million people. KPK’s mountainous terrain and security-sensitive border areas mean its police codes include specialized signals for cross-border situations, Levies coordination, and CTD operations.

Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) Police The ICT Police operates dedicated helplines including IGP direct on 1715 and the standard emergency line on 15. Islamabad’s police codes also incorporate VIP protocol codes given the capital’s concentration of diplomatic missions, government buildings, and high-profile targets.

CTD and FIA Specialized Communication Codes

Pakistan’s Counter Terrorism Department and Federal Investigation Agency operate with additional layers of encrypted and specialized communication beyond the standard 10-code framework.

CTD (Counter Terrorism Department) operates in all four provinces plus Islamabad and AJK. CTD units use secure radio protocols that layer on top of standard provincial codes, adding signals for:

  • Terrorist alert levels (Low / Medium / High / Critical)
  • IED (Improvised Explosive Device) threat notifications
  • Suspect surveillance operations
  • Coordination with military intelligence
  • Sensitive witness protection operations

FIA (Federal Investigation Agency) specializes in cybercrime, immigration, anti-human trafficking, and financial crimes. FIA communication codes include specific signals for digital evidence handling, border interception, and inter-agency coordination with Interpol.

For broader context on how specialized law enforcement agencies use radio codes globally, see our guide to Popular Police Codes of the United States.

Pakistan Police Color Alert Codes

Pakistani law enforcement and security agencies use a color-coded threat alert system for national security situations, especially in response to terrorism and civil unrest:

Color CodeThreat LevelMeaning / Response
Code WhiteRoutine / NormalNo specific threat — standard patrol
Code YellowElevatedIncreased vigilance — enhanced patrols
Code OrangeHighSpecific threat identified — tactical readiness
Code RedCriticalImminent threat / active incident — full deployment
Code BlackExtremeMajor attack / national emergency — all forces mobilized
Code BlueOfficer downPolice officer injured or killed — immediate response
Code GreenAll clearSituation resolved — stand down


Pakistan Rangers Radio Codes

Pakistan Rangers operate as a paramilitary force in Sindh and Punjab, frequently working alongside civilian police in high-crime or security-sensitive areas — most notably in Karachi. Rangers use a parallel communication framework that interfaces with civilian police dispatch while maintaining their own command structure:

Rangers CodeMeaning
R-1Ranger unit active / on patrol
R-2Joint operation with police initiated
R-3Sector secured
R-4Suspect apprehended — transfer to police
R-5Exchange of fire / contact with armed criminals
R-6Reinforcements required
R-7Checkpoint established
R-8Curfew enforcement in sector
R-9Stand down / operation concluded


Pakistan Traffic Police Codes

Pakistan’s traffic police forces — particularly the Punjab Traffic Police (PTP), which has won recognition as one of South Asia’s most reformed traffic enforcement bodies — use a set of codes tailored to road safety and accident management:

CodeMeaning
T-1Traffic flow normal
T-2Minor congestion — monitor
T-3Heavy congestion — rerouting advised
T-4Road blocked — emergency vehicles needed
T-5Fatal accident — site secured
T-6Non-fatal accident — assistance given
T-7Vehicle breakdown — tow required
T-8Speed violation — fine issued
T-9DUI suspected — further checks
T-10VIP convoy — clear route

Pakistan’s traffic police were early adopters of mobile apps and SMS-based violation notification systems, reflecting a modernization of communication that complements traditional radio codes. For comparison with how other Commonwealth nations handle traffic policing codes, see our article on Police Codes of the United Kingdom.

Emergency Helpline Numbers in Pakistan

Alongside police radio codes used internally by law enforcement, Pakistan operates a comprehensive public emergency helpline system. Citizens should be familiar with these numbers:

NumberServiceCoverage
15Police Emergency (Madadgar 15)Nationwide
1122Rescue Emergency (Ambulance, Fire, Disaster)Punjab, KPK, Balochistan, GB, AJK; now also Karachi
1021Chhipa Ambulance / EmergencySindh / Karachi
115Edhi Foundation AmbulanceNationwide
16Fire BrigadeMajor cities
1020Bomb Disposal Unit (Karachi)Karachi / Sindh
1715IGP Direct Line — IslamabadICT
1991FIA Cybercrime HelplineNationwide
051-9261083Rangers Helpline — IslamabadICT
9212111Bomb Disposal — KarachiKarachi

Emergency numbers like 15, 1122, and 115 work from any phone, even without balance or a SIM card, as long as there is network coverage.

Prior to 2004, Pakistan did not have an organized emergency medical system. In that year, Rescue 1122 was launched as a professional pre-hospital emergency service within Lahore, and it managed to achieve an average response time of seven minutes, comparable to that of developed nations. Today, Rescue 1122 is operational across all districts of Punjab and has expanded to KPK, Balochistan, AJK, and Gilgit-Baltistan, as well as Karachi in Sindh.

How Pakistani Police Codes Compare to Other Countries

Pakistan’s police communication system reflects the country’s layered historical influences — British colonial policing, post-independence institutional development, and modern international cooperation with agencies including Interpol, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), and U.S. DEA cooperation programs.

The 10-code framework Pakistan uses has direct parallels with the systems used in the United States and Canada. Our detailed breakdown of Police Radio 10-Codes of the United States illustrates how the same numerical framework functions in a different operational context. Similarly, our guide to Police Codes of India — Pakistan’s neighboring country with a shared British-origin policing system — highlights the interesting convergences and divergences between the two nations’ communication frameworks.

How to Read a Pakistani Police Radio Transmission

If you are studying Pakistani police communication or monitoring publicly accessible radio frequencies, understanding the structure of a typical radio exchange helps:

Standard transmission format: [Calling unit] to [Base / Dispatch], 10-20 [location], 10-38 [traffic stop], requesting 10-29 [warrant check], over.

Typical dispatch response: [Base] to [Unit], 10-4, 10-20 confirmed, 10-29 running, stand by.

Key principles:

“Over” signals the end of a transmission and an expectation of reply. “Out” signals the end of a communication exchange entirely. Officers always identify their unit designation before the code. Priority codes (10-33, Signal 1) override all other radio traffic. Urdu and English are both used in Pakistani police radio, sometimes within the same transmission, depending on the city and the educational background of the operator.

The Future of Pakistani Police Communication

Pakistan’s law enforcement agencies are actively modernizing their communication infrastructure. Key developments include:

Digital radio migration — Several provincial forces are transitioning from analog VHF/UHF radio to digital trunked radio systems (TETRA), which offer better audio quality, GPS integration, and encryption.

Integrated dispatch centers — Major cities including Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad have established or are building Integrated Emergency Operations Centers (IEOCs) that combine police, rescue, fire, and traffic management on a single platform.

Mobile apps — Applications such as ICT Police’s 1INFO App and similar provincial platforms allow citizens to report crimes and emergencies digitally, supplementing traditional radio-based dispatch.

Encrypted communications — CTD and FIA units are increasingly using end-to-end encrypted digital radio for sensitive operations, reducing the risk of operational details being intercepted.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What police codes are used in Pakistan? Pakistani police primarily use an adapted version of the international APCO 10-code system, supplemented by signal codes, incident classification codes, and color-alert codes. These are used across all provincial police forces — Punjab, Sindh, KPK, and Balochistan — as well as federal agencies like the FIA and CTD.

What does 10-4 mean in Pakistani police communication? 10-4 means “message acknowledged” or “OK” — it is the most universally used code across all police forces in Pakistan and worldwide. An officer responding “10-4” to dispatch confirms they received and understood the message.

What is the emergency police number in Pakistan? The primary police emergency number in Pakistan is 15, often called Madadgar 15 (Madadgar meaning “helper” in Urdu). For medical and rescue emergencies, 1122 (Rescue) is the most widely used number.

Do all Pakistani provinces use the same police codes? No. While all provinces use the 10-code framework as a baseline, each provincial force has local adaptations. Sindh Police has additional codes for Rangers coordination and coastal operations. KPK Police has codes specific to border security. Punjab Police uses the most standardized code system due to its size and institutional development.

What does 10-33 mean in Pakistani police radio? 10-33 is the emergency code meaning all available units must respond immediately. When 10-33 is broadcast, all other radio traffic stops and every unit in range responds to assist.

What is “Code Red” in Pakistani law enforcement? Code Red in Pakistan’s security framework indicates a critical threat level — an imminent or active attack, major civil disorder, or life-threatening situation requiring full deployment of available law enforcement and security resources.

What does 10-20 mean in Pakistani police communication? 10-20 means “location” — either asking an officer where they are (“What’s your 10-20?”) or an officer reporting their current position. It is one of the most frequently used codes in daily police radio traffic.

How is Pakistani police communication different from British police codes? Pakistan’s police system has British colonial roots but has evolved toward the 10-code system rather than retaining the UK’s signal/grading system. British police now primarily use plain language communication, while Pakistani forces continue to use numeric codes extensively. Read about the differences in our guide to Police Codes of the United Kingdom.

What is the role of Rescue 1122 in Pakistan’s emergency system? Rescue 1122 is Pakistan’s premier government emergency service, providing 24/7 ambulance, fire, and rescue response. In Karachi specifically, it is called the Police Madadgar Helpline for police-related emergencies.

Can civilians listen to Pakistani police radio? Pakistan does not have a specific law prohibiting the reception of police radio transmissions on publicly accessible frequencies. However, many agencies — particularly CTD and FIA — use encrypted or secure communications. Standard provincial police radio can technically be monitored, but using any intercepted information to interfere with police operations is a criminal offence under the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC).

Conclusion

Pakistan’s police code system is one of the most extensive and operationally critical communication frameworks in South Asia. Spanning four major provincial forces, multiple federal agencies, paramilitary units, and a rapidly modernizing emergency services infrastructure, it serves a nation of over 240 million people in some of the most complex security environments in the world.

From the universally recognized 10-4 to the province-specific incident codes of Karachi’s Sindh Police and Lahore’s Punjab Police, this complete guide to Pakistan police codes provides the most comprehensive publicly available English-language reference on the subject.

Whether you are a journalist covering Pakistan’s law enforcement beat, a security researcher, an overseas Pakistani wanting to understand the homeland’s emergency systems, or simply a curious reader, Police Code is your trusted global police code explorer.

Explore more country-specific police code guides in our global database at policecode.info.