Sandeman Tangi is a village located in the union council of Ziarat District in the Balochistan province of Pakistan.

It is 127 km from Quetta and 4 km from Ziarat. It contains a dramatic waterfall cascading down the rocks which is an attraction for visitors.

A tangi (means split mountain in local language) is a narrow cleft carved through a limestone ridge over millions of years by flowing water.

A few such clefts are sprinkled around Ziarat.

It is possible to walk 50 or 60 m into the gorge before the rock walls close in.

A steep climb, holding on to a water supply pipe, takes you to the top.

The climb is particularly adventurous because of the sheer of the rock wall.

The waterfall was earlier known as Droond Tangai.

Many people believed that there live ghosts.

But afterwards, it was named after Sir Robert Sandeman, a Colonial British Indian officer and administrator in the late 19th century.