LOCATION AND AREA
Pakistan consists of
four provinces. Its second largest province
is known as Sindh with its capital in Karachi,
which is not only the most populous metropolis of
the country, but also, a commercial hub.
The province
of Sindh has two gigantic seaports and both are
located in Karachi. The biggest international
airport of Pakistan is also situated in Karachi
and is widely known as Qaid-e-Azam International
airport.
The Province of
Sindh forms the lower Indus basin and lies between
23 to 35 Degree and 28-30, north latitude and
66-42 and 71-1-degree east longitude. It is about
579 kms in length from north to south and nearly
442 kms in its extreme breadth (281 kms average).
It covers 1,40,915 square kms and is about as
large as England.
Sindh is also proud
of having acquired fame as Bab-ul-Islam (Gateway
to Islam in the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent). At
the time of the independence from the British
occupation in August 1947, the population of Sindh
was estimated at 5.5 million. Today, after the
passage of fifty years the population of the
province stands around 40 million souls, a half of
whom now live in the urban centres like Hyderabad,
Sukkur, Mirpurkhas, Tando Adam, Nawabshah, Larkana,
Shikarpur, Khairpur, Badin and other smaller
towns. It is basically an agrarian province. The
Indus is by far the most important river of the
province. The classical name of the river was
Sindhu (Sanskrit for an ocean) and Sindh province
was created and sustained by the river, without
which it would have been a desert. Its length is
about 2,880 kilometers and nearly a third of that
(about 944 Kms) traverses the province. The
striking resemblance of Sindh to Egypt was noticed
long before the existence in it of a comparable
great prehistoric civilization was even suspected;
the idiosyncrasy of its people when compared with
Indians, is very marked. There is an ancient
saying "Just as Egypt is the gift of Nile, Sindh
is the gift of the Indus".
Owing to its
prevalent aridity and the absence of the monsoons,
the climate of Sindh ranks among the hottest and
is most variable. The average temperature of the
summer months is 35 degrees centigrade and those
of inter months 16. But the thermometer frequently
rises in summer to 45 and occasionally to 50.In
the northern part of Sindh the extremes of
temperature are strongly marked. Jacobabad boasts
of the highest temperature yet recorded at a
Pakistani meteorological station i.e.52 degrees
centigrade in June 1919. Sehwan is another hot
place while Hyderabad is on the average pleasant
due to cool breeze.
Cotton, rice, wheat
and sugarcane are the main crops produced in
Sindh. Rice is by far the most important crop
cultivated here. It is the only crop that can be
grown in the annually inundated lands within the
delta of the Indus and a larger quantity and much
finer quality is produced in the Larkana district.
In Jacobabad, Sukkur, Badin, Thatta and Dadu,
also, a great quantity of rice is cultivated.
Cotton is produced mainly in Sanghar, Nawabshah,
and Hyderabad, Sugarcane is another important crop
which is chiefly grown in the Ghulam Mohammad
Barrage zone in South. Sindh is proud of its
bananas and mangoes also.
The waters around
Karachi are rich with seafood and are considered
to be some of the best fishing spots in the world.
Surmai, pomphret, lobsters, shrimps, sharks,
dolphins, crocodiles and other aquatic life
especially Pallas exists in plenty in the sea as
well as in the sweet waters of the Indus, Manchar,
Keenjhar, Haleji and other lakes.
Within the last 45
years, three irrigation barrages have been
constructed across the Indus in the province. The
command areas of the three barrages are: Sukkur
barrage 3.12 million hectares, Kotri barrage 1.12
million hectares, and Guddu barrage 1.172 million
hectares.
The province
of Sindh had traditionally been rich in wildlife
heritage. Its Kirthar National Park, about 70 k.m.
of North West of Karachi, is enlisted on World
Heritage. Other side at Haleji Lake and Thar area
are also of paramount importance.
Though chiefly an
agricultural and pastoral province, Sindh has a
reputation for textiles, pottery, leatherwork,
carpets etc. The craftsmanship of the people of
Sindh began during the period of Moenjodaro
civilization. Their polished ornaments and
articles of apparel made out of muslin and wooden
lacquer work have won the praise in and outside
the country.
THE BOUNDARIES
Geographically
speaking the word "Sindh" denotes the lower half
of he Indus Valley from Bhakkar down to the sea
and from the Kirthar in the west to the desert of
Thar in the east. These geographical boundaries
loosely form the basis of cultural, ethnic,
linguistic and political frontiers of Sindh.
Generally speaking the above-mentioned frontiers
agree with the geographical boundaries but in some
cases they over-step them. This is particularly
noticeable in respect of the languages. In the
north Landha and in the east Rajhastani co-mingle
with Sindhi. Ethnically the Sindhi society has
been cosmopolitan in its composition. Its ethnic
groups range from the descendants of the ancient
Aryans, the Secthians, the Arabs, the Turks, the
Persians, the Rajputs and the Baluchis.
Politically speaking
it is difficult to draw exact frontiers of Sindh
as they have suffered constant changes in the
course of history. However, references made by the
Greeks and the Arab historians enable one to
determine with some measure of precision the
frontiers of Sindh which existed at the time when
these records were written. The Greek accounts of
Alexander’s expedition show Sindh divided into
several states. The northern most was Alor, while
Kachh-Gandava and the Arabi (the Purali) formed
the boundary on the west. The description of
Oritoe shows Mukran as a separate kingdom. Later
Hiue Tsiang mentioned Cutch as a part of Sindh and
described Multan as part of a separate kingdom. In
the reign of Chach (last half of 7 century AD) the
frontiers of Sindh extended upto Kashmir.
PRESENT DAY BOUNDARIES
Sindh is bounded on
north by Baluchistan and the Punjab, on the east
by Rajisthan (India), on the south by the Runn of
Kutch and the Arabian Sea and on the West by
Lasbela and Kalat districts of the province of
Baluchistan.
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