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Sar Hawza District

Coordinates: 33°6′52.34″N 69°7′28.97″E / 33.1145389°N 69.1247139°E / 33.1145389; 69.1247139
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Sar Hawza
سر هوزه
District
Sar Hawza district (in orange) within the province of Paktika.
Sar Hawza district (in orange) within the province of Paktika.
Sar Hawza is located in Afghanistan
Sar Hawza
Sar Hawza
Location in Afghanistan
Coordinates: 33°6′52.34″N 69°7′28.97″E / 33.1145389°N 69.1247139°E / 33.1145389; 69.1247139
Country Afghanistan
ProvincePaktika
Population
 • Total36,236
Time zoneUTC+4:30

Sari-roza or Sar Hawza (Pashto: سر هوزه, Persian: ولسوالی سرروضه) is a district of Paktika Province, Afghanistan.

Sar Hawza is one of the main districts of Paktika with over three thousand houses. The population is 36,236.[1] People of Sar Hawza mostly work in business.[citation needed] Several Sar Hawzewal (residents of Sar Hawza) have businesses in Karachi, Saudi Arabia, Dubai, UK, USA and other European countries.

The district was the location of an operating point (OP) for the U.S. military in support of patrols and other operations throughout the Paktika province. In 2009, Sar Hawza was center of a firefight between U.S. and Taliban forces, resulting in a Taliban commander being captured.[2]

They have committees in Karachi, Pakistan, Saudi, Dubai, UK and in the USA. The Saudi committee serves the people of Sar Hawza by providing shelter and guidance during the Hajj.

The district is within the heartland of the Kharoti tribe of Ghilji Pashtuns.[3][4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Paktika provincial profile, June 2004, profile compiled by the National Area-Based Development Programme (NABDP) of the Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development (MRRD)
  2. ^ Wafa, Abdul Waheed; Otterman, Sharon (2009-08-27). "Afghan Taliban Commander Is Captured in Raid". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-01-31.
  3. ^ Paktika Province Tribal Map (Page 11). Naval Postgraduate School.
  4. ^ Paktika Personalities: An Examination of the Tribes and the Significant People of a Traditional Pashtun Province - Timothy S. Timmons and Rashid Hassanpoor (2007)


33°6′52.34″N 69°7′28.97″E / 33.1145389°N 69.1247139°E / 33.1145389; 69.1247139