Chattroh

Chhatroh, also spelt Chattroh, is a small village in the Dadyal tehsil (sub-division) of Mirpur District in Azad Kashmir (a self-governing administrative division of Pakistan).

Like much of Mirpur, Chatroh has deep connections with the UK. Many people originally from Chhatroh have settled in urban centres of the UK such as Birmingham, Manchester and also Rotherham. The Cheetham Hill district of Manchester is often referred to as 'New Chhatroh' (by Mirpuris), reflecting the fact that a large number of people from Chhatroh live there. The town of Rochdale in Greater Manchester also has a large number of people from Chhatroh residing in it. The link with the UK is immediately obvious upon entering Chhatroh, where one is greeted by palatial, hacienda-style residences, eerily empty, which have been built with remitted UK incomes. In this regard, Chhatroh is no different from the rest of the Mirpur District, where links with the UK have precipitated various property booms since the 1960s. There are four major castes living in Chattroh – [Jatt's], [Mughals], [Chaudhary], and [Raja's].

Chattroh meets the Jhelum River at its west end. There are fields of ankar at the north end of its geographical boundary. Chattroh is covered with hills covered with trees from east to southwest until Jhelum. River meets.

Demography

According to the 1998 census of Pakistan, the population of Chhatroh was 3,191.[1]

History

When the Mangla Dam was created in the 1960s, Chhatroh escaped relatively unscathed, with only land on the periphery affected. However, plans to raise the Mangla reservoir further, if implemented, are certain to affect properties in Chhatroh. These plans, as well as the general property boom, have contributed to demand for habitable land (as in much of the Mirpur District) This, in turn, has encouraged many unscrupulous people to take advantage of the archaic land laws and registers to make unmeritorious claims to premium land.

Politics

Chhatroh also has a long history of involvement in politics. Ch Abbas Ali, Mirpur's representative to the assembly of Maharaja Hari Singh, the last Dogra ruler of Kashmir, was from Chhatroh. In recent years, two MPs for the Dadyal constituency of the state government have hailed from Chhatroh, both of whom also served as State Ministers. Choudhry Ali Mohammad Chacha, the ex-Minister of Law of Azad Kashmir who was assassinated in Mirpur in March 2008 was from Chhatroh. Now the agriculture minister of Azad Kashmir is Chaudhary Masood Khalid. In office from 2016. He is a native of Chattroh.

References

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