Jump to content

Katakhal

Coordinates: 24°49′51″N 92°36′51″E / 24.8309°N 92.6143°E / 24.8309; 92.6143
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Katakhal
village
Katakhal is located in Assam
Katakhal
Katakhal
Location in Assam, India
Katakhal is located in India
Katakhal
Katakhal
Katakhal (India)
Coordinates: 24°49′51″N 92°36′51″E / 24.8309°N 92.6143°E / 24.8309; 92.6143
CountryIndia
StateAssam
DistrictHailakandi
District created1 October 1989
Government
 • BodyHailakandi Municipality Board
Area
 • Total1,327 km2 (512 sq mi)
 • Rankhhh
Elevation
21 m (69 ft)
Population
 (2011)
 • Total659,260
 • Density497/km2 (1,290/sq mi)
Languages
 • OfficialBengali and Meitei (Manipuri)
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
788XXX
Telephone code91 - (0) 03844
ISO 3166 codeIN-AS
Vehicle registrationAS-24
Websitehailakandi.nic.in

Katakhal is a town and railway station in Hailakandi tehsil of Hailakandi district in the Indian state of Assam. The village is named after the Katakhal River which originates in Bhairabi after three other rivers merge. The river ends at Kalinagar Village falling into Barak river. The Hailakandi district is one of the three districts of Southern Assam in the Barak Valley.[citation needed][verification needed]

Bengali and Meitei (Manipuri) are the official languages of this place.[1][2]

Bairabi Sairang Railway

[edit]

Indian Railways has already converted the current 84 km railway from Assam to Bairabi 2 km inside Mizoram. Its 51.38 km long Bairabi Sairang Railway extension from Bairabi to Sairang (20 km north of Aizawl) in Mizoram is under construction with target completion date of March 2019. In August 2015, Indian Railway completed a survey for a possible new route extension from Sairang to Hmawngbuchhuah[3] on Mizoram's southern tip on the border of Myanmar, where at nearby Zochachhuah[4] village the National Highway 502 (India) (part of Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project) enters Myanmar, leaving a possibility open for yet-unplanned future rail connections to Paletwa.[5][6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Govt withdraws Assamese as official language from Barak valley". Business Standard India. Press Trust of India. 9 September 2014. Archived from the original on 29 January 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  2. ^ Purkayastha, Biswa Kalyan (24 February 2024). "Assam recognises Manipuri as associate official language in four districts". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
  3. ^ Hmawngbuchhuah location map
  4. ^ Zochachhuah location map
  5. ^ Massive push to railway infrastructure under way in Northeast
  6. ^ Sanctioned in 2000, broad-gauge train reaches Mizoram after 16 years
[edit]