fbpx
Wikipedia

Paktia Province

Coordinates: 33°36′N 69°30′E / 33.6°N 69.5°E / 33.6; 69.5

Paktia (Pashto/Dari: پکتياPaktyā) is one of the 34 provinces of Afghanistan, located in the east of the country. Forming part of the larger Loya Paktia region, Paktia Province is divided into 15 districts and has a population of roughly 623,000,[3] which is mostly a tribal society living in rural areas. Pashtuns make up the majority of the population and a small percentage include Tajiks[4] Gardez is the provincial capital. The traditional food in Paktia is known as (dandakai) which is made from rice and mung bean or green gram.

Paktia
پکتیا
Aerial view of a fort in Gardez, the capital of Paktia province
Map of Afghanistan with Paktia highlighted
Country Afghanistan
CapitalGardez
Government
 • GovernorMuhammad Ali Jan Ahmad[1]
 • Deputy GovernorSheikh Aziz-ur-Rehman Mansoor[2]
Area
 • Total6,432 km2 (2,483 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[3]
 • Total622,831
 • Density97/km2 (250/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+4:30 (Afghanistan Time)
ISO 3166 codeAF-PIA
Main languagesPashto
Dari

In 2021, the Taliban gained control of the province during the 2021 Taliban offensive.

History

Paktia used to be a unified province with Khost and Paktika till Khost became a separate province in 1985.[5] These three provinces are now referred to as Loya Paktia, meaning "Greater Paktia". Paktia came to prominence during the 1980s, when a significant portion of Afghanistan's leadership originated from the province. Some of the more notable leaders include Najibullah Ahmadzai (a former President of Afghanistan), Mohammad Aslam Watanjar, Shahnawaz Tanai, and Sayed Muhammad Gulabzoi.

Soviet–Afghan War (1988)

Between 7 and 8 January 1988, in Paktia Province, near the Pakistani–Afghan border, the Battle for Hill 3234 took place, which was a successful defensive action fought by the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment, 39 Soviet Airborne Troops, in Soviet occupied Afghanistan against a force of up to 200 to 250 Mujahideen rebels.

Soviet commanders wanted to secure the entire section of the road from Gardez to Khost.

One of the most important points was the nameless hill designated Hill 3234 by its height of 3234 meters, which was assigned to the 9th Company of the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment led by Colonel Valery Vostrotin.

The 39-man company landed on the hilltop on 7 January 1988, tasked with creating and holding a hilltop strong point from which to observe and control a long section of the road beneath and thus secure it for the safe passage of convoys.

Shortly after landing, the airborne troopers, who were well trained and experienced in Afghan conditions, started to take up positions which covered both the road and the uphill passages. Just as they had dug in, the mujahideen began their attack at 1530 hrs. First they fired with all possible weapons including recoilless guns and RPGs. After a few salvos, Soviet artillery replied and silenced some of the mujahideen's guns, with the commander of the first platoon, Lt. Viktor Gagarin, directing fire via a radio. When rebel fire slackened, it was clear that this was the beginning of an infantry assault.

The airborne troopers were attacked by a coordinated and well-armed force of between 200 and 250 mujahideen. Attacks were made from two directions, indicating that the assailants may have been assisted by rebels trained in Pakistan by American agents. During the ensuing battle, the Soviet unit was in constant communication with headquarters and received everything the leadership of 40th Army had to offer in terms of artillery support, ammunition, reinforcements, and helicopter evacuation of the wounded.[6]

The exhausted and mostly wounded Soviets were nearly out of ammunition but continued to occupy the hill until the last convoy passed through the road below.

The Soviet forces sustained very low casualties, with six men killed and 28 injured out of 39. Two of the soldiers killed, Vyacheslav Alexandrovich Alexandrov and Andrey Alexandrovich Melnikov, were posthumously awarded the golden star of the Hero of the Soviet Union. All of the paratroopers in this battle were given the Order of the Red Banner and Order of the Red Star.[7]

According to the Soviet estimates, the mujahideen lost over 200 men. And soviets lost 70–200 men . The Mujahideen wore black uniforms with rectangular black-yellow-red stripes.[7][8][9][10]

After 1991

 
U.S. military base next to Gardez in 2007

Immediately after the fall of the Taliban government, Paktia was one of the most chaotic regions in the country, as a small civil war broke out between rival militia commanders for control of the province, and Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters gave occupying U.S. troops some of their heaviest losses in the cave complexes south of Gardez.[11]

Paktia was the site of heavy fighting between Taliban insurgents and ISAF-backed Afghan National Security Forces. Paktia was one of the last redoubts of organized Taliban resistance; much of Operation Anaconda took place in Zurmat, Paktia's largest district. Pacha Khan Zadran was appointed provincial governor by Hamid Karzai in January 2002, but Zadran faced strong local opposition and was prevented from entering Gardez by Haji Saifullah, a local tribal elder who considered Zadran to be a "smuggler", "tyrant" and "killer". Forces loyal to Zadran attacked Gardez several times and were resisted by Saifullah's militia, leading to many people being killed. Zadran was sacked by Karzai after ordering a deadly rocket attack at Gardez in February 2002.[12]

February 2003, the 1st Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Gardez commenced with the objective of providing funding for local Afghan projects concurrent to a reinforce security presence in overwatch. The PRT Gardez composition includes a reinforced platoon from the 504th 82nd ABN along with US Army Civil Affairs contingent plus Special Forces. In March 2003, USAID and State Department representatives joined the 1st Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) in Gardez.

In September 2006, Governor Hakim Taniwal was killed by a Taliban suicide bomber as he left his office in Gardez.[13] At the time, Taniwal was the highest-ranking post-Taliban official to be killed by insurgent forces in the country.

On 12 February 2010, five civilians including two pregnant women and a teenage girl were killed by U.S. special forces during the Khataba raid. U.S. special forces were later accused of attempting to cover up the incident.[14][15][16] Head of Joint Special Operations Command, U.S. Vice Admiral William McRaven stated that the deaths were a "terrible mistake",[17] offered an apology, accepted responsibility for the deaths and made a traditional Afghan condolence offering of sheep.[18]

After some early unrest a long period of relative calm followed, despite the occasional high-profile incident such as the 2006 assassination of the governor, by a suicide bomber. There was a rise in violent incidents when the pullout of Americans troops neared in 2014.

Some regions of Paktia are also believed to be a safe haven for militants from the Haqqani network, an anti-government combat organisation involved in the Taliban insurgency.[19][20]

Healthcare

The percentage of households with clean drinking water increased from 30% in 2005 to 36% in 2011.[21] The percentage of births attended to by a skilled birth attendant fell from 9% in 2005 to 3% in 2011.[21]

Education

The overall literacy rate (6+ years of age) fell from 35% in 2005 to 27% in 2011.[21] The overall net enrolment rate (6–13 years of age) fell from 65% in 2005 to 24% in 2011.[21]

Geography

 
Snow-covered mountains in Paktia province

Paktia borders the Pakistani-ruled Kurram district of province Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Within Afghanistan, it borders Logar Province, Ghazni Province, Paktika Province, and Khost Province, in counterclockwise order.

Paktia is a largely mountainous province, with most of the population living in the central valley stretching from Ahmadkhel in the east down through Zurmat and into neighboring Paktika province. The eastern part of the province, particularly Tsamkani and Dand Aw Patan, is a second valley leading into Pakistan.

Jaji (Zazi) and Jani Khel districts are largely mountainous with much smaller inhabited valleys.

The Khost-Gardez Pass area, to the south of Gardez, is mountainous with settlements limited to the main pass and smaller valleys.

As of 2005, Azra district is no longer a part of Paktya. It has been attached to Logar province to the north, to which it is much more closely connected by roadways and people.[clarification needed]

Demographics

 
People of Paktia province
 
Districts of Paktia province

As of 2021, the total population of the province is 622,831.[3] According to the Institute for the Study of War, "The province is predominantly Pashtun, with a small Tajik population."[4] According to the figures below, the ethnic groups of the province are as follows: 78% Pashtun and 22% Tajik.[22]

Districts

Districts of Paktia Province
District Ethnicity Population (2022)[3] Notes
Ahmad Aba Pashtuns 16,019 Created in 2005 within Said Karam District; includes the unofficial district Mirzaka
Ahmadkhel Pashtuns 13,113
Dand Aw Patan Pashtuns 15,276
Gardez 56% Pashtun and 44% Tajik 195,046 Includes the capital Gardez, which lies at the crossroads of the province's main north–south and east–west roads
Gerda Serai Pashtuns 6,432
Janikhel District | Pashtuns 20,075
Lazha Mangal District | Pashtuns 10,815
Mirzaka Pashtuns 4,934
Rohani Baba Pashtuns 11,710
Said Karam 85% Pashtuns and 15% Tajiks 128,150 Sub-divided in 2005
Shwak Pashtuns 3,177
Tsamkani Pashtuns 28,726 Includes the city of Tsamkani, the largest in the eastern half of Paktia and a major gateway to Pakistan
Zadran Pashtuns 13,980 Sub-divided in 2005 to create Gerda Serai
Zazi 85% Pashtuns and 15% Tajiks 144,912 People fleeing sectarian strife between Shiites and Sunnis in Pakistan occasionally take refuge in Zazi
Zurmat 75% Pashtuns and 25% Tajiks 200,540 Populous, relatively prosperous agricultural district. Unlike most other districts, Zurmat includes more than one tribal group, making it somewhat more fractious than other districts

Gerda Serai, Ahmadkhel, and Mirzaka are unofficial districts.

Important geographical features

See also

References

  1. ^ "د نږدې شلو ولایاتو لپاره نوي والیان او امنیې قوماندانان وټاکل شول". 7 November 2021.
  2. ^ "د پکتیا ولایت د ټولو ولسوالیو د مسؤلینو او امنیه قوماندانانو ګډه غونډه جوړه شوه – د افغانستان اسلامي امارت". 16 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d "Estimated Population of Afghanistan 2021–22" (PDF). National Statistic and Information Authority (NSIA). April 2021. (PDF) from the original on 29 June 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Paktiya Province". Understanding War. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
  5. ^ Thomas Ruttig (2009). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  6. ^ Carey Schofield, The Russian Elite, Greenhill/Stackpole, 1993, pp. 120–125. ISBN 1-85367-155-X.
  7. ^ a b "Клятва тридцати девяти". 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine A. Oliynik. Krasnaya Zvezda, 29 October 1988. (in Russian)
  8. ^ "Афганистан: бой у высоты 3234". 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine D. Meshchaninov (in Russian).
  9. ^ My Jihad: One American's Journey Through the World of Usama Bin Laden—as a Covert Operative for the American Government. Aukai Collins. ISBN 0-7434-7059-1
  10. ^ Carey Schofield, The Russian Elite, Greenhill/Stackpole, 1993, p. 121. ISBN 1-85367-155-X.
  11. ^ "Pacha Khan Zadran". GlobalSecurity.org.
  12. ^ "Heavy fighting in southern Afghan province threatens fragile peace". Independent.co.uk. 27 February 2014. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022.
  13. ^ "Nato kills 94 'Taleban fighters'". BBC News (10 September 2006).
  14. ^ "The Times & The Sunday Times". thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  15. ^ Nato ‘covered up’ botched night raid in Afghanistan that killed five, RAWA News. RAWA.org. Retrieved on 12 July 2013.
  16. ^ NATO admits Afghan civilian deaths in night raid. Reuters. Retrieved on 12 July 2013.
  17. ^ Staff (9 April 2010). "Special Forces chief begs forgiveness for killing five innocents". Edinburgh: The Scotsman.
  18. ^ Julius Cavendish (8 April 2010). "US military offers sheep in apology for Afghanistan deaths". Christian Science Monitor.
  19. ^ "More than 20 Insurgents Killed in Haqqani Clearing Operation"
  20. ^ "Afghan, Coalition Forces Keep Pressure on Insurgents". defense.gov. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  21. ^ a b c d Archive, Civil Military Fusion Centre, https://www.cimicweb.org/AfghanistanProvincialMap/Pages/Paktiya.aspx
  22. ^ "Paktia Province" (PDF). Program for Culture & Conflict Studies. Naval Postgraduate School. Retrieved 20 October 2014.

External links

paktia, province, confused, with, paktika, province, loya, paktia, coordinates, paktia, pashto, dari, پکتيا, paktyā, provinces, afghanistan, located, east, country, forming, part, larger, loya, paktia, region, divided, into, districts, population, roughly, whi. Not to be confused with Paktika Province or Loya Paktia Coordinates 33 36 N 69 30 E 33 6 N 69 5 E 33 6 69 5 Paktia Pashto Dari پکتيا Paktya is one of the 34 provinces of Afghanistan located in the east of the country Forming part of the larger Loya Paktia region Paktia Province is divided into 15 districts and has a population of roughly 623 000 3 which is mostly a tribal society living in rural areas Pashtuns make up the majority of the population and a small percentage include Tajiks 4 Gardez is the provincial capital The traditional food in Paktia is known as dandakai which is made from rice and mung bean or green gram Paktia پکتیاProvinceAerial view of a fort in Gardez the capital of Paktia provinceMap of Afghanistan with Paktia highlightedCountry AfghanistanCapitalGardezGovernment GovernorMuhammad Ali Jan Ahmad 1 Deputy GovernorSheikh Aziz ur Rehman Mansoor 2 Area Total6 432 km2 2 483 sq mi Population 2021 3 Total622 831 Density97 km2 250 sq mi Time zoneUTC 4 30 Afghanistan Time ISO 3166 codeAF PIAMain languagesPashto DariIn 2021 the Taliban gained control of the province during the 2021 Taliban offensive Contents 1 History 1 1 Soviet Afghan War 1988 1 2 After 1991 2 Healthcare 3 Education 4 Geography 5 Demographics 5 1 Districts 5 2 Important geographical features 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditFurther information History of Afghanistan Paktia used to be a unified province with Khost and Paktika till Khost became a separate province in 1985 5 These three provinces are now referred to as Loya Paktia meaning Greater Paktia Paktia came to prominence during the 1980s when a significant portion of Afghanistan s leadership originated from the province Some of the more notable leaders include Najibullah Ahmadzai a former President of Afghanistan Mohammad Aslam Watanjar Shahnawaz Tanai and Sayed Muhammad Gulabzoi Soviet Afghan War 1988 Edit Between 7 and 8 January 1988 in Paktia Province near the Pakistani Afghan border the Battle for Hill 3234 took place which was a successful defensive action fought by the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment 39 Soviet Airborne Troops in Soviet occupied Afghanistan against a force of up to 200 to 250 Mujahideen rebels Soviet commanders wanted to secure the entire section of the road from Gardez to Khost One of the most important points was the nameless hill designated Hill 3234 by its height of 3234 meters which was assigned to the 9th Company of the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment led by Colonel Valery Vostrotin The 39 man company landed on the hilltop on 7 January 1988 tasked with creating and holding a hilltop strong point from which to observe and control a long section of the road beneath and thus secure it for the safe passage of convoys Shortly after landing the airborne troopers who were well trained and experienced in Afghan conditions started to take up positions which covered both the road and the uphill passages Just as they had dug in the mujahideen began their attack at 1530 hrs First they fired with all possible weapons including recoilless guns and RPGs After a few salvos Soviet artillery replied and silenced some of the mujahideen s guns with the commander of the first platoon Lt Viktor Gagarin directing fire via a radio When rebel fire slackened it was clear that this was the beginning of an infantry assault The airborne troopers were attacked by a coordinated and well armed force of between 200 and 250 mujahideen Attacks were made from two directions indicating that the assailants may have been assisted by rebels trained in Pakistan by American agents During the ensuing battle the Soviet unit was in constant communication with headquarters and received everything the leadership of 40th Army had to offer in terms of artillery support ammunition reinforcements and helicopter evacuation of the wounded 6 The exhausted and mostly wounded Soviets were nearly out of ammunition but continued to occupy the hill until the last convoy passed through the road below The Soviet forces sustained very low casualties with six men killed and 28 injured out of 39 Two of the soldiers killed Vyacheslav Alexandrovich Alexandrov and Andrey Alexandrovich Melnikov were posthumously awarded the golden star of the Hero of the Soviet Union All of the paratroopers in this battle were given the Order of the Red Banner and Order of the Red Star 7 According to the Soviet estimates the mujahideen lost over 200 men And soviets lost 70 200 men The Mujahideen wore black uniforms with rectangular black yellow red stripes 7 8 9 10 After 1991 Edit U S military base next to Gardez in 2007 Immediately after the fall of the Taliban government Paktia was one of the most chaotic regions in the country as a small civil war broke out between rival militia commanders for control of the province and Taliban and al Qaeda fighters gave occupying U S troops some of their heaviest losses in the cave complexes south of Gardez 11 Paktia was the site of heavy fighting between Taliban insurgents and ISAF backed Afghan National Security Forces Paktia was one of the last redoubts of organized Taliban resistance much of Operation Anaconda took place in Zurmat Paktia s largest district Pacha Khan Zadran was appointed provincial governor by Hamid Karzai in January 2002 but Zadran faced strong local opposition and was prevented from entering Gardez by Haji Saifullah a local tribal elder who considered Zadran to be a smuggler tyrant and killer Forces loyal to Zadran attacked Gardez several times and were resisted by Saifullah s militia leading to many people being killed Zadran was sacked by Karzai after ordering a deadly rocket attack at Gardez in February 2002 12 February 2003 the 1st Provincial Reconstruction Team PRT in Gardez commenced with the objective of providing funding for local Afghan projects concurrent to a reinforce security presence in overwatch The PRT Gardez composition includes a reinforced platoon from the 504th 82nd ABN along with US Army Civil Affairs contingent plus Special Forces In March 2003 USAID and State Department representatives joined the 1st Provincial Reconstruction Team PRT in Gardez In September 2006 Governor Hakim Taniwal was killed by a Taliban suicide bomber as he left his office in Gardez 13 At the time Taniwal was the highest ranking post Taliban official to be killed by insurgent forces in the country On 12 February 2010 five civilians including two pregnant women and a teenage girl were killed by U S special forces during the Khataba raid U S special forces were later accused of attempting to cover up the incident 14 15 16 Head of Joint Special Operations Command U S Vice Admiral William McRaven stated that the deaths were a terrible mistake 17 offered an apology accepted responsibility for the deaths and made a traditional Afghan condolence offering of sheep 18 After some early unrest a long period of relative calm followed despite the occasional high profile incident such as the 2006 assassination of the governor by a suicide bomber There was a rise in violent incidents when the pullout of Americans troops neared in 2014 Some regions of Paktia are also believed to be a safe haven for militants from the Haqqani network an anti government combat organisation involved in the Taliban insurgency 19 20 Healthcare EditFurther information Health in Afghanistan The percentage of households with clean drinking water increased from 30 in 2005 to 36 in 2011 21 The percentage of births attended to by a skilled birth attendant fell from 9 in 2005 to 3 in 2011 21 Education EditFurther information Education in Afghanistan The overall literacy rate 6 years of age fell from 35 in 2005 to 27 in 2011 21 The overall net enrolment rate 6 13 years of age fell from 65 in 2005 to 24 in 2011 21 Geography EditFurther information Geography of Afghanistan Snow covered mountains in Paktia province Paktia borders the Pakistani ruled Kurram district of province Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Within Afghanistan it borders Logar Province Ghazni Province Paktika Province and Khost Province in counterclockwise order Paktia is a largely mountainous province with most of the population living in the central valley stretching from Ahmadkhel in the east down through Zurmat and into neighboring Paktika province The eastern part of the province particularly Tsamkani and Dand Aw Patan is a second valley leading into Pakistan Jaji Zazi and Jani Khel districts are largely mountainous with much smaller inhabited valleys The Khost Gardez Pass area to the south of Gardez is mountainous with settlements limited to the main pass and smaller valleys As of 2005 Azra district is no longer a part of Paktya It has been attached to Logar province to the north to which it is much more closely connected by roadways and people clarification needed Demographics EditFurther information Demographics of Afghanistan People of Paktia province Ethnolinguistic groups in Afghanistan Districts of Paktia province As of 2021 the total population of the province is 622 831 3 According to the Institute for the Study of War The province is predominantly Pashtun with a small Tajik population 4 According to the figures below the ethnic groups of the province are as follows 78 Pashtun and 22 Tajik 22 Districts Edit Districts of Paktia Province District Ethnicity Population 2022 3 NotesAhmad Aba Pashtuns 16 019 Created in 2005 within Said Karam District includes the unofficial district MirzakaAhmadkhel Pashtuns 13 113Dand Aw Patan Pashtuns 15 276Gardez 56 Pashtun and 44 Tajik 195 046 Includes the capital Gardez which lies at the crossroads of the province s main north south and east west roadsGerda Serai Pashtuns 6 432Janikhel District Pashtuns 20 075Lazha Mangal District Pashtuns 10 815Mirzaka Pashtuns 4 934Rohani Baba Pashtuns 11 710Said Karam 85 Pashtuns and 15 Tajiks 128 150 Sub divided in 2005Shwak Pashtuns 3 177Tsamkani Pashtuns 28 726 Includes the city of Tsamkani the largest in the eastern half of Paktia and a major gateway to PakistanZadran Pashtuns 13 980 Sub divided in 2005 to create Gerda SeraiZazi 85 Pashtuns and 15 Tajiks 144 912 People fleeing sectarian strife between Shiites and Sunnis in Pakistan occasionally take refuge in ZaziZurmat 75 Pashtuns and 25 Tajiks 200 540 Populous relatively prosperous agricultural district Unlike most other districts Zurmat includes more than one tribal group making it somewhat more fractious than other districtsGerda Serai Ahmadkhel and Mirzaka are unofficial districts Important geographical features Edit Shah i Kot Valley Tera Pass the mountain pass linking Paktia with Logar province to the north Khost Gardez Pass K G Pass the mountain pass linking Paktia with Khost province to the southSee also EditProvinces of AfghanistanReferences Edit د نږدې شلو ولایاتو لپاره نوي والیان او امنیې قوماندانان وټاکل شول 7 November 2021 د پکتیا ولایت د ټولو ولسوالیو د مسؤلینو او امنیه قوماندانانو ګډه غونډه جوړه شوه د افغانستان اسلامي امارت 16 November 2021 a b c d Estimated Population of Afghanistan 2021 22 PDF National Statistic and Information Authority NSIA April 2021 Archived PDF from the original on 29 June 2021 Retrieved 21 June 2021 a b Paktiya Province Understanding War Retrieved 17 August 2013 Thomas Ruttig 2009 Loya Paktia s Insurgency The Haqqani Network as an Autonomous Entity PDF Archived from the original PDF on 11 May 2021 Retrieved 11 August 2021 Carey Schofield The Russian Elite Greenhill Stackpole 1993 pp 120 125 ISBN 1 85367 155 X a b Klyatva tridcati devyati Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine A Oliynik Krasnaya Zvezda 29 October 1988 in Russian Afganistan boj u vysoty 3234 Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine D Meshchaninov in Russian My Jihad One American s Journey Through the World of Usama Bin Laden as a Covert Operative for the American Government Aukai Collins ISBN 0 7434 7059 1 Carey Schofield The Russian Elite Greenhill Stackpole 1993 p 121 ISBN 1 85367 155 X Pacha Khan Zadran GlobalSecurity org Heavy fighting in southern Afghan province threatens fragile peace Independent co uk 27 February 2014 Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Nato kills 94 Taleban fighters BBC News 10 September 2006 The Times amp The Sunday Times thetimes co uk Retrieved 5 April 2018 Nato covered up botched night raid in Afghanistan that killed five RAWA News RAWA org Retrieved on 12 July 2013 NATO admits Afghan civilian deaths in night raid Reuters Retrieved on 12 July 2013 Staff 9 April 2010 Special Forces chief begs forgiveness for killing five innocents Edinburgh The Scotsman Julius Cavendish 8 April 2010 US military offers sheep in apology for Afghanistan deaths Christian Science Monitor More than 20 Insurgents Killed in Haqqani Clearing Operation Afghan Coalition Forces Keep Pressure on Insurgents defense gov Retrieved 5 April 2018 a b c d Archive Civil Military Fusion Centre https www cimicweb org AfghanistanProvincialMap Pages Paktiya aspx Paktia Province PDF Program for Culture amp Conflict Studies Naval Postgraduate School Retrieved 20 October 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paktia Province Paktya Province by the Naval Postgraduate School Paktya Province by the Institute for the Study of War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paktia Province amp oldid 1130276108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.