Tuesday 1 October 2013

HISTORY OF KUCHLAK

Kuchlak (or Kuchlagh) is a town near Quetta, in the province of Balochistan, Pakistan. It is governed by a union council in Chiltan Town, Quetta. Kuchlak is home to Halaqa Number 61, one of the largest halaqas in Quetta. Kuchlak is well known for summer fruits such as apples and peaches; however, soil aridity is a problem. Vegetables grown in the valley include tomatoes, potatoes, onions and turnips.
Contents  
1 Climate
2 Education
3 Tribes
3.1 Kakar
3.2 Kasi
3.3 Khilji
3.4 Durrani
4 Sports
5 See also
6 Reference
Climate

Kuchlak has a continental arid climate with great variation between summer and winter temperatures. Summer highs can reach 40 °C (104 °F), while winter temperatures can drop to −19 °C (−2 °F). Summer begins in late May and continues until early September, with average temperatures ranging from 24–26 °C (75–79 °F). Autumn runs from late September to mid-November, with average temperatures in the 12–18 °C (54–64 °F) range. Winter starts in late November and ends in late March, with average temperatures near 4–5 °C (39–41 °F) and snow during the months of January and February. Spring starts in early April and ends in late May, with average temperatures close to 15 °C (59 °F). Unlike most of Pakistan, Kuchlak does not have a monsoon with sustained, heavy rainfall; snowfall during the winter months is the principal mode of precipitation.
Education[edit source]

Arbab Ghulam Ali Kasi Government Inter College is the only institute of higher learning in Kuchlak. There are three boys' public high schools, two girls' high schools and many primary and middle schools. Several private educational institutions and schools also exist in the town. For higher education, most students are travel over 25 km daily to Quetta (the nearest city) for study in tertiary educational institutions such as:
University of Balochistan (UOB)
Balochistan University of Information Technology, Engineering and Management Sciences (BUITEMS)
Iqra University
Government Science College, Quetta
Government Degree College
Bolan Medical College and Hospital
Al Hamd University
Government Girls' Degree College, Quetta
Government Girls' Degree College, Quarry Road, Quetta
Professor Bahadur Khan Women's University (Brewery Road Western Bypass, Quetta
Noble Institute of Computer Programming kuchlak.
Tribes[edit source]

There are many Pashtun tribes living in Kuchlak; tribes with the largest population are the Sanatia Kakar and Sargarh Kakar tribes.
Kakar
Sargarh (Sargarhei) yousuf Khan Kakar , Khan Of Kuchlak
Sanzarkhail
Dummar
Essakhail (Yasinzai, Sahibzada or Sahibzadakhail
Mehtarzai
Sanatia or Abubakarzai
Kasi
Malak
Arbab
Khilji[edit source]
Sulemankhail
Nasar
Nakhail
Miakhail
Kharotei
Babar
Safi
Wardag
Tokhei
Andarh
Dotani
Murekkhail(anikhail)
Tarakai
Durrani[edit source]
Tareen (Tor)
Achakzai (Asakzai)
Noorzai
Alikozai
Berech
Sayyed
Sports

The following sports are popular:
Cricket
Football
Volleyball
Bodybuilding
Cycling
Mountaineering
Horseback riding
Buz-Kashi (new in north Kuchlak)
Wrestling (Ghaiza in Balochi)
Of these sports cricket, football, volleyball, bodybuilding, and cycling are the most popular.


Pishin
Chaman
Qilla Abdullah
Ziarat
Qilla Saifullah
Loralai
Zhob
Afghanistan
Kandahar
Helmand
Herat
Kabul


Kuchlak is a city of 120,000 people located a 30-minutes drive from Quetta, the capital of Balochistan Province. Situated on the border with Afghanistan, the town has become a permanent home to Afghan refugees who fled to Pakistan during the civil war in the 1980s and later conflicts. In this remote area where health services are almost unreachable, Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) has been providing medical care in a maternal health and a rural health center since 2006.
On a dusty gravel road to the Afghanistan border in between the horn blasts from passing trucks, the faint cries of newborn babies can be heard from inside the MSF birthing unit in the town of Kuchlak—located in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan Province.
Inside a neat and newly painted room a young mother in her twenties has just given birth. It is her third child. She lies, spent at the effort, while midwives attend to the newborn. It is a boy and she is happy that she has born her laborer husband a son who will grow up to look after the family.
To outsiders there should be nothing extraordinary about her delivery. But this young mother has just survived an event that claims the lives of thousands of women living in rural Balochistan, the largest and least developed Pakistani province. Here childbirth is a deadly part of life—claiming women’s lives because they cannot access proper maternal healthcare in time.
Infant mortality figures are estimated to be around of 65 deaths per 1,000 live births. In 2007, the maternal mortality rate in Balochistan stood at an equally alarming 637 deaths per 100,000 live births. That is more than double the national average for Pakistan, which was the eighth highest number of maternal deaths worldwide in 2005. Couple this with the low number of nurses and midwives in the country and the dangers of childbirth in Pakistan become clear.
MSF has been operating a maternal and child health center in Kuchlak since 2006. The services provided by the center include antenatal consultations, obstetrics, gynecology, post-natal care, vaccinations, and general free health consultations for children under five. Every week about 1,000 patients seek treatment at the outpatient facility. At the birthing unit an average of 150 to 170 women give birth every month.
For a community living in perpetual poverty, free medical services are a lifeline that they otherwise struggle to afford. Women here, whose husbands earn a pittance as laborers, sometimes have to pay hundreds of dollars to give birth in public hospitals. They have to borrow money from relatives and neighbors to receive proper medical attention, which they invariably struggle to repay.

A short distance from the maternal and child health center, past a small bustling market place, lies the rural health center where MSF runs a nutrition program. A little over 30 percent of children younger than five in Pakistan are underweight for their age. Two tiny infants, twins Hamida and Ansa, have just been brought into the clinic by their gaunt, breastfeeding mother. She is an Afghan refugee who settled here in Kuchlak, but lives a hard nomadic life. The twins are 10 days old. Ansa is visibly smaller and malnourished."Most pregnant women here still have to journey for up to an hour or more to give birth, and many women still give birth at home, because they have no choice," says MSF's Dr. Amna Hammad.
"I married at 13 or 14 years old. I am now about 38 years old. It took me over an hour to walk here. I came alone," the twins’ mother says. So far, she has given birth to five boys and four girls. But three of her babies died before reaching their first birthday because she could not afford formula milk, nor could she produce enough breast milk herself.
Staff nurse Hamdullah Kaka oversees the nutrition project that has treated 1,200 severely malnourished children since it opened in 2006. Currently, 60 children are enrolled in the program, which ensures recovery by monitoring their progress with follow-up visits. The patients here have taken to calling him 'uncle' because of his gentle and caring way with children and their mothers alike.
Although poverty is the leading cause of malnutrition in this community, some mothers only feed their children when they think the infants are hungry. Others give their babies painkillers to prevent them from crying when they are hungry. "We are trying to change that by providing them with a quality service and guidance," explains MSF’s Dr. Mirwais Wardak.
MSF provides medical care in a maternal health and a rural health center in Kuchlak. MSF medical teams see more than 10,000 patients every month, mostly women and children from Kuchlak and surrounding towns and villages. Every month, 300 antenatal care consultations are performed and between 150 and 170 women come to the maternal health center for deliveries. Mental health officers organize up to 600 counseling sessions every month. In September 2008, MSF started treating cutaneous leishmaniasis, a parasitic disease transmitted by the bite of certain species of sand flies. MSF also runs a program to treat malnutrition.
- See more at: http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news/article.cfm?id=4109&cat=field-news#sthash.FJxCYr8j.dpuf

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