Sialkot








City in  Punjab, Pakistan





































































































Sialkot

سیالکوٹ
City

The clock tower in Saddar Bazar, Sialkot.
The clock tower in Saddar Bazar, Sialkot.


Municipal Corporation Sialkot
Municipal Corporation logo
Nickname(s): City of Iqbal



Sialkot is located in Punjab, Pakistan

Sialkot

Sialkot




Location in Pakistan

Show map of Punjab, Pakistan



Sialkot is located in Pakistan

Sialkot

Sialkot




Sialkot
(Pakistan)

Show map of Pakistan

Coordinates: 32°29′33″N 74°31′52″E / 32.49250°N 74.53111°E / 32.49250; 74.53111Coordinates: 32°29′33″N 74°31′52″E / 32.49250°N 74.53111°E / 32.49250; 74.53111
Country
 Pakistan
Province
Punjab, Pakistan Punjab
District Sialkot
Tehsil Sialkot
Government[1]
 • Type Municipal Corporation
 • Mayor Toheed Akhtar Chaudhary
 • Deputy Mayor Chaudhary Bashir Ahmed
 • Chief Officer Muhammad Zafar Qureshi
Area
 • Total 19 km2 (7 sq mi)
Elevation
256 m (840 ft)
Population (2017)[2]
 • Total 655,852
 • Density 35,000/km2 (89,000/sq mi)
 • Municipal Corporation
591,668
 • Cantonment
64,184
Time zone
UTC+5 (PST)
Postal code 51310
Calling code 052
Old name
Sagala[3][4] or Sakala[5]
HDI 834 (data for 2014–2015) Increase[6]
HDI Category very high
Number of Union councils
152
Website Municipal Corporation Sialkot

Sialkot (Urdu and Punjabi: سيالكوٹ) is a city in Punjab, Pakistan. Sialkot is Pakistan's 13th largest city,[2] and is located in north-east Punjab — one of Pakistan's mostly highly industrialised regions.[7] Along with the nearby cities of Gujranwala and Gujrat, Sialkot forms part of the so-called Golden Triangle of industrial cities with export-oriented economies.[8]


Sialkot is believed to be site of ancient Sagala, a city razed by Alexander the Great in 326 BCE, and then made capital of the Indo-Greek kingdom by Menander I in the 2nd century BCE – a time during which the city greatly prospered as a major centre for trade and Buddhist thought.[9] Sialkot continued to be a major political centre, until it was eclipsed by Lahore around the turn of the first millennium.[10] The city rose again in prominence during the British era, and is now one of Pakistan's most important industrial centres.


Sialkot is wealthy relative to other cities in South Asia, with an estimated 2014 per capita income of $2800 (nominal).[11][12] The city has been noted by The Economist for its entrepreneurial spirit, and productive business climate that have made Sialkot an example of a small Pakistani city that has emerged as a "world-class manufacturing hub."[13] The relatively small city exported approximately $2 billion worth of goods in 2015, or about 10% of Pakistan's total exports.[13][14] Sialkot is also home to the Sialkot International Airport – Pakistan's first privately owned public airport.[13]




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Ancient


      • 1.1.1 Founding


      • 1.1.2 Greek


      • 1.1.3 Indo-Greek


      • 1.1.4 White Huns


      • 1.1.5 Late antiquity




    • 1.2 Medieval


    • 1.3 Pre-modern


      • 1.3.1 Mughal


      • 1.3.2 Post-Mughal


      • 1.3.3 Sikh




    • 1.4 Modern


      • 1.4.1 British


      • 1.4.2 Partition


      • 1.4.3 Post-independence






  • 2 Geography


    • 2.1 Climate


    • 2.2 Cityscape




  • 3 Economy


    • 3.1 Industry


    • 3.2 Public-Private Partnerships




  • 4 Transportation


    • 4.1 Motorways


    • 4.2 Rail


    • 4.3 Air


    • 4.4 Air Sial




  • 5 Notable people


  • 6 Sister cities


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





History





Iqbal Manzil the residence of Allama Iqbal



Ancient



Founding



Ambiguity regarding Sialkot's ancient history has resulted in the promulgation of various myths and legends to explain the city's origins.[15] The most popular tradition states that the city was founded as the capital city of the Madra kingdom by King Shalya - who served as a general in the central Kurukshetra War of the Mahabharata.[15][16]


The city is referred to in the Mahabharata as Sakala, and was renowned for the wild and hedonist women who lived in the forests surrounding the city.[17] The city was said to have been located in the Sakaladvipa region between the Chenab and Ravi rivers,[16] now known as the Rechna Doab.



Greek


The first record of Sialkot dates from the invasion of Alexander the Great, who conquered upper Punjab in 326 BCE.[15] The Anabasis of Alexander, written by the Roman-Greek historian Arrian, recorded that Alexander captured ancient Sialkot, recorded as Sagala, from the Cathaeans, who had entrenched themselves there.[18][19] The city had been home to 80,000 residents on the eve of Alexander's invasion,[19] but was razed as a warning against any other nearby cities that might resist his invasion.[19]



Indo-Greek


The ancient city was rebuilt, and made capital by the Indo-Greek king Menander I, of the Euthydemid dynasty,[20] who ruled between 135 and 160 BCE.[16] The rebuilt city was shifted slightly from the older city, as rebuilding on exactly the same spot was considered an ill-omen.[17]


Under Menander's rule, the city greatly prospered as a major trading centre renowned for its silk.[9][15] Menander embraced Buddhism, in a process recorded in the Buddhist text Milinda Panha.[16] The text offers an early description of the city's cityscape and status as a prosperous trade centre with numerous green spaces.[21] Following his conversion, Sialkot developed as a major centre for Buddhist though.[22]


Ancient Sialkot was recorded by Ptolemy in his 1st century CE work, Geography,[23][20] in which he refers to the city as Euthymedeia (Εύθυμέδεια).[24]



White Huns


Around 460 CE, the Hephthalites, also known as the White Huns, invaded the region from Central Asia,[25] forcing the ruling family of nearby Taxila to seek refuge in Sialkot.[26] Sialkot itself was soon captured, and the city was made capital of the Hephthalite Empire around 515,[27] during the reign of Toramana.[28] During the reign of his son, Mihirakula, the Hephthalite Empire reached its zenith.[29] The Hepthalites were defeated in 528 by a coalition of princes led by Prince Yasodhara.[28]



Late antiquity


The city was visited by the Chinese traveller Xuanzang in 633,[30] who recorded the city's name as Tseh-kie.[31] Xuanzang reported that the city had been rebuilt approximately 15 li, or 2.5 miles, away from the city ruined by Alexander the Great.[32] During this time, Sialkot served as the political nucleus of the Punjab region.[33] The city was then invaded in 643 by Rajput princes from Jammu, who held the city until the Muslim invasions during the medieval era.[34] Little was recorded of the city's history during the Rajput period, and the city would not feature prominently again until the medieval period.



Medieval


Around the year 1000, Sialkot began to decline in importance as the nearby city of Lahore rose to prominence.[10] Following to fall of Lahore to the Ghaznavid Empire in the early 11th century, the capital of the Hindu Shahi empire was shifted from Lahore to Sialkot.[35] Ghaznavid expansion in northern Punjab encouraged local Khokhar tribes to stop paying tribute to the Rajas of Jammu.[36]


Sialkot became a part of the medieval Sultanate of Delhi after Muhammad Ghauri conquered Punjab in 1185.[33] Ghauri was unable to conquer the larger city of Lahore, but deemed Sialkot important enough to warrant a garrison.[37][15] He also extensively repaired the Sialkot Fort around the time of his conquest of Punjab,[36] and left the region in charge of Hussain Churmali while he returned to Ghazni.[38] Sialkot was then quickly laid siege to by Khokhar tribesmen,[39] and Khusrau Malik,[37] the last Ghaznavid sultan, though he was defeated during Ghauri's return to Punjab in 1186.[38][39]


In the 1200s, Sialkot was the only area of western Punjab that was ruled by the Mamluk Sultanate in Delhi.[40] The area had been captured by the Ghauri prince Yildiz, but was recaptured by Sultan Iltutmish in 1217.[40] Around 1223, Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu, the last king of the Khwarazmian dynasty of Central Asia that had fled invasion of Genghis Khan there, briefly captured Sialkot and Lahore,[41] before being driven out by Iltutmish's forces towards Uch Sharif.[42] During the 13th century, Imam Ali-ul-Haq, Sialkot's most revered Sufi warrior-saint,[43] arrived from Arabia, and began his missionary work in the region that successfully converted large numbers of Hindus to Islam, thereby transforming Sialkot into a largely Muslim city.[44] The saint later died in battle, and is revered as a martyr.[45]


Sialkot fell to Shaykha Khokhar around 1414.[46] Sialkot's population continued to grow in the 1400s under the rule of Sultan Bahlul Lodi, who had granted custodianship of the city to Jammu's Raja Biram Dev, after he helped Lodhi defeat the Khokhars.[46] Sialkot was sacked during the Lodhi period by Malik Tazi Bhatt of Kashmir, who attacked Sialkot after the governor of Punjab, Tatar Khan, had left the city undefended during one of his military campaigns.[47]


Sialkot was captured by armies of the Babur in 1520,[48] when the Mughal commander Usman Ghani Raza advanced towards Delhi during the initial conquest of Babur. Babur recorded a battle with Gujjar raiders, who had attacked Sialkot, and allegedly mistreated its inhabitants.[49] In 1525-1526, Alam Khan, uncle of Sultan Ibrahim Lodi, invaded from Afghanistan, and was able to capture Sialkot with the aid of Mongol forces.[50]



Pre-modern



Mughal


During the early Mughal era, Sialkot was made part of the subah, or "province," of Lahore.[34] According to Sikh tradition, Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism, visited the city,[15] sometime in the early 16th century. He is said to have met Hamza Ghaus, a prominent Sufi mystic based in Sialkot, at a site now commemorated by the city's Gurdwara Beri Sahib.


During the Akbar era, Sialkot's pargana territory was placed in the jagir custodianship of Raja Man Singh, who would repair the city's fort, and sought to increase its population and develop its economy.[51] In 1580 Yousuf Shah Chak of Kashmir sought refuge in the city during his exile from the Valley of Kashmir.[52] Paper-makers from Kashmir migrated to the city during the Akbar period,[53] and Sialkot later became renowned as the source of the prized Mughal Hariri paper - known for its brilliant whiteness and strength.[45] The city's metalworkers also provided the Mughal crown with much of its weaponry.[54]


During the reign of Jahangir, the post was given to Safdar Khan, who rebuilt the city's fort, and oversaw a further increase in Sialkot's prosperity.[45] Numerous fine houses and gardens were built in the city during the Jehangir period.[55] During the Shah Jahan period, the city was placed under the rule of Ali Mardan Khan.[56]


The last great Mughal emperor, Aurangzeb, appointed Ganga Dhar as faujdar of the city until 1654.[57] Rahmat Khan was then placed in charge of the city, and would build a mosque in the city.[58] Under Aurangzeb's reign, Sialkot became known as a great centre of Islamic thought and scholarship,[59][60] and attracted scholars because of the widespread availability of paper in the city.[61]



Post-Mughal


Following the decline of the Mughal empire after the death of Emperor Aurangzeb in 1707, Sialkot and its outlying districts were left undefended and forced to defend itself. In 1739, the city was captured by Nader Shah of Persia during his invasion of the Mughal Empire.[62] The city was placed under the governorship of Zakariya Khan, the Mughal Viceroy of Lahore, who in return for the city promised to pay tribute to the Persian crown.[62]


In the wake of the Persian invasion, Sialkot fell under the control of Pashtun powerful families from Multan and Afghanistan - the Kakayzais and Sherwanis.[56] Sialkot was crept upon by Ranjit Deo of Jammu, who pledged nominal allegiance to the Mughal crown in Delhi.[56] Ranjit Deo did not conquer Sialkot city from the Pashtun families which held the city, but switched allegiance to the Pashtun ruler Ahmed Shah Durrani in 1748,[56] effectively ending Mughal influence in Sialkot. The city and three nearby districts were amalgamated into the Durrani Empire.[34]



Sikh


Sikh chieftains of the Bhangi Misl state encroached upon Sialkot, and had gained full control of the Sialkot region by 1786,[56] dispersing many of its inhabitants and destroying many of the city's mansions.[46] Sialkot was portioned into 4 quarters, under the control of Sardar Jiwan Singh, Natha Singh, Sahib Singh, and Mohar Singh, who invited the city's dispersed residents back to the city.[46]


The Bhangi rulers engaged in feuds with the neighbouring Sukerchakia Misl state by 1791,[56] and would eventually lose control of the city. The Sikh Empire of Ranjit Singh captured Sialkot from Sardar Jiwan Singh in 1808.[62] Sikh forces then occupied Sialkot until the arrival of the British in 1849.[63]



Modern



British





Allama Iqbal, the philosopher-poet credited inspiring the Pakistan Movement, was born in Sialkot in 1877.


Sialkot, along with Punjab as a whole, was captured by the British following their victory over the Sikhs at the Battle of Gujrat in February 1849. During the British era, an official known as The Resident who would in theory advise the Maharaja of Kashmir would reside in Sialkot during the wintertime.[64]


During the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857, the two Bengal regiments based in Sialkot rebelled against the East India Company,[65] while their native servants also took up arms against the British.[66] In 1877, the Sialkot poet Allama Iqbal, who is credited for inspiring the Pakistan Movement, was born into to a Kashmiri family that had converted to Islam from Hinduism in the early 1400s.[67] British India's first bagpipe works opened in Sialkot, and today there are 20 pipe bands in the city.[68]


Sialkot's modern prosperity began during the colonial era.[11] The city had been known its paper making and ironworking prior to the colonial era,[11] and became a centre of metalwork in the 1890s. Surgical instruments were being manufactured in Sialkot for use throughout British India by the 1920s.[69] The city also became a centre for sporting goods manufacturing for British troops stationed along the North West Frontier due to the availability of nearby timber reserves.[11]


As a result of the city's prosperity, large numbers of migrants from Kashmir came to the city in search of employment.[11] At the end of World War 2, the city was considered the second most industrialised in Punjab, after Amritsar.[11] Much of the city's infrastructure was paid for by local taxes,[11] and the city was one of the few in British India to have its own electric utility company.[11]



Partition


The first communal riots between Hindus and Muslims took place on 24 June 1946,[70] a day after the resolution calling for the establishment of Pakistan as a separate state. Sialkot remained peaceful for several months while communal riots had erupted in Lahore, Amritsar, Ludhiana, and Rawalpindi.[70] The predominantly Muslim population supported Muslim League and the Pakistan Movement.


While Muslim refugees had poured into the city escaping riots elsewhere, Sialkot's Hindu and Sikh communities began fleeing in the opposite direction towards India.[70] They initially congregated in fields outside the city, where some of Sialkot's Muslims would bid farewell to departing friends.[70] Hindu and Sikh refugees were unable to exit Pakistan towards Jammu on account of conflict in Kashmir, and were instead required to transit via Lahore.[70]




A Boulevard in Sialkot



Post-independence




Shopping area in Sialkot


After independence in 1947 the Hindu and Sikh minorities migrated to India, while Muslim refugees from India settled in Sialkot. The city had suffered significant losses as a result of communal rioting that erupted because of Partition.[11] 80% of Sialkot's industry had been destroyed or abandoned, and the working capital fell by an estimated 90%.[11] The city was further stressed by the arrival of 200,000 migrants, mostly from Jammu,[11] who had arrived in the city.[11]


Following the demise of industry in the city, the government of West Pakistan prioritized the re-establishment of Punjab's decimated industrial base.[11] The province lead infrastructure projects in the area, and allotted abandoned properties to newly arrived refugees.[11] Local entrepreneurs also rose to fill the vacuum created by the departure of Hindu and Sikh businessmen.[69][11] By the 1960s, the provincial government laid extensive new roadways in the district, and connected it to trunk roads to link the region to the seaport in Karachi.[11]


During the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965, when Pakistani troops arrived in Kashmir, the Indian Army counterattacked in the Sialkot Sector. The Pakistan Army successfully defended the city and the people of Sialkot came out in full force to support the troops.[71] In 1966 the Government of Pakistan awarded the Hilal-i-Istaqlal to the citizens of Sialkot, Lahore and Sargodha for their courage and bravery. The armoured battles in the Sialkot sector like the Battle of Chawinda were the most intense since the Second World War.[72]


Despite being cut off from its historic economic heartland in Kashmir, Sialkot has managed to position itself into one of Pakistan's most prosperous cities, exporting up to 10% of all Pakistani exports.[13] Its sporting goods firms have been particularly successful, and have produced items for global brands such as Nike, Adidas, Reebok, and Puma.[11] Balls for the 2014 FIFA World Cup were made in Sialkot.[73]


Sialkot's business community has joined with the local government to maintain the city's infrastructure, as the local government has limited capacity to fund such maintenance.[11] The business community was instrumental in the establishment of Sialkot's Dry Port in 1985,[74] and further helped re-pave the city's roads.[13] Sialkot's business community also largely funded the Sialkot International Airport – opened in 2011 as Pakistan's first privately owned public airport,[13] which now offers direct flights from Sialkot to Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.




Sialkot International Airport



Geography



Climate


Sialkot features a humid subtropical climate (Cwa) under the Köppen climate classification, with four seasons. The post-monsoon season from mid-September to mid-November remains hot during the daytime, but nights are cooler with low humidity. In the winter from mid-November to March, days are mild to warm, with occasionally heavy rainfalls occurring. Temperatures in winter may drop to 0 °C or 32 °F, but maxima are very rarely less than 15 °C or 59 °F.





















































































































Climate data for Sialkot, Pakistan
Month
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Year
Record high °C (°F)
26.1
(79)
30.0
(86)
35.0
(95)
42.2
(108)
47.3
(117.1)
48.9
(120)
44.4
(111.9)
41.1
(106)
39.0
(102.2)
37.2
(99)
33.3
(91.9)
27.2
(81)
48.9
(120)
Average high °C (°F)
18.5
(65.3)
21.0
(69.8)
25.7
(78.3)
32.8
(91)
38.0
(100.4)
39.9
(103.8)
34.9
(94.8)
33.6
(92.5)
33.6
(92.5)
31.7
(89.1)
26.1
(79)
20.1
(68.2)
29.7
(85.5)
Daily mean °C (°F)
11.6
(52.9)
13.8
(56.8)
18.6
(65.5)
25.0
(77)
30.0
(86)
32.2
(90)
29.8
(85.6)
29.0
(84.2)
27.9
(82.2)
23.7
(74.7)
17.8
(64)
12.8
(55)
22.6
(72.7)
Average low °C (°F)
5.0
(41)
7.1
(44.8)
11.8
(53.2)
17.3
(63.1)
22.0
(71.6)
25.1
(77.2)
25.1
(77.2)
24.8
(76.6)
22.3
(72.1)
16.0
(60.8)
9.6
(49.3)
5.6
(42.1)
16.0
(60.8)
Record low °C (°F)
−1.1
(30)
−1.0
(30.2)
3.0
(37.4)
9.0
(48.2)
13.4
(56.1)
18.0
(64.4)
19.5
(67.1)
18.7
(65.7)
13.3
(55.9)
8.5
(47.3)
3.0
(37.4)
−0.6
(30.9)
−1.1
(30)
Average rainfall mm (inches)
41.1
(1.618)
43.8
(1.724)
53.7
(2.114)
30.1
(1.185)
28.0
(1.102)
65.6
(2.583)
288.4
(11.354)
259.1
(10.201)
94.1
(3.705)
14.5
(0.571)
9.1
(0.358)
30.4
(1.197)
957.9
(37.712)
Source: NOAA (1971–1990)[75]


Cityscape


Sialkot's core is composed of the densely populated Old City, while northeast of the city lies the vast colonial era Sialkot Cantonment - characterized by wide streets and large lawns. The city's industries have developed in a "ribbon-like" pattern along the cities main arteries,[11] and are almost entirely dedicated to export.[11] The city's sporting good firms are not concentrated in any part of the city, but are instead spread throughout Sialkot.[11] Despite the city's overall prosperity, the local government has failed to meet Sialkot's basic infrastructure needs.[74]



Economy


Sialkot is a wealthy city relative to the rest of Pakistan and South Asia,[69] with a per capita income in 2014 estimated at $2800.[11] The city was considered to be one of British India's most industrialised cities,[11] though its economy would later be largely decimated by violence and capital flight following the Partition.[11] The city's economy rebounded, and Sialkot now forms part of the relatively industrialised region of northern Punjab that is sometimes referred to as the Golden Triangle.[8]



Sialkot has been noted by Britain's The Economist magazine as a "world-class manufacturing hub" with strong export industries.[13] As of 2015, Sialkot exported US$2 billion worth of goods which is equal to 9% of Pakistan's total exports (US$22 billion).[76] 250,000 residents are employed in Sialkot's industries,[11] with most enterprises in the city being small and funded by family savings.[74] Sialkot's Chamber of Commerce had over 6,500 members in 2010, with most active in the leather, sporting goods, and surgical instruments industry.[74] The Sialkot Dry Port offers local producers quick access to Pakistani Customs, as well as to logistics and transportation.[13]




Sialkot Gate



Industry


Sialkot is the world's largest producer of hand-sewn footballs, with local factories manufacturing 40~60 million footballs a year, amounting to roughly 60% of world production.[77] The 2014 FIFA World Cup's footballs were made by Forward Sports, a company based in Sialkot.[73] Clustering of sports goods industrial units has allowed for firms in Sialkot to become highly specialised, and to benefit from joint action and external economies.[78] There is a well-applied child labour ban, the Atlanta Agreement, in the industry since a 1997 outcry,[79] and the local industry now funds the Independent Monitoring Association for Child Labour to regulate factories.[74]


Sialkot is also the world's largest centre of surgical instrument manufacturing.[80] Sialkot was first noted to be a centre of metalwork in the 1890s, and the city's association with surgical instruments came from the need to repair, and subsequently manufacture, surgical instruments for the nearby Mission hospital.[69] By the 1920s, surgical instruments were being manufactured for use throughout British India,[69] with demand boosted by further by World War Two.[69]


The city's surgical instrument manufacturing industry benefits from a clustering effect, in which larger manufacturers remain in close contact with smaller and specialized industries that can efficiently perform contracted work.[69] The industry is made up of a few hundred small and medium size enterprises, supported by thousands of subcontractors, suppliers, and those providing other ancillary services.[69] The bulk of exports are destined for the United States and European Union.[69]


Sialkot first became a centre for sporting goods manufacturing during the colonial era. Enterprises were initially established for the recreation of British troops stationed along the North West Frontier.[11] Nearby timber reserves served to initially attract the industry to Sialkot.[11] The city's Muslim craftsmen generally manufactured the goods, while Sikh and Hindu merchants of the Sindhi Bania, Arora, and Punjabi Khatri castes acted like middle men to bring goods to market.[11] Sialkot now produces a wide array of sporting goods, including footballs and hockey sticks.[13]


Sialkot is also noted for its leather goods. Leather for footballs is sourced from nearby farms,[74] while Sialkot's leather workers craft some of Germany's most prized leather lederhosen trousers.[13]



Public-Private Partnerships


Sialkot has a productive relationship between the civic administration and the city's entrepreneurs,[81] that dates to the colonial era. Sialkot's infrastructure was paid for by local taxes on industry,[11] and the city was one of the few in British India to have its own electric utility company.[11]


Modern Sialkot's business community has assumed responsibility for developing infrastructure when the civic administration is unable to deliver requested services.[13] The city's Chamber of Commerce established the Sialkot Dry Port, the country's first dry-port in 1985 to reduce transit times by offering faster customs services.[13] Members of the Chamber of Commerce allowed paid fees in order to help resurface the city's streets.[13] The Sialkot International Airport was established by the local businesses community, is the only private airport in Pakistan.[76] The airport now offers flights throughout Pakistan, and several Persian Gulf countries.



Transportation



Motorways


A dual-carriageway connects Sialkot to the nearby town of Wazirabad, with onwards connections throughout Pakistan via the N-5 National Highway, while another dual carriageway connects Sialkot to Daska, and onwards to Gujranwala and Lahore. Sialkot is situated near the terminus of the under-construction 6-lane Sialkot–Lahore Motorway connecting the city to Lahore, 89 kilometres away, with exits at Daska, and Gujranwala. Construction is expected to be complete in December 2018,[82] and will terminate at the nearby town of Sambrial.



Rail


Sialkot Junction railway station is the city's main railway station and is serviced by the Wazirabad–Narowal Branch Line of the Pakistan Railways.



Air


Sialkot International Airport is located 8.7 east of the city in the town of Sambrial. It is Pakistan's only privately owned public airport[13] and offers flights throughout Pakistan with also direct flights to Bahrain, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.



Air Sial


Sialkot International Airport Sialkot is launching their own airline soon.



Notable people





  • Muhammad Iqbal, Ph.D Doctor, Titles: Sir & Allama, Mufakkir-e-Pakistan, Poet of the East


  • Faiz Ahmad Faiz, Poet


  • Waheed Murad, actor


  • Zaheer Abbas, cricketer and President of ICC


  • Ghulam Ali, Ghazal singer


  • Khawaja Muhammad Asif, Former Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs, Former Federal Minister of Defense & Federal Minister of Water & Power


  • Rajendra Kumar, Film actor


  • Firdous Ashiq Awan, Pakistani physician and politician


  • Ijaz Ahmed Famous Cricketer


  • Shoaib Malik, Former captain of Pakistan Cricket team


  • Umera Ahmed, novelist and author, and screenplay writer born in Sialkot.


  • Gulzari Lal Nanda, politician and economist,


  • Chaudhry Amir Hussain, politician, former acting President of Pakistan


  • Khawaja Muhammad Safdar, Former Acting President of Pakistan


  • Kuldip Nayar, Indian Journalist


  • Abdal Bela, Author


  • Baba Mohammad Yahya Khan, Sufi writer


  • Qamar Javed Bajwa, 11th Chief of army staff



Sister cities




  • United States Bolingbrook, Illinois, United States


  • Turkey Kayseri, Turkey



See also



  • List of educational institutions in Sialkot

  • List of cities in Punjab, Pakistan by area

  • List of twin towns and sister cities in Pakistan

  • Sialkot Stallions




References





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    29th December: We dismounted at Sialkot. If one enters Hindustan the Jats and Gujjars always pour down in countless hordes from hill and plain for loot of bullocks and buffalo. These ill-omened peoples are senseless oppressors. Previously, their deeds did not concern us because the territory was an enemy's. But they did the same senseless deeds after we had captured it. When we reached Sialkot, they swooped on the poor and needy folk who were coming out of the town to our camp and stripped them bare. I had the witless brigands apprehended, and ordered a few of them to be cut to pieces.'Babur Nama page 250 published by Penguin




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External links







  • Sialkot District Government website










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