Kharian Cantonment

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Kharian Cantonment
کھارِیاں کینٹ
Kharian Cantonment is located in Pakistan
Kharian Cantonment
Kharian Cantonment
Coordinates: 32°29′N 73°32′E / 32.48°N 73.53°E / 32.48; 73.53Coordinates: 32°29′N 73°32′E / 32.48°N 73.53°E / 32.48; 73.53
CountryPakistan
ProvincePunjab
DistrictGujrat
Population
 (2014)
 • Total204,462
Time zoneUTC+5 (PST)
Calling code+92-537
Postal Code 50070
Administrative Control
Cantonment Board Kharian

Kharian Cantonment (Urdu: کھارِیاں کینٹ), (Punjabi: کھاریاں ﮐﻴﻨٹ) or Kharian Cantonment is one of the largest cantonment (Army bases) in Pakistan. It is located near Kharian city, in the Gujrat district of Punjab province.[1][2]

The Cantonment was built in the late 1950s with US support. The population of the cantonment is 90,462, and the population of the parent city Kharian is around 30,000.[3]

Geography[]

The Kharian Cantonment is 144 km from Islamabad and 173 km from Lahore. Prominent nearby cities and towns include Lalamusa, Dinga, Sarai Alamgir and Gujrat.[4]

History[]

The construction of the cantonment was completed in 1958 with the assistance of the United States as part of its military assistance to Pakistan. Its construction was supervised by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and was built according to American standards. which differed considerably from British standards for Indian and British troops. The master plan is a planned grid-like road network. It was one of the few cantonments established during the post-partition era. It was constructed to station US troops in Pakistan, a plan which was partly reversed because of the U2 spy plane crash scandal. It was one of the biggest army bases and the home of BURAK, (the Armoured division of Pakistan Army Reserve North) until 2008.

Residential areas[]

Residential areas include the Abrar Colony, Sanaullah Colony, Ghazi Colony, I.J. Colony, Defence Colony, Shami Colony, North Colony, M-Block, Afzaal Colony, Gammon Colony and Johar Colony. Besides, small camps and residential areas for military personnel are present. Each colony has a small park where typically you come across children playing cricket. In 2021, Cantonment Board elections were held throughout Pakistan including Kharian Cantonment.[5]

Transport[]

Kharian Cantt is accessible by road on National Highway N-5 (known as the GT road) and the main Rail line. Not all express trains stop at the Kharian Cantt Railway station; public and private buses are the main means of transport.

Education[]

Kharian Cantt offers education institutes for basic, intermediate, and higher education. Prominent schools and colleges include:

  • C.M.H Kharian Medical College
  • F.G Degree College For Men
  • F.G Degree College For Women
  • F.G Boys Public School
  • F.G Girls Public School
  • F.G. Boys High School
  • F.G Girls High School
  • Govt. Institute of Commerce, Kharian (TEVTA)
  • Govt. Technical Training Center (Thapla) Kharian (TEVTA)
  • Govt. Vocational Training Institute (Women), Kharian (TEVTA)
  • Garrison Academy Kharian Cantt (GAK)
  • Bloom Field Hall School
  • Cambridge Standard School Kharian
  • Army Public School & College
  • Babari Society
  • Islamic Asian College of Commerce & Computer Sciences G.T. Road Kharian
  • Kharian College of Commerce & Computer Sciences G.T. Road Kharian
  • Rosebelt College G.T. Road Kharian
  • New Vision College of information Technology Kharian

In addition, good schools operate near the cantonment, including The Beaconhouse School Systems, International School of Cordoba, Bahria Foundation College, Dar-e-Arqam School and The City School (Pakistan). A famous Cadet College, Military College Jhelum, is located 15 km away at Sarai Alamgir.

Health care[]

The cantonment has an "A" class standard, 700-bed teaching hospital known as CMH (Combined Military Hospital) Kharian. It is the second largest CMH after Rawalpindi.

See also[]

  • List of cities in Pakistan
  • List of cities in Punjab (Pakistan)
  • Army Cantonment Board
  • Cantonment

References[]

  1. ^ Waseem Ashraf Butt (27 April 2015). "PML-N lost Kharian Cantt due to 'differences among leaders'". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  2. ^ "Tehsils & Unions in the District of Gujrat". National Reconstruction Bureau, Government of Pakistan website. 2 January 2008. Archived from the original on 14 February 2009. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
  3. ^ "Cities in Pakistan: 2005 Population Estimates". Mongabay.com. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  4. ^ Gujrat including Kharian Tehsil on Punjab Portal website Retrieved 24 September 2021
  5. ^ Full results: PTI leads in cantonment board elections Samaa TV News website, Published 13 September 2021, Retrieved 24 September 2021
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