Sohawa is a town in the Punjab province of Pakistan, and is the capital of the Sohawa Tehsil, which is an administrative subdivision of Jhelum District in Punjab.[1] Sohawa has grown from a small village in 1947 to a large town in 2014, with major developments in transport, education and health. Most of the bureaucrats, army officers, judges and high officials belong to Sohawa areas

Sohawa
سوہاوہ
Town
Grand Trunk Road (N-5) in Sohawa
Grand Trunk Road (N-5) in Sohawa
Sohawa is located in Pakistan
Sohawa
Sohawa
Coordinates: 33°07′55″N 73°25′12″E / 33.13194°N 73.42000°E / 33.13194; 73.42000
CountryPakistan
ProvincePunjab
DivisionRawalpindi
DistrictJhelum
TehsilSohawa
Government
 • MPASyed Riffat Mehmood
Elevation
408 m (1,339 ft)
Languages
 • OfficialPahari-Pothwari, Urdu
Time zoneUTC+5 (PST)
Postal code
49230
Calling code0544
A sign pointing to the tomb of Shahab-Ud-Din Muhammad Ghauri, near Sohawa

Etymology edit

The etymology of Sohawa has not been proven, but folk etymology suggests Soo Awa, which means "100 pottery furnaces".

Geography edit

Sohawa is in the north-western part of Jhelum district, Punjab, on the subcontinental Grand Trunk Road (GT Road) between Gujar Khan and Dina. The geographical coordinates of its weather station are 33° 07' 15" North, 73° 25' 34".[2] One sign of Sohawa is the toll plaza by the name of 'Tarakki' on the GT Road. The bazaars of Sohawa attract people from nearby villages; these bazaars are located on both sides of the GT Road.

Sociology edit

The population mostly consists of different tribes. One of the major professions in Sohawa is service in the Armed Forces. A large number of people of Sohawa are settled in foreign countries particularly Western Europe and Middle East. The main source of livelihood of the people is agriculture.

In the media edit

In mid 2014, Sohawa was featured on national media including Geo News, Dawn News and other top news channel because of newly discovered Ghauri XI oil reserves in its suburbs.[3]

Health edit

The main hospital for Sohawa and surrounding rural areas is the 80-bed Tehsil Headquarters Hospital but it has only basic facilities.[4] For more serious health problems people have to go to larger hospitals in major cities such as Gujar Khan, Islamabad or Jhelum. There is also a rural health center in Domeli and twelve basic health units (Adrana, Jandala, Nagial, Gurah Uttam Singh, Kohali, Phulray Syedan, Surgdhan, Dewan-e-Hazoori, Pail Mirza, Karounta, Panchor and Banth). Additionally there three government rural dispensaries (Lehri, Gaddar, and Baragawah) and four rural dispensaries (Dial, Hayal, Pari Darweza and Dhairy Bakrala).

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Tehsils & Unions in the District of Jhelum - Government of Pakistan Archived 2012-02-09 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Location of Sohawa - Falling Rain Genomics
  3. ^ "Oil struck near Jhelum - Pakistan - DAWN.COM". 7 June 2014.
  4. ^ "TEHSIL HEADQUARTER HOSPITAL, SOHAWA, JHELUM". Primary & Secondary Healthcare Department, Government of The Punjab. 22 January 2024. Retrieved 22 January 2024.

Notations edit

External links edit