WAHGA BORDER MARCHING CEREMONY, PAKISTAN.

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • WAHGA is a village located in the Wahga Zone near City of Lahore, Pakistan. The town is famous for the Wahga border ceremony and also serves as a goods transit terminal and a railway station between Pakistan and India. Wahga is situated 600 metres west of the border and lies on the historic Grand Trunk Road between Lahore - Pakistan and Amritsar - India. The border is located 24 kilometres from Lahore and 32 kilometres from Amritsar. It is also 3 kilometres from the bordering village of Attari - India.
    WAHGA - ATTARI BORDER CROSSING CEREMONY.
    The border crossing draws its name from Wahga village, near which the Radcliffe Line, the boundary demarcation line dividing India and Pakistan upon the Partition of British India, was drawn. At the time of the independence in 1947, migrants from India entered Pakistan through this border crossing and vice versa.
    The Wahga-Attari border marching ceremony is known as the "Silly Walk ceremony"
    & it happens at the border gate, two hours before sunset each day. The flag ceremony is conducted by the Pakistani Rangers and Indian Border Security Force (BSF).
    India erected a 360 ft flagpole on their side of the border in Attari & in August 2017, a 400 ft Pakistani flagpole was installed on the Wahga side which is 40 ft taller than the Indian flagpole.
    OCT 2023

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