fbpx
Wikipedia

Karachi

Karachi (/kəˈrɑːi/; Urdu: کراچی; Sindhi: ڪراچي; IPA: [kəˈraːtʃi] (listen)) is the largest city in Pakistan and 12th largest in the world, with a population of over 20 million.[17][18][19] It is situated at the southern tip of the country along the Arabian Sea coast. It is the former capital of Pakistan and capital of the province of Sindh. Ranked as a beta-global city,[20][21] it is Pakistan's premier industrial and financial centre,[22] with an estimated GDP of over $200 billion (PPP) as of 2021.[15][16] Karachi paid $9 billion (25% of whole country) as tax during fiscal year July 2021 to May 2022 according to FBR report. Karachi is Pakistan's most cosmopolitan city, linguistically, ethnically, and religiously diverse,[23] as well as one of Pakistan's most socially liberal cities.[24][25][26] Karachi serves as a transport hub, and contains Pakistan's two largest seaports, the Port of Karachi and Port Qasim, as well as Pakistan's busiest airport, Jinnah International Airport.[27] Karachi is also a media center, home to news channels, film and fashion industry of Pakistan. Most of Pakistan's multinational companies and banks have their headquarters in Karachi. Karachi is also a tourism hub due to its scenic beaches, historic buildings and shopping malls.

Karachi
کراچی
Nickname(s): 
City of the Quaid,[1] Paris of the East,[2][3] City of Lights,[2] Bride of the Cities[4][5]
Karachi
Map of the city of Karachi
Karachi
Location within Sindh province
Karachi
Location within Pakistan
Karachi
Location within Asia
Coordinates: 24°51′36″N 67°0′36″E / 24.86000°N 67.01000°E / 24.86000; 67.01000
Country Pakistan
Province Sindh
DivisionKarachi Division
Settled1729
Metropolitan council1880; 143 years ago (1880)
City councilCity Complex, Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
Districts[6]
Government
 • TypeMetropolitan Corporation
 • BodyGovernment of Karachi
 • MayorNone (vacant)
 • Deputy mayorNone (vacant)
 • CommissionerIqbal Memon[7]
Area
 • Metro
3,530 km2 (1,360 sq mi)
Elevation10 m (30 ft)
Population
 • City14,916,456
 • Rank1st (Pakistan); 12th (world)
 • Metro
16,051,521
DemonymKarachiite[13]
Time zoneUTC+05:00 (PKT)
Postal codes
74XXX – 75XXX
Dialling code021[14]
GDP/PPP$200 billion (2021)[15][16]
International airportJinnah International (KHI)
Rapid transit systemKarachi Breeze
Largest district by areaMalir
Largest area by population (2020)Orangi Town (2,750,000)
Largest area by GDP (2020)Saddar Town ($40 billion)
Websitewww.kmc.gos.pk

The region has been inhabited for millennia,[28] but the city was formally founded as the fortified village of Kolachi as recently as 1729.[29][30] The settlement greatly increased in importance on arrival of the East India Company in the mid-19th century. British administrators embarked on substantial projects to transform the city into a major seaport, and connect it with the extensive railway network of the Indian subcontinent.[30] At the time of the partition of India in 1947, the city was the largest in Sindh with an estimated population of 400,000 people.[23] Following the independence of Pakistan, the city experienced a dramatic shift in population and demography with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Muhajir (Urdu-speaking people) Muslim refugees from India,[31] coupled with a substantial exodus of its Hindu residents, whose numbers declined from 51.1% to 1.7% of the total population.[32][33] The city experienced rapid economic growth following Pakistan's independence, attracting migrants from throughout the country and other regions in South Asia.[34] According to the 2017 Census of Pakistan, Karachi's total population was 16,051,521, with 14.9 million of those people residing in the urban areas of the city. Karachi is one of the world's fastest-growing cities,[35] and has significant communities representing almost every ethnic group in Pakistan. Karachi holds more than two million Bengali immigrants, a million Afghan refugees, and up to 400,000 Rohingyas from Myanmar.[36][37][38]

Karachi is now Pakistan's premier industrial and financial centre. The city has a formal economy estimated to be worth $190 billion as of 2021, which is the largest in the country.[39][40] Karachi collects 35% of Pakistan's tax revenue,[41] and generates approximately 25% of Pakistan's entire GDP.[42][43] Approximately 30% of Pakistani industrial output is from Karachi,[44] while Karachi's ports handle approximately 95% of Pakistan's foreign trade.[45] Approximately 90% of the multinational corporations and 100% of banks operating in Pakistan are headquartered in Karachi.[45] Karachi is considered to be Pakistan's fashion capital,[46][47] and has hosted the annual Karachi Fashion Week since 2009.[48][49]

Known as the "City of Lights" in the 1960s and 1970s for its vibrant nightlife,[50] Karachi was beset by sharp ethnic, sectarian, and political conflict in the 1980s with the large-scale arrival of weaponry during the Soviet–Afghan War.[51] The city had become well known for its high rates of violent crime, but recorded crimes sharply decreased following a crackdown operation against criminals, the MQM political party, and Islamist militants, initiated in 2013 by the Pakistan Rangers.[52] As a result of the operation, Karachi dropped from being ranked the world's 6th-most dangerous city for crime in 2014, to 128th by 2022.[53]

Etymology

Before independence, the city was widely known as Karanchi in Urdu, though the English spelling Karachi became more popular over time.[54]

Modern Karachi was reputedly founded in 1729 as the settlement of Kolachi-jo-Goth during the rule of Kalhora dynasty.[29] The new settlement is said to have been named in honour of Mai Kolachi, whose son is said to have slain a man-eating crocodile in the village after his elder brothers had already been killed by it.[29] The name Karachee, a shortened and corrupted version of the original name Kolachi-jo-Goth, was used for the first time in a Dutch report from 1742 about a shipwreck near the settlement.[55][56]

History

Early history

 
The 15th–18th century Chaukhandi tombs are a Tentative UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The region around Karachi has been the site of human habitation for millennia. Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic sites have been excavated in the Mulri Hills along Karachi's northern outskirts. These earliest inhabitants are believed to have been hunter-gatherers, with ancient flint tools discovered at several sites.

The expansive Karachi region is believed to have been known to the ancient Greeks, and may have been the site of Barbarikon, an ancient seaport which was located at the nearby mouth of the Indus River.[57][58][59][60] Karachi may also have been referred to as Ramya in ancient Greek texts.[61]

The ancient site of Krokola, a natural harbor west of the Indus where Alexander the Great sailed his fleet for Achaemenid Assyria, may have been located near the mouth of Karachi's Malir River,[62][63][64] though some believe it was located near Gizri.[65][66] No other natural harbor exists near the mouth of the Indus that could accommodate a large fleet.[67] Nearchus, who commanded Alexander's naval fleet, also mentioned a hilly island by the name of Morontobara and an adjacent flat island named Bibakta, which colonial historians identified as Karachi's Manora Point and Kiamari (or Clifton), respectively, based on Greek descriptions.[68][69][70] Both areas were island until well into the colonial era, when silting in led to them being connected to the mainland.[71]

In 711 CE, Muhammad bin Qasim conquered the Sindh and Indus Valley and the port of Debal, from where he launched his forces further into the Indus Valley in 712.[72] Some have identified the port with Karachi, though some argue the location was somewhere between Karachi and the nearby city of Thatta.[73][74]

Under Mirza Ghazi Beg, the Mughal administrator of Sindh, the development of coastal Sindh and the Indus River Delta was encouraged. Under his rule, fortifications in the region acted as a bulwark against Portuguese incursions into Sindh. In 1553–54, Ottoman admiral Seydi Ali Reis, mentioned a small port along the Sindh coast by the name of Kaurashi which may have been Karachi.[75][76][77] The Chaukhandi tombs in Karachi's modern suburbs were built around this time between the 15th and 18th centuries.

Kolachi settlement

 
The Manora Fort, built-in 1797 to defend Karachi, was captured by the British on 3 February 1839 and upgraded 1888–1889.

19th century Karachi historian Seth Naomal Hotchand recorded that a small settlement of 20–25 huts existed along the Karachi Harbour that was known as Dibro, which was situated along a pool of water known as Kolachi-jo-Kun.[78] In 1725, a band of Baloch settlers from Makran and Kalat had settled in the hamlet after fleeing droughts and tribal feuds.[79]

A new settlement was built in 1729 at the site of Dibro, which came to be known as Kolachi-jo-Goth ("The village of Kolachi").[29] The new settlement is said to have been named in honour of Mai Kolachi, a resident of the old settlement whose son is said to have slain a man-eating crocodile.[29] Kolachi was about 40 hectares in size, with some smaller fishing villages scattered in its vicinity.[80] The founders of the new fortified settlement were Sindhi Baniyas,[79] and are said to have arrived from the nearby town of Kharak Bandar after the harbour there silted in 1728 after heavy rains.[81] Kolachi was fortified, and defended with cannons imported from Muscat, Oman. Under the Talpurs, the Rah-i-Bandar road was built to connect the city's port to the caravan terminals.[82] This road would eventually be further developed by the British into Bandar Road, which was renamed Muhammad Ali Jinnah Road.[83][84]

The name Karachee was used for the first time in a Dutch document from 1742, in which a merchant ship de Ridderkerk is shipwrecked near the settlement.[55][56] In 1770s, Karachi came under the control of the Khan of Kalat, which attracted a second wave of Balochi settlers.[79] In 1795, Karachi was annexed by the Talpurs, triggering a third wave of Balochi settlers who arrived from central Sindh and southern Punjab.[79] The Talpurs built the Manora Fort in 1797,[85][86] which was used to protect Karachi's Harbor from al-Qasimi pirates.[87]

In 1799 or 1800, the founder of the Talpur dynasty, Mir Fateh Ali Khan, allowed the East India Company under Nathan Crow to establish a trading post in Karachi.[88] He was allowed to build a house for himself in Karachi at that time, but by 1802 was ordered to leave the city.[89] The city continued to be ruled by the Talpurs until it was occupied by forces under the command of John Keane in February 1839.[90]

British control

 
An 1897 image of Karachi's Rampart Row street in Mithadar
 
Some of Karachi's most recognized structures, such as Frere Hall, date from the British Raj.
 
Karachi features several examples of colonial-era Indo-Saracenic architecture, such as the KMC Building.

The British East India Company captured Karachi on 3 February 1839 after HMS Wellesley opened fire and quickly destroyed Manora Fort, which guarded Karachi Harbour at Manora Point.[91] Karachi's population at the time was an estimated 8,000 to 14,000,[92] and was confined to the walled city in Mithadar, with suburbs in what is now the Serai Quarter.[93] British troops, known as the "Company Bahadur" established a camp to the east of the captured city, which became the precursor to the modern Karachi Cantonment. The British further developed the Karachi Cantonment as a military garrison to aid the British war effort in the First Anglo-Afghan War.[94]

Portuguese Goan community started migrating to Karachi in the 1820s as traders. The majority of the estimated 100,000 who came to Pakistan are primarily concentrated in Karachi.[95]

Sindh's capital was shifted from Hyderabad to Karachi in 1840 when Karachi was annexed to the British Empire after Major General Charles James Napier captured the rest of Sindh following his victory against the Talpurs at the Battle of Miani. Following the 1843 annexation, on 17 February the entire province was amalgamated into the Bombay Presidency for the next 93 years, and Karachi remain the divisional headquarter. A few years later in 1846, Karachi suffered a large cholera outbreak, which led to the establishment of the Karachi Cholera Board (predecessor to the city's civic government).[96]

The city grew under the administration of its new Commissioner, Henry Bartle Edward Frere, who was appointed in the 1850s. Karachi was recognized for its strategic importance, prompting the British to establish the Port of Karachi in 1854. Karachi rapidly became a transportation hub for British India owing to newly built port and rail infrastructure, as well as the increase in agricultural exports from the opening of productive tracts of newly irrigated land in Punjab and Sindh.[97] By 1856, the value of goods traded through Karachi reached £855,103, leading to the establishment of merchant offices and warehouses.[98] The population in 1856 is estimated to have been 57,000.[99] During the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857, the 21st Native Infantry, then stationed in Karachi, mutinied and declared allegiance to rebel forces in September 1857, though the British were able to quickly defeat the rebels and reassert control over the city.

Following the Rebellion, British colonial administrators continued to develop the city's infrastructure, but continued to neglect localities like Lyari, which was home to the city's original population of Sindhi fishermen and Balochi nomads.[100] At the outbreak of the American Civil War, Karachi's port became an important cotton-exporting port,[99] with Indus Steam Flotilla and Orient Inland Steam Navigation Company established to transport cotton from rest of Sindh to Karachi's port, and onwards to textile mills in England.[101] With increased economic opportunities, economic migrants from several ethnicities and religions, including Anglo-British, Parsis, Marathis, and Goan Christians, among others, established themselves in Karachi,[99] with many setting-up businesses in the new commercial district of Saddar. Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, was born in Karachi's Wazir Mansion in 1876 to such migrants from Gujarat. Public building works were undertaken at this time in Gothic and Indo-Saracenic styles, including the construction of Frere Hall in 1865 and the later Empress Market in 1889.

With the completion of the Suez Canal in 1869, Karachi's position as a major port increased even further.[99] In 1878, the British Raj connected Karachi with the network of British India's vast railway system. In 1887, Karachi Port underwent radical improvements with connection to the railways, along with expansion and dredging of the port, and construction of a breakwater.[99] Karachi's first synagogue was established in 1893.[102] By 1899, Karachi had become the largest wheat-exporting port in the East.[103] In 1901, Karachi's population was 117,000 with a further 109,000 included in the Municipal area.[99]

Under the British, the city's municipal government was established. Known as the Father of Modern Karachi, mayor Seth Harchandrai Vishandas led the municipal government to improve sanitary conditions in the Old City, as well as major infrastructure works in the New Town after his election in 1911.[2] in 1914, Karachi had become the largest wheat-exporting port of the entire British Empire,[104] after large irrigation works in Sindh were initiated to increase wheat and cotton yields.[99] By 1924, the Drigh Road Aerodrome was established,[99] now the Faisal Air Force Base.

Karachi's increasing importance as a cosmopolitan transportation hub leads to the influence of non-Sindhis in Sindh's administration. Half the city was born outside of Karachi by as early as 1921.[105] Native Sindhis were upset by this influence,[99] and so on 1 April 1936, Sindh was established as a province separate from the Bombay Presidency with Karachi was once again made capital of Sindh. In 1941, the population of the city had risen to 387,000.[99]

Post-independence

 
Lord Mountbatten and his wife Edwina in Karachi 14 August 1947

At the dawn of independence following the success of the Pakistan Movement in 1947, On 15 August 1947 Capital of Sindh shifted from Karachi to Hyderabad and Karachi was made the national capital of Pakistan.

Karachi was Sindh's largest city with a population of over 400,000.[23] The city had a slight Hindu majority, with around 51% of the population being Hindu. Partition resulted in the exodus of much of the city's Hindu population, though Karachi, like most of Sindh, remained relatively peaceful compared to cities in Punjab.[106] Riots erupted on 6 January 1948, after which most of Sindh's Hindu population fled to India,[106] with assistance of the Indian government.[107]

Karachi became the focus for the resettlement of middle-class Muslim Muhajir refugees who fled India, with 470,000 refugees in Karachi by May 1948,[108] leading to a drastic alteration of the city's demography. In 1941, Muslims were 42% of Karachi's population, but by 1951 made up 96% of the city's population.[105] The city's population had tripled between 1941 and 1951.[105] Urdu replaced Sindhi as Karachi's most widely spoken language; Sindhi was the mother tongue of 51% of Karachi in 1941, but only 8.5% in 1951, while Urdu grew to become the mother tongue of 51% of Karachi's population.[105] 100,000 Muhajir refugees arrived annually in Karachi until 1952. Muhajirs kept arriving from different parts of India till 2000.[105]

Karachi was selected as the first capital of Pakistan, and was administered as a federal district separate from Sindh beginning in 1948,[108] the capital of Sindh shifted again Hyderabad to Karachi until the national capital was shifted to Rawalpindi in 1958.[109] While foreign embassies shifted away from Karachi, the city is host to numerous consulates and honorary consulates.[110] Between 1958 and 1970, Karachi's role as capital of Sindh was ceased due to the One Unit programme enacted by President Iskander Mirza.[2]

Karachi of the 1960s was regarded as an economic role model around the world, with Seoul, South Korea, borrowing from the city's second "Five-Year Plan".[111][112] Several examples of Modernist architect were built in Karachi during this period, including the Mazar-e-Quaid mausoleum, the distinct Masjid-e-Tooba, and the Habib Bank Plaza (the tallest building in all of South Asia at the time). The city's population by 1961 had grown 369% compared to 1941.[105] By the mid-1960s, Karachi began to attract large numbers of Pashtun, Punjabis and Kashmiris from northern Pakistan.[105]

The 1970s saw a construction boom funded by remittances and investments from the Gulf States, and the appearance of apartment buildings in the city.[113] Real-estate prices soared during this period, leading to a worsening housing crisis.[114] The period also saw labour unrest in Karachi's industrial estates beginning in 1970 that were violently repressed by the government of President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto from 1972 onwards.[115] To appease conservative forces, Bhutto banned alcohol in Pakistan, and cracked-down of Karachi's discotheques and cabarets - leading to the closure of Karachi's once-lively nightlife.[116] The city's art scene was further repressed during the rule of dictator General Zia-ul-Haq.[116] Zia's Islamization policies lead the Westernized upper-middle classes of Karachi to largely withdraw from the public sphere, and instead form their own social venues that became inaccessible to the poor.[116] This decade also saw an influx of more than one million Behari immigrants into Karachi from the newly made country Bangladesh which separated from Pakistan in 1971.

In 1972, the Karachi district divided into three districts, East, West and South districts.

The 1980s and 1990s saw an influx of almost one million Afghan refugees into Karachi fleeing the Soviet–Afghan War.[105] This was followed by refugees escaping from post-revolution Iran.[117] At this time, Karachi was also rocked by political conflict, while crime rates drastically increased with the arrival of weaponry from the War in Afghanistan.[51] Conflict between the MQM party, and ethnic Sindhis, Pashtuns, Punjabis and Balochis was sharp.[118] The party and its vast network of supporters were targeted by Pakistani security forces as part of the controversial Operation Clean-up in 1992 – an effort to restore peace in the city that lasted until 1994.[119] Anti-Hindu riots also broke out in Karachi in 1992 in retaliation for the demolition of the Babri Mosque in India by a group of Hindu nationalists earlier that year.[120]

In 1996, two (02) more districts created in the Karachi division named Central and Malir districts.

The 2010s saw another influx of hundreds of thousands of Pashtun refugees fleeing conflict in North-West Pakistan and the 2010 Pakistan floods.[105] By this point Karachi had become widely known for its high rates of violent crime, usually in relation to criminal activity, gang-warfare, sectarian violence, and extrajudicial killings.[100] Recorded crimes sharply decreased following a controversial crackdown operation against criminals, the MQM party, and Islamist militants initiated in 2013 by the Pakistan Rangers.[52] As a result of the operation, Karachi went from being ranked the world's 6th most dangerous city for crime in 2014, to 128th by 2022.[121]

In 2022 at least one million flood affectees from Sindh and Balochistan took refuge in Karachi.

Geography

Karachi is located on the coastline of Sindh province in southern Pakistan, along the Karachi Harbour, a natural harbour on the Arabian Sea. Karachi is built on a coastal plain with scattered rocky outcroppings, hills and marshlands. Mangrove forests grow in the brackish waters around the Karachi Harbour, and farther southeast towards the expansive Indus River Delta. West of Karachi city is the Cape Monze, locally known as Ras Muari, which is an area characterised by sea cliffs, rocky sandstone promontories and beaches.

Karachi lies very close to a major fault line, where the Indian tectonic plate meets the Arabian tectonic plate.[122] Within the city of Karachi are two small ranges: the Khasa Hills and Mulri Hills, which lie in the northwest and act as a barrier between North Nazimabad and Orangi.[123] Karachi's hills are barren and are part of the larger Kirthar Range, and have a maximum elevation of 528 metres (1,732 feet).[citation needed]

Between the hills are wide coastal plains interspersed with dry river beds and water channels. Karachi has developed around the Malir River and Lyari Rivers, with the Lyari shore being the site of the settlement for Kolachi. To the east of Karachi lies the Indus River flood plains.[124]

Climate

 
The Arabian Sea influences Karachi's climate, providing the city with more moderate temperatures compared to other areas of Sindh province.

Karachi has a hot desert climate (Köppen: BWh) dominated by a long "Summer Season" while moderated by oceanic influence from the Arabian Sea. The city has low annual average precipitation levels (approx. 174 mm (7 in) per annum), the bulk of which occurs during the July–August monsoon season. Summers are hot and humid, and Karachi is prone to deadly heatwaves.[125] On the other hand, cool sea breezes typically provide relief during hot summer months. A text message-based early warning system alerts people to take precautionary measures and helps prevent fatalities during an unusually strong heatwave or thunderstorm.[126] The winter climate is dry and lasts between December and February. It is dry and pleasant in winter relative to the warm hot season that follows, which starts in March and lasts until October. Proximity to the sea maintains humidity levels at near-constant levels year-round. Thus, the climate is similar to a humid tropical climate except for low precipitation and occasional temperatures well over 100 F (38 C) due to dry continental influence.

The city's highest monthly rainfall, 19 in (480 mm), occurred in July 1967.[127][128] The city's highest rainfall in 24 hours occurred on 7 August 1953, when about 278.1 millimetres (10.95 in) of rain lashed the city, resulting in major flooding.[129]

Karachi's highest recorded temperature is 47.8 °C (118.0 °F) which was recorded on 9 May 1938,[130] and the lowest is 0 °C (32 °F) recorded on 21 January 1934.[128]

Climate data for Karachi
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 32.8
(91.0)
36.5
(97.7)
42.5
(108.5)
44.4
(111.9)
47.8
(118.0)
47.0
(116.6)
42.2
(108.0)
41.7
(107.1)
42.8
(109.0)
43.3
(109.9)
38.5
(101.3)
35.5
(95.9)
47.8
(118.0)
Average high °C (°F) 25.9
(78.6)
27.9
(82.2)
31.7
(89.1)
34.5
(94.1)
35.3
(95.5)
35.2
(95.4)
33.1
(91.6)
31.9
(89.4)
32.8
(91.0)
35.1
(95.2)
32.2
(90.0)
27.9
(82.2)
32.0
(89.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) 20.4
(68.7)
21.2
(70.2)
25.4
(77.7)
28.8
(83.8)
31.0
(87.8)
31.8
(89.2)
30.4
(86.7)
29.2
(84.6)
28.7
(83.7)
27.8
(82.0)
24.6
(76.3)
20.4
(68.7)
26.6
(80.0)
Average low °C (°F) 10.8
(51.4)
13.0
(55.4)
17.7
(63.9)
22.5
(72.5)
26.2
(79.2)
28.1
(82.6)
27.5
(81.5)
26.2
(79.2)
25.4
(77.7)
21.4
(70.5)
16.3
(61.3)
12.2
(54.0)
20.6
(69.1)
Record low °C (°F) 0.0
(32.0)
3.3
(37.9)
7.0
(44.6)
12.2
(54.0)
17.7
(63.9)
22.1
(71.8)
22.2
(72.0)
20.0
(68.0)
18.0
(64.4)
10.0
(50.0)
6.1
(43.0)
1.3
(34.3)
0.0
(32.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 8.4
(0.33)
7.4
(0.29)
5.3
(0.21)
3.0
(0.12)
0.1
(0.00)
10.8
(0.43)
60.0
(2.36)
60.9
(2.40)
11.0
(0.43)
2.6
(0.10)
0.4
(0.02)
4.8
(0.19)
174.7
(6.88)
Average precipitation days 0.7 0.8 0.7 0.2 0.1 0.9 8.0 3.3 0.7 0.3 0.1 0.7 16.5
Mean monthly sunshine hours 269.7 251.4 272.8 276 297.6 231 155 148.8 219 282.1 273 272.8 2,949.2
Mean daily sunshine hours 8.7 8.9 8.8 9.2 9.6 7.7 5 4.8 7.3 9.1 9.1 8.8 8.1
Percent possible sunshine 81 79 73 72 72 56 37 37 59 78 83 83 68
Average ultraviolet index 6 8 10 12 12 12 12 12 11 9 6 5 10
Source: PMD (1991–2020),[131] Weather Atlas,[132] and Karachi Extremes (1931–2018)[133][134]

Cityscape

The city first developed around the Karachi Harbour, and owes much of its growth to its role as a seaport at the end of the 18th century,[135] contrasted with Pakistan's millennia-old cities such as Lahore, Multan, and Peshawar. Karachi's Mithadar neighbourhood represents the extent of Kolachi prior to British rule.

British Karachi was divided between the "New Town" and the "Old Town", with British investments focused primarily on the New Town.[94] The Old Town was a largely unplanned neighbourhood which housed most of the city's indigenous residents and had no access to sewerage systems, electricity, and water.[94] The New Town was subdivided into residential, commercial, and military areas.[94] Given the strategic value of the city, the British developed the Karachi Cantonment as a military garrison in the New Town to aid the British war effort in the First Anglo-Afghan War.[94] The city's development was largely confined to the area north of the China Creek prior to independence, although the seaside area of Clifton was also developed as a posh locale under the British, and its large bungalows and estates remain some of the city's most desirable properties. The aforementioned historic areas form the oldest portions of Karachi, and contain its most important monuments and government buildings, with the I. I. Chundrigar Road being home to most of Pakistan's banks, including the Habib Bank Plaza which was Pakistan's tallest building from 1963 until the early 2000s.[2] Situated on a coastal plain northwest of Karachi's historic core lies the sprawling district of Orangi. North of the historic core is the largely middle-class district of Nazimabad, and upper-middle-class North Nazimabad, which were developed in the 1950s. To the east of the historic core is the area known as Defence, an expansive upscale suburb developed and administered by the Pakistan Army. Karachi's coastal plains along the Arabian Sea south of Clifton were also developed much later as part of the greater Defence Housing Authority project. Karachi's city limits also include several islands, including Baba and Bhit Islands, Oyster Rocks, and Manora, a former island which is now connected to the mainland by a thin 12-kilometre long shoal known as Sandspit. Gulistan-e-Johar, Gulshan-e-Iqbal, Federal B. Area, Malir, Landhi and Korangi areas were all developed after 1970. The city has been described as one divided into sections for those able to afford to live in planned localities with access to urban amenities, and those who live in unplanned communities with inadequate access to such services.[136] 35% of Karachi's residents live in unplanned communities.[136]

Economy

Karachi is Pakistan's financial and commercial capital.[137] Since Pakistan's independence, Karachi has been the centre of the nation's economy, and remain's Pakistan's largest urban economy despite the economic stagnation caused by sociopolitical unrest during the late 1980s and 1990s. The city forms the centre of an economic corridor stretching from Karachi to nearby Hyderabad, and Thatta.[138]

As of 2021, Karachi had an estimated GDP (PPP) of $190 billion with a yearly growth rate of 5.5%.[139][40] Karachi contributes 90% of Sindh's GDP[140][141][142][143] and accounts for approximately 25% of the total GDP of Pakistan.[42][43] The city has a large informal economy which is not typically reflected in GDP estimates.[144] The informal economy may constitute up to 36% of Pakistan's total economy, versus 22% of India's economy, and 13% of the Chinese economy.[145] The informal sector employs up to 70% of the city's workforce.[146] In 2018 The Global Metro Monitor Report ranked Karachi's economy as the best performing metropolitan economy in Pakistan.[147]

Today along with Pakistan's continued economic expansion Karachi is now ranked third in the world for consumer expenditure growth with its market anticipated to increase by 6.6% in real terms in 2018[148] It is also ranked among the top cities in the world by an anticipated increase of a number of households (1.3 million households) with annual income above $20,000 dollars measured at PPP exchange rates by 2025.[149] The Global FDI Intelligence Report 2017/2018 published by Financial Times ranks Karachi amongst the top 10 Asia pacific cities of the future for FDI strategy.[150] According to Anatol Lieven the economic growth of Karachi is a result of the influx of Muhajirs to Karachi during late 1940s and early 50s.[151]

Finance and banking

Most of Pakistan's public and private banks are headquartered on Karachi's I. I. Chundrigar Road, which is known as "Pakistan's Wall Street",[2] with a large percentage of the cash flow in the Pakistani economy taking place on I. I. Chundrigar Road. Most major foreign multinational corporations operating in Pakistan have their headquarters in Karachi. Karachi is also home to the Pakistan Stock Exchange, which was rated as Asia's best-performing stock market in 2015 on the heels of Pakistan's upgrade to emerging-market status by MSCI.[152]

Media and technology

Karachi has been the pioneer in cable networking in Pakistan with the most sophisticated of the cable networks of any city of Pakistan,[153] and has seen an expansion of information and communications technology and electronic media. The city has become a software outsourcing hub for Pakistan.[citation needed] Several independent television and radio stations are based in Karachi, including Business Plus, AAJ News, Geo TV, KTN,[154] Sindh TV,[155] CNBC Pakistan, TV ONE, Express TV,[156] ARY Digital, Indus Television Network, Samaa TV, Abb Takk News, Bol TV, and Dawn News, as well as several local stations.

Industry

Industry contributes a large portion of Karachi's economy, with the city home to several of Pakistan's largest companies dealing in textiles, cement, steel, heavy machinery, chemicals, and food products.[157] The city is home to approximately 30 percent of Pakistan's manufacturing sector,[44] and produces approximately 42 percent of Pakistan's value added in large scale manufacturing.[158] At least 4500 industrial units form Karachi's formal industrial economy.[159] Karachi's informal manufacturing sector employs far more people than the formal sector, though proxy data suggest that the capital employed and value-added from such informal enterprises is far smaller than that of formal sector enterprises.[160] An estimated 63% of the Karachi's workforce is employed in trade and manufacturing.[138]

Karachi Export Processing Zone, SITE, Korangi, Northern Bypass Industrial Zone, Bin Qasim and North Karachi serve as large industrial estates in Karachi.[161] The Karachi Expo Centre also complements Karachi's industrial economy by hosting regional and international exhibitions.[162]

Revenue collection

 
The former State Bank of Pakistan building was built during the colonial era.

As home to Pakistan's largest ports and a large portion of its manufacturing base, Karachi contributes a large share of Pakistan's collected tax revenue. As most of Pakistan's large multinational corporations are based in Karachi, income taxes are paid in the city even though income may be generated from other parts of the country.[174] As home to the country's two largest ports, Pakistani customs officials collect the bulk of federal duty and tariffs at Karachi's ports, even if those imports are destined for one of Pakistan's other provinces.[175] Approximately 25% of Pakistan's national revenue is generated in Karachi.[42]

According to the Federal Board of Revenue's 2006–2007 year book, tax and customs units in Karachi were responsible for 46.75% of direct taxes, 33.65% of federal excise tax, and 23.38% of domestic sales tax.[176] Karachi accounts for 75.14% of customs duty and 79% of sales tax on imports,[176] and collects 53.38% of the total collections of the Federal Board of Revenue, of which 53.33% are customs duty and sales tax on imports.[176][177]

Demographics

 
Bahadurabad Area has a high population density.

Karachi is the most linguistically, ethnically, and religiously diverse city in Pakistan.[23] The city is a melting pot of ethnolinguistic groups from throughout Pakistan, as well as migrants from other parts of Asia. The 2017 census numerated Karachi's population to be 14,910,352, having grown 2.49% per year since the 1998 census, which had listed Karachi's population at approximately 9.3 million.[178] The city's inhabitants are referred to by the demonym Karachiite in English, and Karāchīwālā in Urdu.

Language

  Urdu (42.30%)
  Pashto (15.01%)
  Punjabi (10.73%)
  Sindhi (10.67%)
  Saraiki (4.98%)
  Hindko (4.24%)
  Balochi (4.04%)
  Others (8.01%)

Karachi has the largest number of Urdu speakers in Pakistan.[153][179] As per the 2017 census, the linguistic breakdown of Karachi Division is:

Language Rank 2017 census[180] Speakers 1998 census[181] Speakers 1981 census[182] Speakers
Urdu 1 42.30% 6,779,142 48.52% 4,497,747 54.34% 2,830,098
Pashto 2 15.01% 2,406,011 11.42% 1,058,650 8.71% 453,628
Punjabi 3 10.73% 1,719,636 13.94% 1,292,335 13.64% 710,389
Sindhi 4 10.67% 1,709,877 7.22% 669,340 6.29% 327,591
Saraiki 5 4.98% 798,031 2.11% 195,681 0.35% 18,228
Balochi 6 4.04% 648,964 4.34% 402,386 4.39% 228,636
Others 7 12.25% 1,963,233 12.44% 1,153,126 12.27% 639,560
All 100% 16,024,894 100% 9,269,265 100% 5,208,132

The category of "others" includes Hindko, Kashmiri, Kohistani, Burushaski, Gujarati, Memoni, Marwari, Dari, Brahui, Makrani, Hazara, Khowar, Gilgiti, Balti, Arabic, Farsi, Bengali and Tamil.[183]

Population

At the end of the 19th century, Karachi had an estimated population of 105,000.[184] By the dawn of Pakistan's independence in 1947, the city had an estimated population of 400,000.[23] The city's population grew dramatically with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Muslim refugees from the newly independent Republic of India.[31] Rapid economic growth following independence attracted further migrants from throughout Pakistan and South Asia.[34] The 2017 census numerated Karachi's population to be 14,910,352, having grown 2.49% per year since the 1998 census, which had listed Karachi's population at approximately 9.3 million.[178]

Lower than expected population figures from the census suggest that Karachi's poor infrastructure, law and order situation, and weakened economy relative to other parts of Pakistan made the city less attractive to in-migration than previously thought.[178] The figure is disputed by all the major political parties in Sindh.[185][186][187] Karachi's population grew by 59.8% since the 1998 census to 14.9 million, while Lahore city grew 75.3%[188] – though Karachi's census district had not been altered by the provincial government since 1998, while Lahore's had been expanded by Punjab's government,[188] leading to some of Karachi's growth to have occurred outside the city's census boundaries.[178] Karachi's population had grown at a rate of 3.49% between the 1981 and 1998 census, leading many analysts to estimate Karachi's 2017 population to be approximately 18 million by extrapolating a continued annual growth rate of 3.49%. Some had expected that the city's population to be between 22 and 30 million,[178] which would require an annual growth rate accelerating to between 4.6% and 6.33%.[178]

Political parties in the province have suggested the city's population has been underestimated in a deliberate attempt to undermine the political power of the city and province.[192] Senator Taj Haider from the PPP claimed he had official documents revealing the city's population to be 25.6 million in 2013,[192] while the Sindh Bureau of Statistics, part of by the PPP-led provincial administration, estimated Karachi's 2016 population to be 19.1 million.[193]

District population density per km2

According to 2017 Census, with 43,063.51 residents per square kilometre Karachi Central is the most densely populated district of the six districts of Karachi as well as the entirety of Pakistan.

Rank District Population (2017 census)[194] Area (Sq. km.) Density
1 Central 2,971,382 69 43,063.51
2 Korangi 2,577,556 108 23,866.26
3 East 2,875,315 139 20,685.72
4 South 1,769,230 122 14,501.89
5 West 3,907,065 929 4,205.67
6 Malir 1,924,364 2,160 890.90
All 16,024,894 3,527 4,543.49

Ethnicity

The oldest portions of modern Karachi reflect the ethnic composition of the first settlement, with Balochis and Sindhis continuing to make up a large portion of the Lyari neighbourhood,[24] though many of the residents are relatively recent migrants. Following Partition, large numbers of Hindus left Pakistan for the newly independent Dominion of India (later the Republic of India), while a larger percentage of Muslim migrant and refugees from India settled in Karachi. The city grew 150% during the ten period between 1941 and 1951 with the new arrivals from India,[195] who made up 57% of Karachi's population in 1951.[196] The city is now considered a melting pot of Pakistan and is the country's most diverse city.[24]

Karachi is the largest Bengali speaking city outside Bengal region.

In 2011, an estimated 2.5 million foreign migrants lived in the city, mostly from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, and Sri Lanka.[197]

 
Karachi is home to large numbers of descendants of refugees and migrants from Hyderabad, in southern India, who built a small replica of Hyderabad's famous Charminar monument in Karachi's Bahadurabad area.

Much of Karachi's citizenry descend from Urdu-speaking migrants and refugees from North India who became known by the Arabic term for "Migrant": Muhajir. The first Muhajirs of Karachi arrived in 1946 in the aftermath of the Great Calcutta Killings and subsequent 1946 Bihar riots.[198] The city's wealthy Hindus opposed the resettlement of refugees near their homes, and so many refugees were accommodated in the older and more congested parts of Karachi.[199] The city witnessed a large influx of Muhajirs following Partition, who were drawn to the port city and newly designated federal capital for its white-collar job opportunities.[200] Muhajirs continued to migrate to Pakistan throughout the 1950s and early 1960s,[201] with Karachi remaining the primary destination of Indian Muslim migrants throughout those decades.[201] The Muhajir Urdu-speaking community in the 2017 census forms slightly less than 45% of the city's population.[188] Muhajirs form the bulk of Karachi's middle class.[24] Muhajirs are regarded as the city's most secular community, while other minorities such as Christians and Hindus increasingly regard themselves as part of the Muhajir community.[24]

Karachi is home to a wide array of non-Urdu speaking Muslim peoples from what is now the Republic of India. The city has a sizable community of Gujarati, Marathi, Konkani-speaking refugees.[24] Karachi is also home to a several-thousand member strong community of Malabari Muslims from Kerala in South India.[202] These ethno-linguistic groups are being assimilated in the Urdu-speaking community.[203]

During the period of rapid economic growth in the 1960s, large numbers Pashtuns from the NWFP migrated to Karachi with Afghan Pashtun refugees settling in Karachi during the 80's.[204][205][206][207][208] Karachi is home to the world's largest urban Pashtun population,[209] with more Pashtun citizens than the Peshawar.[2][209] Pashtuns from Afghanistan are regarded as the most conservative community.[2] Pashtuns from Pakistan's Swat Valley, in contrast, are generally seen as more liberal in social outlook.[2] The Pashtun community forms the bulk of manual labourers and transporters.[210] Anatol Lieven of Georgetown University in Qatar wrote that due to Pashtuns settling the city, "Karachi (not Kabul, Kandahar or Peshawar) is the largest Pashtun city in the world."[211]

Migrants from Punjab began settling in Karachi in large numbers in the 1960s, and now make up an estimated 14% of Karachi's population.[2] The community forms the bulk of the city's police force.[2] The bulk of Karachi's Christian community, which makes up 2.5% of the city's population, is Punjabi.[212]

Despite being the capital of Sindh province, only 6–8% of the city is Sindhi.[2] Sindhis form much of the municipal and provincial bureaucracy.[2] 4% of Karachi's population speaks Balochi as its mother tongue, though most Baloch speakers are of Sheedi heritage – a community that traces its roots to Africa.[2]

Following the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 and independence of Bangladesh, thousands of Urdu-speaking Biharis arrived in the city, preferring to remain Pakistani rather than live in the newly independent country. Large numbers of Bengalis also migrated from Bangladesh to Karachi during periods of economic growth in the 1980s and 1990s. Karachi is now home to an estimated 2.5 to 3 million ethnic Bengalis living in Pakistan.[36][37] Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, who speak a dialect of Bengali and are sometimes regarded as Bengalis, also live in the city. Karachi is home to an estimated 400,000 Rohingya residents.[213][214] Large scale Rohingya migration to Karachi made Karachi one of the largest population centres of Rohingyas in the world outside of Myanmar.[215]

Central Asian migrants from Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan have also settled in the city.[216] Domestic workers from the Philippines are employed in Karachi's posh locales, while many of the city's teachers hail from Sri Lanka.[216] Many Sri Lankans moved to Karachi due to the 2022 Economic Crisis in Sri Lanka. Expatriates from China began migrating to Karachi in the 1940s, to work as dentists, chefs and shoemakers, while many of their descendants continue to live in Pakistan.[216][217] Chinese also reached Karachi after 2015 in large number due to the CPEC project. The city is also home to a small number of British and American expatriates.[218]

During World War II, about 3,000 Polish refugees from the Soviet Union, with some Polish families who chose to remain in the city after Partition.[219][220] Post-Partition Karachi also once had a sizable refugee community from post-revolutionary Iran.[216]

Religion

Religions in Karachi[221][222][223][224]
Religions Percent
Islam
96.5%
Christianity
2.5%
Hinduism
0.86%
Others
0.14%
 
With a capacity of 800,000 worshippers, Grand Jamia Mosque is the largest mosque in Pakistan and 3rd largest in the world.
 
St. Patrick's Cathedral, built-in 1881, serves as the seat of the Archdiocese of Karachi.
 
The Swaminarayan Temple is the largest Hindu temple in Karachi.

Karachi is a religiously homogeneous city with more than 96 per cent of its population adhering to Islam.[225] Karachiites adhere to numerous sects and sub-sects of Islam, as well as Protestant Christianity, and community of Goan Catholics. The city also is home to large numbers of Hindus, and a small community of Zoroastrians and Parsi's. According to Nichola Khan Karachi is also the world's largest Muslim city.[226] Prior to Pakistan's independence in 1947, the religious demographics of the city was estimated to be 51.1% Hindu, 42.3% Muslim, with the remaining 7% primarily Christians (both British and native), Sikhs, Jains, with a small number of Jews.[227] Following the independence of Pakistan, the vast majority of Karachi's Sindhi Hindu population left for India while Muslim refugees from India, in turn, settled in the city. This mass migration dramatically changed the religious demographics of the city.

Islam

Karachi is overwhelmingly Muslim,[2] though the city is one of Pakistan's most secular cities.[24][25][26] Approximately 85% of Karachi's Muslims are Sunnis, while 15% are Shi'ites.[228][229][230] Sunnis primarily follow the Hanafi school of jurisprudence, with Sufism influencing religious practices by encouraging reverence for Sufi saints such as Abdullah Shah Ghazi and Mewa Shah. Shi'ites are predominantly Twelver, with a significant Ismaili minority which is further subdivided into Nizaris, Mustaalis, Dawoodi Bohras, and Sulaymanis. There are over 3000 mosques in Karachi, most famous of which include Grand Jamia Mosque, Baitul Mukarram Mosque, Masjid-e-Tooba and Memon Masjid.

Christianity

Approximately 2.5% of Karachi's population is Christian.[221][222][223] The city's Christian community is primarily composed of Punjabi Christians and a community of Goan Catholics who are typically better-educated and more affluent than their Punjabi co-religionists.[231] They established the posh Cincinnatus Town in Garden East as a Goan enclave. The Goan community dates from 1820 and has a population estimated to be 12,000–15,000 strong.[232] Karachi is served by its own archdiocese, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Karachi.

Hinduism

While most of the city's Hindu population left en masse for India following Pakistan's independence, Karachi still has a large Hindu community with an estimated population of 250,000 based on 2013 data,[233] with several active temples in central Karachi. The Hindu community is split into a more affluent Sindhi Hindu and small Punjabi Hindu group that forms part of Karachi's educated middle class, while poorer Hindus of Rajasthani and Marwari descent form the other part and typically serve as menial and day laborers. Wealthier Hindus live primarily in Clifton and Saddar, while poorer ones live and have temples in Narayanpura and Lyari. Many streets in central Karachi still retain Hindu names, especially in Mithadar, Aram Bagh (formerly Ram Bagh), and Ramswami. Many Mandirs exist in Saddar which are over a 100 years old.

Zoroastrianism

Karachi's affluent and influential Parsis have lived in the region in the 12th century, though the modern community dates from the mid 19th century when they served as military contractors and commissariat agents to the British.[234] Further waves of Parsi immigrants from Persia settled in the city in the late 19th century.[235] The population of Parsis in Karachi and throughout South Asia is in continuous decline due to low birth-rates and migration to Western countries.[236]

In 2019, according to Framji Minwalla, approximately 1,092 Parsis are left in Pakistan.[237]

Transportation

Road

Karachi is served by a road network estimated to be approximately 15,500 kilometres (9,600 miles) in length,[238] serving approximately 5 million vehicles per day.

Karachi is served by 6 Signal-Free Corridors which are designed as urban express roads to permit traffic to transverse large distances without the need to stop at intersections and stoplights. The 16 km (10 mi) Karsaz Road connects PAF Museum in central Karachi to SITE Industrial Area. The Rashid Minhas Road connects Surjani Town with Shah Faisal Town over a 20 km span. The 19 km (12 mi) University Road connects Karachi's urban centre to the Gulistan-e-Johar suburb. The 18 km (11 mi) Shahrah-e-Faisal connects Karachi's Sadar area to the Jinnah International Airport. The 18 km (11 mi) Shahrah-e-Pakistan connects city centre to Federal B. Area. The 18 km (11 mi) Sher Shah Suri Road connects the city centre to Nazimabad.

The Lyari Expressway is a 16 km controlled-access highway along the Lyari River. This toll highway is designed to relieve congestion within the city. To the north of Karachi lies the 39 km Karachi Northern Bypass (M10), which bypasses the city to connect M9 Motorway to N25 National Highway. A 39 km (24 mi) Malir Expressway is underconstruction along the Malir River. It will link Karachi's DHA to Karachi's Malir Town and terminate at Kathore on M-9 Motorway.

Karachi is the terminus of the M-9 motorway, which connects Karachi to Hyderabad. M-9 motorway is part of a larger countrywide motorways network, many of which were built through China Pakistan Economic Corridor Project. From Hyderabad, motorways provide high-speed road access to all major Pakistani cities like Peshawar, Islamabad, Lahore, Multan and Faisalabad.

Karachi is also the terminus of the N-5 National Highway which connects the city to the historic medieval capital of Sindh, Thatta. It offers further connections to northern Pakistan and the Afghan border near Torkham. The N-25 National Highway connects Karachi to capital of Balochistan, Quetta. The N-10 National Highway connects Karachi to the emerging port city of Gwadar.

Rail

Karachi is linked by rail to the rest of the country by Pakistan Railways. The Karachi City Station and Karachi Cantonment Railway Station are the city's two major railway stations.[2] The city has an international rail link, the Thar Express which links Karachi Cantonment Station with Bhagat Ki Kothi station in Jodhpur, India.[239]

The railway system also handles freight linking Karachi port to destinations up-country in northern Pakistan.[240] The city is the terminus for the Main Line-1 Railway which connects Karachi to Peshawar. Pakistan's rail network, including the Main Line-1 Railway is being upgraded as part of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor, allowing trains to depart Karachi and travel on Pakistani railways at an average speed of 160 km/h (100 mph) versus the current average speed of 80 km/h (50 mph).[241]

Public transport

Metrobus

The Pakistani Government is developing the Karachi Metrobus project, which is a 6-line 150-kilometre (93+14-mile) bus rapid transit system.[242] The Metrobus project was inaugurated by then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on 25 February 2016. Sharif said the "project will be more beautiful than Lahore Metro Bus".[243] Orange and Green Lines are operational while Red-Line is underconstruction.

People's Bus Service

In 2022, provincial government launched People's Bus Service having fleet size of 100+ which run on 12 different routes on nominal fare. The buses are air-conditioned, have wifi, have priority seeting for disabled and elderly and are wheelchair accessible.

Red buses are for general public. Pink buses are for women only. White buses are environment friendly electric buses having designated charging points.

Karachi Circular Railway

Karachi Circular Railway is a partially active regional public transit system in Karachi, which serves the Karachi metropolitan area. KCR was fully operational between 1969 and 1999. Since 2001, restoration of the railway and restarting the system had been sought.[244][245] In November 2020, the KCR partially revived operations.[246]

KCR was included in CPEC by Shehbaz Sharif and construction started in 2022. Existing 43 km KCR track and stations would be completely rebuilt into world class automated rapid transit system with environment friendly electric trains. The route would not be changed however many underpasses and bridges would be built along the route to eliminate 22-level crossings. New KCR would be similar to Lahore's Orange Train. New KCR would have joint stations with Karachi Metrobus at points of intersection. Project would be operational by 2025.

With its hub at Karachi City station on I. I. Chundrigar Road, KCR will be a public transit system that connects the city centre with several industrial, commercial and residential districts within the city.[247]

Tramway service

An iconic tramway service was started in 1884 in Karachi but was closed in 1975 because of some reason.[248][249] However, the revival of tramway service is proposed by Karachi Administrator Iftikhar Ali. Turkey has offered assistance in the revival and launching modern tramway service in Karachi.[250]

Air

Karachi's Jinnah International Airport is the busiest airport of Pakistan with a total of 7.2 million passengers in 2018. The current terminal structure was built in 1992, and is divided into international and domestic sections. Karachi's airport serves as a hub for the flag carrier, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), as well as for Air Indus, Serene Air and airblue. The airport offers non-stop flights to destinations throughout East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Gulf States, Europe and North America.[251][252]

Sea

The largest shipping ports in Pakistan are the Port of Karachi and the nearby Port Qasim, the former being the oldest port of Pakistan. Port Qasim is located 35 kilometres (22 miles) east of the Port of Karachi on the Indus River estuary. These ports handle 95% of Pakistan's trade cargo to and from foreign ports. These seaports have modern facilities which include bulk handling, containers and oil terminals.[253] The ports are part of the Maritime Silk Road.[254]

Civic administration

City government

Karachi has a fragmented system of civic government. The urban area is divided into six District Municipal Corporations: Karachi East, Karachi West, Karachi Central, Karachi South, Malir, Korangi. Each district is further divided into between 22 and 42 Union Committees. Each Union Committee is represented by seven elected representatives, four of whom can be general candidates of any background; the other three seats are reserved for women, religious minorities, and a union representative or peasant farmer.

Karachi's urban area also includes six cantonments, which are administered directly by the Pakistani military, and include some of Karachi's most desirable real-estate.

Key civic bodies, such as the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board and KBCA (Karachi Building Control Authority), among others, are under the direct control of the Government of Sindh.[255] Additionally, Karachi's city-planning authority for undeveloped land, the Karachi Development Authority, is under control of the government, while two new city-planning authorities, the Lyari Development Authority and Malir Development Authority were revived by the Pakistan Peoples Party government in 2011 – allegedly to patronize their electoral allies and voting banks.[256]

Historical background

In response to a cholera epidemic in 1846, the Karachi Conservancy Board was organized by British administrators to control its spread.[257][258] The board became the Karachi Municipal Commission in 1852, and the Karachi Municipal Committee the following year.[257] The City of Karachi Municipal Act of 1933 transformed the city administration into the Karachi Municipal Corporation with a mayor, a deputy mayor and 57 councillors.[257] In 1976, the body became the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation.[257]

During the 1900s, Karachi saw its major beautification project under the mayoralty of Harchandrai Vishandas. New roads, parks, residential, and recreational areas were developed as part of this project. In 1948, the Federal Capital Territory of Pakistan was created, comprising approximately 2,103 km2 (812 sq mi) of Karachi and surrounding areas, but this was merged into the province of West Pakistan in 1959.[259] In 1960, Karachi and Lasbela District merged to create Karachi-Bela Division. In 1972, Lasbela District transferred to Kalat division and Karachi metropolitan area was divided into three (03) districts East, West and South. In 1996, again the Karachi metropolitan area was divided into More two (02) districts Central and Malir, each with its own municipal corporation.[257]

Union councils (2001–11)

 
Given the honorary title "Father of Service", Naimatullah Khan Advocate (2001-2005) was one of the most successful and respected mayors Karachi ever had.

In 2001, during the rule of General Pervez Musharraf, five districts of Karachi were merged to form the city district of Karachi, with a three-tier structure. The two most local tiers are composed of 18 towns, and 178 union councils.[260] Each tier focused on elected councils with some common members to provide "vertical linkage" within the federation.[261]

Naimatullah Khan was the first Nazim of Karachi during the Union Council period, while Shafiq-Ur-Rehman Paracha was the first district coordination officer of Karachi. Syed Mustafa Kamal was elected City Nazim of Karachi to succeed Naimatullah Khan in 2005 elections, and Nasreen Jalil was elected as the City Naib Nazim.

Each Union Council had thirteen members elected from specified electorates: four men and two women elected directly by the general population; two men and two women elected by peasants and workers; one member for minority communities; two members are elected jointly as the Union Mayor (Nazim) and Deputy Union Mayor (Naib Nazim).[262] Each council included up to three council secretaries and a number of other civil servants. The Union Council system was dismantled in 2011.

District Municipal Corporations (2011–present)

In July 2011, city district government of Karachi was reverted its original constituent units known as District Municipal Corporations (DMC). The five original DMCs are: Karachi East, Karachi West, Karachi Central, Karachi South and Malir. In November 2013, a sixth DMC, Korangi District was carved out from District East.[263][264][265][266][267] In August 2020, Sindh cabinet approves formation of the seventh district in Karachi (Keamari District), Keamari District was formed by splitting District West.[268][269][270][271]

The committees for each district devise and enforce land-use and zoning regulations within their district. Each committee also manages water supply, sewage, and roads (except for 28 main arteries, which are managed by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation).[96] Street lighting, traffic planning, markets regulations, and signage are also under the control of the DMCs. Each DMC also maintains its own municipal record archive, and devises its own local budget.[96]

Municipal Administration of Karachi is also run by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (KMC), which is responsible for the development and maintenance of main arteries, bridges, drains, several hospitals, beaches, solid waste management, as well as some parks, and the city's firefighting services.[272] The most recent Karachi mayor was Waseem Akhtar (2016-2020), with Arshad Hassan serving as Deputy Mayor; both served as part of the KMC. The Administrator of Karachi is Dr. Syed Saif-ur-Rehman as of 2022.[273]

The position of Commissioner of Karachi was created, with Iftikhar Ali Shallwani serving this role.[274] There are six military cantonments, which are administered by the Pakistani Army, and are some of Karachi's most upscale neighbourhoods.

City planning

The Karachi Development Authority (KDA), along with the Lyari Development Authority (LDA) and Malir Development Authority (MDA), is responsible for the development of most undeveloped land around Karachi. KDA came into existence in 1957 with the task of managing land around Karachi, while the LDA and MDA were formed in 1993 and 1994, respectively. KDA under the control of Karachi's local government and mayor in 2001, while the LDA and MDA were abolished. KDA was later placed under the direct control of the Government of Sindh in 2011. The LDA and MDA were also revived by the Pakistan Peoples Party government at the time, allegedly to patronize their electoral allies and voting banks.[256] City-planning in Karachi, therefore, is not locally directed but is instead controlled at the provincial level.

Each District Municipal Corporation regulate land-use in developed areas, while the Sindh Building Control Authority ensures that building construction is in accordance with building & town planning regulations. Cantonment areas, and the Defence Housing Authority are administered and planned by the military.

Municipal services

Water

Municipal water supplies are managed by the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board (KW&SB), which supplies 640 million gallons daily (MGD) to the city (excluding the city's steel mills and Port Qasim), of which 440 MGD are filtered/treated.[96] Most of the supply comes from the Indus River, and 90 MGD from the Hub Dam.[96] Karachi's water supply is transported to the city through a complex network of canals, conduits, and siphons, with the aid of pumping and filtration stations.[96] 80% of Karachi households have access to piped water as of 2022,[275] with private water tankers supplying much of the water required in informal settlements.[138] 15% of residents in a 2022 survey rated their water supply as "bad" or "very bad", while 40% expressed concern at the stability of water supply.[275] By 2022, an estimated 35,000 people were dying due to water-borne diseases annually.[276]

The K-IV water project is under development at a cost of $876 million. It would connect Keenjhar Lake to Karachi hence eradicating water scarcity in eastern and northern parts of the city. It is expected to supply 650 million gallons daily of potable water to the city, the first phase 260 million gallons upon completion.[277][278]

Desalination plants are also planned to be built on Arabian Sea coast on western side of Karachi in near future. These would resolve water scarcity issues in western parts of the city including SITE Area, Shershah and Orangi Town.

Sanitation

98% of Karachi's households are connected to the city's underground public sewerage system,[275] largely operated by the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board (KW&SB). The KW&SB operates 150 pumping stations, 25 bulk reservoirs, over 10,000 kilometres of pipes, and 250,000 manholes.[96] The city generates approximately 472 million gallons daily (MGD) of sewage, of which 417 MGD are discharged without treatment.[96] KW&SB has the optimum capacity to treat up to 150 MGD of sewage, but uses only about 50 MGD of this capacity.[96] Three treatment plants are available, in SITE Town (Gutter Baghicha), Mehmoodabad, and Mauripur.[96] 75% reported in 2022 that Karachi's drainage system overflows or backs up,[275] the highest percentage of all major Pakistani cities.[275] Parts of the city's drainage system overflow on average 2–7 times per month, flooding some city streets.[275]

Households in Orangi self-organized to set-up their own sewerage system under the Orangi Pilot Project,[279] a community service organization founded in 1980. 90% of Orangi streets are now connected to a sewer system built by local residents under the Orangi Pilot Project.[279] Residents of individual streets bear the cost of sewerage pipes, and provide volunteer labour to lay the pipe.[279] Residents also maintain the sewer pipes,[279] while the city municipal administration has built several primary and secondary pipes for the network.[279] As a result of OPP, 96% of Orangi residents have access to a latrine.[279]

The Sindh Solid Waste Management Board (SSWMB) is responsible for the collection and disposal of solid waste, not only in Karachi but throughout the whole province. Karachi has the highest percentage of residents in Pakistan who report that their streets are never cleaned – 42% of residents in Karachi report their streets are never cleaned, compared to 10% of residents in Lahore.[275] Only 17% of Karachi residents reporting daily street cleaning, compared to 45% in Lahore.[275] 69% of Karachi residents rely on private garbage collection services,[275] with only 15% relying on municipal garbage collection services.[275] 53% of Karachi residents in a 2022 survey reported that the state of their neighbourhood's cleanliness was either "bad" or "very bad".[275] compared to 35% in Lahore,[275] and 16% in Multan.[275]

Electricity

The one and only electricity providing company in Karachi is K-Electric. It was government owned but was privatised in 2019. Government still has some shares. However HUBCO is an Independent Power Producer (IPP) that owns few major powerplants.

Karachi mostly gets electricity from oil, gas and coal powerplants established either on western coastline or Port Qasim Industrial Zone. Most recently built coal powerplants were the 1320MW Port Qasim Powerplant and the 1320MW Hub Coal Powerplant. 3 Nuclear Powerplants on western coastline namely KANUPP (K-1, K-2, K-3) also feed Karachi. Jhimpir, a nearby town has Wind Powerplants of more than 1000MW. This capacity is going to increase in future expansions. Solar Parks are envisioned to be established on western coastline having a starting generation of 1000MW.

75% of Karachi receives uninterrupted power supply almost throughout the year. 25% areas including industrial areas suffer with up to 6 hours of power outages everyday due to energy generation deficit. Power outages increase further in Peak-summer and Monsoon season (May to August). Many slums and unregulated areas are not yet electrified hence they indulge in electricity theft which is locally called Kunda-System.

Police, Ambulance, Firfighting

Police is under the control of provincial government and city government has no authority over it. Ambulance is run by private hospitals or NGOs most famous of which are Edhi, Chhipa and JDC. Firefighting is under control of Local Government and has enough firfighters and vehicles to work quickly during fire.

Education

Districts literacy rate (10 years and above)

According to 2017 Census of Pakistan, Central is the most literate district among all the districts of Karachi and Sindh. Following is the literacy rate of 10 years and above population of the six districts of Karachi:

Rank District Literate Population % (2017 census)[280]
1 Central 81.52%
2 Korangi 80.49%
3 South 77.79%
4 East 75.96%
5 West (including Kemari) 65.61%
6 Malir 63.69%

Primary and secondary

Karachi's primary education system is divided into five levels: primary (grades one through five); middle (grades six through eight); high (grades nine and ten, leading to the Secondary School Certificate); intermediate (grades eleven and twelve, leading to a Higher Secondary School Certificate); and university programs leading to graduate and advanced degrees. Karachi has both public and private educational institutions. Most educational institutions are gender-based from primary to intermediate. Universities are mostly co-education.

Several of Karachi's schools, such as St Patrick's High School, St Joseph's Convent School and St Paul's English High School, are operated by Christian churches, and are among Pakistan's most prestigious schools.

Higher

 
The D. J. Sindh Government Science College is one of Karachi's oldest universities and dates from 1887.
 
Karachi University is the city's largest by number of students, number of departments & occupied land area.

Karachi is home to several major public universities. Karachi's first public university's date from the British colonial era. The Sindh Madressatul Islam founded in 1885, was granted university status in 2012. Establishment of the Sindh Madressatul Islam was followed by the establishment of the D. J. Sindh Government Science College in 1887, and the institution was granted university status in 2014. The Nadirshaw Edulji Dinshaw University of Engineering and Technology (NED), was founded in 1921, and is Pakistan's oldest institution of higher learning. The Dow University of Health Sciences was established in 1945, and is now one of Pakistan's top medical research institutions.

The University of Karachi, founded in 1951, is Pakistan's largest university with a student population of 24,000. The Institute of Business Administration (IBA), founded in 1955, is the oldest business school outside of North America and Europe, and was set up with technical support from the Wharton School and the University of Southern California. The Dawood University of Engineering and Technology, which opened in 1962, offers degree programmes in petroleum, gas, chemical, and industrial engineering. The Pakistan Navy Engineering College (PNEC), operated by the Pakistan Navy, is associated with the National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST) in Islamabad.

Karachi is also home to numerous private universities. The Aga Khan University, founded in 1983, is Karachi's oldest private educational institution, and is one of Pakistan's most prestigious medical schools. The Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture was founded in 1989, and offers degree programmes in arts and architectural fields. Hamdard University is the largest private university in Pakistan with faculties including Eastern Medicine, Medical, Engineering, Pharmacy, and Law. The National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences (NUCES-FAST), one of Pakistan's top universities in computer education, operates two campuses in Karachi. Bahria University (BU) founded in 2000, is one of the major general institutions of Pakistan with their campuses in Karachi, Islamabad and Lahore offers degree programs in Management Sciences, Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Psychology. Sir Syed University of Engineering and Technology (SSUET) offers degree programmes in biomedical, electronics, telecom and computer engineering. Karachi Institute of Economics & Technology (KIET) has two campuses in Karachi. The Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology (SZABIST), founded in 1995 by former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, operates a campus in Karachi.

Healthcare

 
Aga Khan University's hospital

Karachi is a centre of research in biomedicine with at least 30 public hospitals, 80 registered private hospitals and 12 recognized medical colleges,[281] including the Indus Hospital, Lady Dufferin Hospital, Karachi Institute of Heart Diseases,[282] National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases,[283] Civil Hospital,[284] Combined Military Hospital,[285] PNS Rahat,[286] PNS Shifa,[287] Aga Khan University Hospital, Liaquat National Hospital, Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre,[288] Holy Family Hospital[289] and Ziauddin Hospital. In 1995, Ziauddin Hospital was the site of Pakistan's first bone marrow transplant.[290]

Karachi municipal authorities in 2017 launched a new early warning system that alerted city residents to a forecasted heatwave. Previous heatwaves had routinely claimed lives in the city, but implementation of the warning system was credited for no reported heat-related fatalities.[126] During 2020-2021 COVID-19 pandemic, vaccines were available in all major hospitals.

Entertainment, tourism and culture

Shopping malls

Karachi is home to Pakistan and South Asia's largest shopping mall, Lucky One Mall which hosts more than two hundred stores.[291] According to TripAdvisor the city is also home to Pakistan's favorite shopping mall, Dolmen Mall, Clifton which was also featured on CNN.[292][293] In 2023, another mega mall/entertainment complex named 'Mall of Karachi' situated at the bottom of Pakistan's tallest skyscraper Bahria Icon Tower will be opened.[294][295]

Museums and galleries

Karachi is home to several of Pakistan's most important museums. The National Museum of Pakistan and Mohatta Palace display artwork, while the city also has several private art galleries.[296] There are also the Pakistan Airforce Museum, the Pakistan Maritime Museum and the country's first interactive science centre, the MagnifiScience Centre located in the city.[297] Wazir Mansion, the birthplace of Pakistan's founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah has also been preserved as a museum open to the public. Quaid-e-Azam House, the residence of Muhammad Ali Jinnah is also a museum which showcases his furniture and other belongings. Other museums include TDF Ghar and the State Bank of Pakistan Museum & Art Gallery.

Theatre and cinema

Karachi is home to some of Pakistan's important cultural institutions. The National Academy of Performing Arts,[298] located in the former Hindu Gymkhana, offers diploma courses in performing arts including classical music and contemporary theatre. Karachi is home to groups such as Thespianz Theater, a professional youth-based, non-profit performing arts group, which works on theatre and arts activities in Pakistan.[299][300]

Though Lahore was considered to be home of Pakistan's film industry, Karachi is home to Urdu cinema and Kara Film Festival annually showcases independent Pakistani and international films and documentaries.[301]

Bambino Cinema, Capri Cinema, Cinepax Cinema, Cinegold Plex Cinema (Bahria Town), Mega Multiplex Cinema (Millennium Mall), Nueplex Cinema (Askari-4), Atrium Mall Cinema (Sadar) are some of the most popular cinemas in Karachi.

Music

The All Pakistan Music Conference, linked to the 45-year-old similar institution in Lahore, has been holding its annual music festival since its inception in 2004.[302] The National Arts Council (Koocha-e-Saqafat) has musical performances and mushaira.

Social issues

Crime & Lawlessness

Sometimes stated to be amongst the world's most dangerous cities,[303] the extent of violent crime in Karachi is not as significant in magnitude as compared to other cities.[304] According to the Numbeo Crime Index 2014, Karachi was the 6th most dangerous city in the world. By the middle of 2016, Karachi's rank had dropped to 31 following the launch of anti-crime operations.[305] By 2018, Karachi's ranking has dropped to 50.[306] In 2021, Karachi's ranking fell to 115. In 2022, the ranking fell further to 128th place, ranking Karachi safer than regional cities such as Dhaka (56th place), Delhi (90th place), and Bangalore (122nd place).[307]

The city's large population results in high numbers of homicides with a moderate homicide rate.[304] Karachi's homicide rates are lower than many Latin American cities,[304] and in 2015 was 12.5 per 100,000[308] – lower than the homicide rate of several American cities such as New Orleans and St. Louis.[309] The homicide rates in some Latin American cities such as Caracas, Venezuela and Acapulco, Mexico are in excess of 100 per 100,000 residents,[309] many times greater than Karachi's homicide rate. In 2016, the number of murders in Karachi had dropped to 471, which had dropped further to 381 in 2017.[310]

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Karachi was rocked by political conflict while crime rates drastically increased with the arrival of weaponry from the War in Afghanistan.[51] Several of Karachi's criminal mafias became powerful during a period in the 1990s described as "the rule of the mafias."[311] Major mafias active in the city included land mafia, water tanker mafia, transport mafia and a sand and gravel mafia.[312][311][313][314] Karachi's highest death rates occurred in the mid-1990s. In 1995, 1,742 killings were recorded, with a maximum of 15 killings in a single day.[315][316]

Karachi Operation by Pakistan Rangers

Karachi had become widely known for its high rates of violent crime, but rates sharply decreased following a controversial crackdown operation against criminals, the MQM political party, and Islamist militants initiated in 2013 by the Pakistan Rangers.[52] In 2015, 1,040 Karachiites were killed in either acts of terror or other crime – an almost 50% decrease from the 2,023 killed in 2014,[317] and an almost 70% decrease from the 3,251 recorded killed in 2013 – the highest ever recorded number in Karachi history.[318] Violent crime like target killings, kidnappings for ransom or extortion, burning or torturing to death, drugs and weapons smugling decreased sharply after 2015. Street crime still remains high like snatching of cash, phones, motorcycles and cars on gunpoint.[319]

With 650 homicides in 2015, Karachi's homicide rate decreased by 75% compared to 2013.[320] In 2017, the number of homicides had dropped further to 381.[310] Extortion crimes decreased by 80% between 2013 and 2015, while kidnappings decreased by 90% during the same period.[320] By 2016, the city registered a total of 21 cases of kidnap for ransom.[321] Terrorist incidents dropped by 98% between 2012 and 2017, according to Pakistan's Interior Ministry.[322] As a result of the Karachi's improved security environment, real-estate prices in Karachi rose sharply after 2015,[323] with a rise in business for upmarket restaurants and cafés.[324]

Ethnic & Linguistic conflict

Insufficient affordable housing infrastructure to absorb growth has resulted in the city's diverse migrant populations being largely confined to ethnically homogeneous neighbourhoods.[138] The 1970s saw major labour struggles in Karachi's industrial estates. Violence originated in the city's university campuses, and spread into the city.[325] Conflict was especially sharp between MQM party and ethnic Sindhis, Pashtuns, and Punjabis. The party and its vast network of supporters were targeted by Pakistani security forces as part of the controversial Operation Clean-up in 1992, as part of an effort to restore peace in the city that lasted until 1994. The ethnic conflicts kept going between linguistic groups till late 2010s and are no more extreme.

Poor infrastructure

Urban planning and service delivery have not kept pace with Karachi's growth, resulting in the city's low ranking on livability rankings.[138] The city has no cohesive transportation policy and inadequate transport, though up to 1,000 new vehicles are added daily to the city's congested streets.[138] Roads and streets are broken at many places but are not repaired in timely manner. Many areas are still unpaved. Population has increased but roads have not been widened. Street lights & traffic signals are present but do not work. Signboards are present but are outdated. Gutters have no covers, people fall in them. Trees are present but nobody to water them.

Unable to provide housing to large numbers of refugees shortly after independence, Karachi's authorities first issued "slips" to refugees beginning in 1950 – which allowed refugees to settle on any vacant land.[279] Such informal settlements are known as katchi abadis. Approximately half of Karachi's residents still live in these unplanned communities which have limited paved roads and limited utilities.[138]

Pollution

Air quality index is one of the worst in the world. Due to desert terrain, there is plenty of dust throughout the year except for rainy season. Vehicles and industries also contribute to air pollution, greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. There is alot of noise pollution due to traffic. Land pollution is due to solid trash not disposed to dedicated dumping sites. Trash is seen here and there and sometimes everywhere. Lastly there is water pollution in Lyari and Malir rivers as gutters directly open into these rivers. These rivers than directly go into Arabian sea untreated. So sewerage and industrial wastewater is directly being thrown into Indian Ocean hence polluting it and destroying marine life under the sea. 3 waste water treatment plants exist but are all dysfunctional.

Urban Flooding in Monsoon Season

Size of Drainage system and storm water drains (locally known as Naalahs) in the city is not enough to handle the heavy rainfalls of monsoon. The drainage system and storm water drains are also filled with solid trash. When water finds no path, it enters streets, roads, underpasses and even houses during rainfall in July and August of every year. Major Naalahs like Orangi Naalah, Gujjar Naalah, Mehmoodabad Naalah are cleaned every year by government but are polluted by people the next day.[citation needed]

Flooding hinders connectivity of different areas of the city. Floods cause drown or electric shocks related deaths as well.[citation needed]

Architecture

Karachi has a collection of buildings and structures of varied architectural styles. The downtown districts of Saddar and Clifton contain early 20th-century architecture, ranging in style from the neo-classical KPT building to the Sindh High Court Building. Karachi acquired its first neo-Gothic or Indo-Gothic buildings when Frere Hall, Empress Market and St. Patrick's Cathedral were completed. The Mock Tudor architectural style was introduced in the Karachi Gymkhana and the Boat Club. Neo-Renaissance architecture was popular in the 19th century and was the architectural style for St. Joseph's Convent (1870) and the Sind Club (1883).[326] The classical style made a comeback in the late 19th century, as seen in Lady Dufferin Hospital (1898)[327] and the Cantt. Railway Station. While Italianate buildings remained popular, an eclectic blend termed Indo-Saracenic or Anglo-Mughal began to emerge in some locations.[328] The local mercantile community began acquiring impressive structures. Zaibunnisa Street in the Saddar area (known as Elphinstone Street in British days) is an example where the mercantile groups adopted the Italianate and Indo-Saracenic style to demonstrate their familiarity with Western culture and their own. The Hindu Gymkhana (1925) and Mohatta Palace are examples of Mughal revival buildings.[329] The Sindh Wildlife Conservation Building, located in Saddar, served as a Freemasonic Lodge until it was taken over by the government. There are talks of it being taken away from this custody and being renovated and the Lodge being preserved with its original woodwork and ornate wooden staircase.[330]

Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture is one of the prime examples of Architectural conservation and restoration where an entire Nusserwanjee building from Kharadar area of Karachi has been relocated to Clifton for adaptive reuse in an art school. The procedure involved the careful removal of each piece of timber and stone, stacked temporarily, loaded on the trucks for transportation to the Clifton site, unloaded and re-arranged according to a given layout, stone by stone, piece by piece, and completed within three months.[331]

Architecturally distinctive, even eccentric, buildings have sprung up throughout Karachi. Notable example of contemporary architecture include the Pakistan State Oil Headquarters building. The city has examples of modern Islamic architecture, including the Aga Khan University hospital, Grand Jamia Mosque, Masjid e Tooba, Faran Mosque, Baitul Mukarram Mosque, Quaid's Mausoleum, and the Textile Institute of Pakistan. One of the unique cultural elements of Karachi is that the residences, which are two- or three-story townhouses, are built with the front yard protected by a high brick wall. I. I. Chundrigar Road features a range of tall buildings. The most prominent examples include the Habib Bank Plaza, UBL Tower, PRC Towers, PNSC Building and MCB Tower.[332] Newer skyscrapers are being built in Clifton. At least 50 150m+ buildings were underconstruction in 2022.

Sports

 
 
The National Stadium in Karachi

Cricket

Cricket's history in Pakistan predates the creation of the country in 1947. The first ever international cricket match in Karachi was held on 22 November 1935 between Sindh and Australian cricket teams. The match was seen by 5,000 Karachiites.[333] Karachi is also the place that innovated tape ball, a safer and more affordable alternative to cricket.[334]

The inaugural first-class match at the National Stadium was played between Pakistan and India on 26 February 1955 and since then Pakistani national cricket team has won 20 of the 41 Test matches played at the National Stadium.[335] The first One Day International at the National Stadium was against the West Indies on 21 November 1980, with the match going to the last ball.

The national team has been less successful in such limited-overs matches at the ground, including a five-year stint between 1996 and 2001, when they failed to win any matches. The city has been host to a number of domestic cricket teams including Karachi,[336] Karachi Blues,[337] Karachi Greens,[338] and Karachi Whites.[339] The National Stadium hosted two group matches (Pakistan v. South Africa on 29 February and Pakistan v. England on 3 March), and a quarter-final match (South Africa v. West Indies on 11 March) during the 1996 Cricket World Cup.[340]

Rafi Cricket Stadium under construction in Bahria Town would soon become the largest cricket stadium in Karachi with a capacity of 50,000+ spectators.

Other sports

When it comes to sports Karachi has a distinction, because some sources cite that it was in 1877 at Karachi in (British) India, where the first attempt was made to form a set of rules of badminton[341] and likely place is said to be Frere Hall.

Karachi has hosted seven editions of the National Games of Pakistan, most recently in 2007.[342]

In 2005, the city hosted the SAFF Championship at this ground, as well as the Geo Super Football League 2007, which attracted capacity crowds during the games. The popularity of golf is increasing, with clubs in Karachi like Dreamworld Resort, Bahria Town Golf Club, Hotel & Golf Club, Arabian Sea Country Club, DA Country & Golf Club. The city has facilities for field hockey (Hockey Club of Pakistan, UBL Hockey Ground), boxing (KPT Sports Complex), squash (Jahangir Khan Squash Complex), and polo. There are marinas and boating clubs. National Bank of Pakistan Sports Complex is First-class cricket venue and Multi-purpose sports facility in Karachi.

Professional teams of Karachi

Notable people

Armed Forces

Politicians

Scientists

Artists and literary figures

TV and media personalities

Sportsperson

Others

Twin towns and sister cities

See also

References

  1. ^ Sarina Singh 2008, p. 164.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Paracha, Nadeem F. (26 September 2014). "Visual Karachi: From Paris of Asia, to City of Lights, to Hell on Earth". Dawn. Pakistan. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  3. ^ Ghosh, Palash (22 August 2013). "Karachi, Pakistan: Troubled, Violent Metropolis Was Once Called 'Paris Of The East'". International Business Times. Retrieved 8 January 2017. However, decades ago, Karachi was a very different place – so different, in fact, that in 1942 the city charmed American soldiers enough they dubbed it the "Paris of the East".
  4. ^ Hunt Janin & Scott A. Mandia 2012, p. 98.
  5. ^ Sind Muslim College 1965.
  6. ^ . Karachi Metropolitan Corporation. Archived from the original on 30 May 2014. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
  7. ^ "Commissioner vows support for Christmas Interfaith Peace Rally". The News International (newspaper). 10 December 2021. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  8. ^ . Karachi Metropolitan Corporation. Archived from the original on 9 February 2014. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
  9. ^ "Karachi Metropolitan Corporation". City District Government of Karachi. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 April 2020. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  11. ^ Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 August 2017.
  12. ^ (PDF). pbscensus.gov.pk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 August 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  13. ^ "Karachiites to endure another powertariff hike". The News International (newspaper). 5 January 2022. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  14. ^ . PTCL. Archived from the original on 9 November 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  15. ^ a b "Karachi: The backbone of Pakistan". September 2020.
  16. ^ a b "| Finance Division | Government of Pakistan |".
  17. ^ a b "Ten major cities' population up by 74pc". Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  18. ^ (PDF). Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 November 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  19. ^ Amer, Khawaja (10 June 2013). "Population explosion: Put an embargo on industrialisation in Karachi". The Express Tribune. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  20. ^ "GaWC – The World According to GaWC 2008". Lboro.ac.uk. 3 June 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2009.
  21. ^ . Diserio.com. Archived from the original on 22 February 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2009.
  22. ^ . pigje.com.pk. Archived from the original on 30 September 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  23. ^ a b c d e Inskeep, Steve (2012). Instant City: Life and Death in Karachi. Penguin Publishing Group. p. 284. ISBN 978-0-14-312216-6. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g Paracha, Nadeem F. (26 September 2014). "Visual Karachi: From Paris of Asia, to City of Lights, to Hell on Earth". Dawn. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  25. ^ a b Abbas, Qaswar. "Karachi: World's most dangerous city". India Today. Retrieved 24 October 2016. Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, with a population of approx. 3.0 crore (Mumbai has 2 crore people) is the country's most educated, liberal and secular metropolis.
  26. ^ a b "Pakistani journalists face threats from Islamists". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 24 October 2016. This all happened in the heart of Karachi – a relatively liberal city with a population of more than 15 million.
  27. ^ . www.cia.gov. Archived from the original on 10 July 2021. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  28. ^ Mahim, Maher (3 November 2013). "Karachi's Stone Age proves history didn't start with the Muslims". The Express Tribune. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  29. ^ a b c d e Askari, Sabiah (2015). Studies on Karachi: Papers Presented at the Karachi Conference 2013. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4438-7744-2. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  30. ^ a b Gayer, Laurent (2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for City. HarperCollins Publishers. p. 368. ISBN 9789351160861. from the original on 23 December 2016. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  31. ^ a b "Port Qasim | About Karachi". Port Qasim Authority. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  32. ^ "CENSUS OF INDIA, 1941 VOLUME XII SIND" (PDF). Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  33. ^ "Population According to Religion" (PDF). Census of Pakistan, 1951. p. 8,22.
  34. ^ a b Brunn, Stanley (2008). Cities of the World: World Regional Urban Development. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 647. ISBN 978-0-7425-5597-6. from the original on 23 December 2016. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  35. ^ Kotkin, Joel. "The World's Fastest-Growing Megacities". Forbes.
  36. ^ a b . Daily Times. Archived from the original on 5 August 2011. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  37. ^ a b . Center for International Development and Conflict Management, University of Maryland. 10 January 2007. Archived from the original on 2 June 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  38. ^ Craig, Time. "Pakistan cracks down on Afghan immigrants, fearing an influx as U.S. leaves Afghanistan". The Washington Post. Retrieved 24 October 2016. Qaim Ali Shah, the chief minister of Sindh province in southern Pakistan, said at a news conference in February that there were already more than 1 million illegal Afghan immigrants living in Karachi, a rapidly growing city of 22 million people.
  39. ^ "| Ministry of Finance | Government of Pakistan |". finance.gov.pk.
  40. ^ a b . Lloyd's City Risk Index 2015–2025. Centre for Risk Studies at the University of Cambridge Judge Business School. Archived from the original on 24 November 2016. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  41. ^ "The importance of Karachi – The Express Tribune". The Express Tribune. 12 October 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  42. ^ a b c (PDF) (Report). Asian Development Bank. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 August 2011. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  43. ^ a b . The Trade & Environment Database. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  44. ^ a b . Pakistan and Gulf Economist. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2007.
  45. ^ a b Drivers of Long-Term insecurity and Instability in Pakistan: Urbanization. Rand Corporation. 2014. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-8330-8750-8.
  46. ^ Isani, Aamna Haider (5 May 2013). "Fashion through the ages". Dawn. Pakistan. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  47. ^ "Karachi the next fashion capital?". Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  48. ^ Khalid, Kiran. "Pakistan's fashionistas: We aren't revolutionaries". CNN. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  49. ^ Waraich, Omar (11 November 2009). "Fashion Week Comes to Pakistan Amid Mayhem". Time. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  50. ^ Gayer, Laurent (2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City. Oxford University Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-19-023806-3.
  51. ^ a b c "2011 brings a violent and bloody year of ethnic conflict to Karachi, Pakistan". Public Radio International. 19 January 2012. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  52. ^ a b c ur-Rehman, Zia (7 November 2015). "Crime Down in Karachi, Paramilitary in Pakistan Shifts Focus". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 3 January 2022. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  53. ^ "Karachi's ranking improves on World Crime Index". www.geo.tv. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  54. ^ "Pakistan Emergency Situational Analysis – District Karachi" (PDF). Alhasan Systems. 2015. p. 14.
  55. ^ a b The Dutch East India Company (VOC) and Diewel-Sind (Pakistan) in the 17th and 18th centuries, Floor, W. Institute of Central & West Asian Studies, University of Karachi, 1993–1994, p. 49.
  56. ^ a b "The Dutch East India Company's shipping between the Netherlands and Asia 1595–1795". 2 February 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  57. ^ Whitfield, Susan (2018). Silk, Slaves, and Stupas: Material Culture of the Silk Road. University of California Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-520-95766-4.
  58. ^ Tan, Chung; Geng, Yinzeng (2005). India and China: twenty centuries of civilization interaction and vibrations. Project of History of Indian Science, Philosophy and Culture, Centre for Studies in Civilizations. ISBN 978-81-87586-21-0.
  59. ^ The Month. 1912.
  60. ^ Sun, Zhixin Jason; Hsing, I-tien; Liu, Cary Y.; Lu, Pengliang; Tseng, Lillian Lan-ying; Hong, Yang; Yates, Robin D. S.; Zhang, Zhonglin Yukina (2017). Age of Empires: Art of the Qin and Han Dynasties. Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-58839-617-4.
  61. ^ Hasan, Arif (7 May 2009). . The News International. Karachi. Archived from the original on 2 August 2020. Retrieved 17 April 2020.
  62. ^ Kapoor, Subodh (2002). Encyclopaedia of Ancient Indian Geography. Cosmo Publications. ISBN 978-81-7755-298-0.
  63. ^ Pithawalla, Maneck B. (1950). An Introduction to Karachi: Its Environs and Hinterland. Times Press.
  64. ^ Pithawalla, Maneck B. (1959). A Physical and Economic Geography of Sind: The Lower Indus Basin. Sindhi Adabi Board.
  65. ^ Samad, Rafi U. (2002). The Greeks in ancient Pakistan. Indus Publications. ISBN 978-969-529-001-9.
  66. ^ McCrindle, John Watson (1896). The Invasion of India by Alexander the Great as Described by Arrian, Q. Curtius, Diodoros, Plutarch and Justin: Being Translations of Such Portions of the Works of These and Other Classical Authors as Describe Alexander's Campaigns in Afghanistan, the Punjâb, Sindh, Gedrosia and Karmania. A. Constable and Company.
  67. ^ Pithawalla, Maneck B. (1938). Identification and description of some old sites in Sind and their relation with the physical geography of the region.
  68. ^ Vincent, William (1797). The Voyage of Nearchus from the Indus to the Euphrates, Collected from the Original Journal Preserved by Arrian ...: Containing an Account of the First Navigation Attempted by Europeans in the Indian Ocean. T. Cadell jun. and W. Davies. p. 180.
  69. ^ Houtsma, M. Th (1993). E. J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-09790-2.
  70. ^ Lambrick, H. T. (1975). Sind: A General Introduction. Sindhi Adabi Board. ISBN 9780195772203.
  71. ^ Pithawalla, Maneck B. (1950). An Introduction to Karachi: Its Environs and Hinterland. Times Press.
  72. ^ . www.houstonkarachi.org. Houston Karachi Sister City Association. Archived from the original on 7 November 2011.
  73. ^ Cunningham, Alexander (28 March 2013). The Ancient Geography of India: The Buddhist Period, Including the Campaigns of Alexander, and the Travels of Hwen-Thsang. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-05645-8.
  74. ^ Elliot, Henry Miers (1853). Appendix to the Arabs in Sind, Vol.III, Part 1, of the Historians of India [sic]. S. Solomon & Company. p. 222.
  75. ^ Bloom, Jonathan; Blair, Sheila (2009). Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture: Three-Volume Set. OUP USA. ISBN 978-0-19-530991-1.
  76. ^ Baillie, Alexander Francis (1890). Kurrachee: (Karachi) Past, Present and Future. Thacker, Spink.
  77. ^ Balocu, Nabī Bak̲h̲shu K̲h̲ānu (2002). Sindh, Studies Historical. Pakistan Study Centre, University of Sindh. ISBN 978-969-8135-13-3.
  78. ^ Haider, Azimusshan (1974). History of Karachi: With Special Reference to Educational, Demographical, and Commercial Developments, 1839–1900. Haider.
  79. ^ a b c d Gayer, Laurent (2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-935444-3.
  80. ^ Karachi (Pakistan) (1984). Brief Sketch of Karachi, the Nerve Center of Pakistan. The Corporation.
  81. ^ A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh. G. Bell and Sons. 1874.
  82. ^ "Preserving cultural assets". DAWN.COM. 10 February 2008. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  83. ^ Sampark: Journal of Global Understanding. Sampark Literary Services. 2004.
  84. ^ The Herald. Pakistan Herald Publications. 1993.
  85. ^ Murray (publishers.), John (1859). A handbook for India. Part ii. Bombay.
  86. ^ The Persian Gulf Pilot. J. D. Potter. 1875.
  87. ^ Davies, Charles E. (1997). The Blood-red Arab Flag: An Investigation Into Qasimi Piracy, 1797–1820. University of Exeter Press. ISBN 978-0-85989-509-5.
  88. ^ Huttenback, Robert A. (1962). British Relations with Sind, 1799–1843: An Anatomy of Imperialism. University of California Press. p. 3.
  89. ^ Sunderlal, Pandit (1 August 2018). British Rule in India. SAGE Publishing India. ISBN 978-93-5280-803-8.
  90. ^ Laurent Gayer 2014, pp. 42.
  91. ^ Neill, John Martin Bladen (1846). Recollections of Four Years' Service in the East with H.M. Fortieth Regiment. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  92. ^ Baillie, Alexander Francis (1890). Kurrachee: (Karachi) Past, Present and Future. Thacker, Spink.
  93. ^ "Preserving cultural assets". Dawn. Pakistan. 10 February 2008. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  94. ^ a b c d e Gayer, Laurent (2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-935444-3.
  95. ^ "Celebrating Karachi's Goan connection | The Express Tribune". tribune.com.pk. 16 April 2022. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  96. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Anwar, Farhan, ed. (2018). LOCAL AND CITY GOVERNMENT HANDBOOK – PROVINCE OF SINDH AND KARACHI CITY (PDF). Shehri. ISBN 978-969-9491-14-6.
  97. ^ Blood, Peter R. (1996). Pakistan: A Country Study. DIANE Publishing. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-7881-3631-3.
  98. ^ Bowden, Rob (2005). Settlements of the Indus River. Capstone Classroom. ISBN 978-1-4034-5723-3.
  99. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Heitzman, James (31 March 2008). The City in South Asia. Routledge. p. 129. ISBN 978-1-134-28963-9.
  100. ^ a b Narayanan, Yamini (19 November 2015). Religion and Urbanism: Reconceptualising sustainable cities for South Asia. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-75541-8.
  101. ^ Clarke, S. H. (1858). The Scinde Railway and Indus Flotilla Companies: Their Futility and Hollowness Demonstrated, Also an Exposure of the Delusion which Exists Respecting the Five Per Cent Guarantee, which Insures No Dividend Whatever to the Respective Shareholders. Richardson Brothers.
  102. ^ Askari, Sabiah, ed. (2015). Studies on Karachi: Papers Presented at the Karachi Conference 2013. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 325. ISBN 978-1-4438-8450-1.
  103. ^ [Herbert Feldman [1970]: Karachi Through a Hundred Years: The Centenary History of the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry 1860–1960. 2. ed. Karachi: Oxford University Press (1960).]
  104. ^ Ansari's Trade & Industrial Directory of Pakistan. Ansari Publishing House.
  105. ^ a b c d e f g h i Gayer, Laurent (1 July 2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-023806-3.
  106. ^ a b Markovits, Claude (22 June 2000). The Global World of Indian Merchants, 1750–1947: Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-43127-9.
  107. ^ Zamindar, Vazira Fazila-Yacoobali (14 November 2007). The Long Partition and the Making of Modern South Asia: Refugees, Boundaries, Histories. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-51101-8.
  108. ^ a b Zamindar, Vazira Fazila-Yacoobali (2010). The Long Partition and the Making of Modern South Asia: Refugees, Boundaries, Histories. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13847-5.
  109. ^ Barbara A. Weightman 2011, p. [page needed].
  110. ^ Party, Government and Freedom in the Muslim World: Three Articles Reprinted from the Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2d Ed., V. 3, Parts 49–50. Brill Archive. 1968. p. 37.
  111. ^ Planning Commission, The Second Five Year Plan: 1960–65, Karachi: Govt. Printing Press, 1960, p. 393
  112. ^ Planning Commission, Pakistan Economic Survey, 1964–65, Rawalpindi: Govt. Printing Press, 1965, p. 212.
  113. ^ Gayer, Laurent (2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-935444-3.
  114. ^ Population Growth and Policies in Mega-cities: Karachi. UN. 1988.
  115. ^ Khan, Nichola (15 July 2017). Cityscapes of Violence in Karachi: Publics and Counterpublics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-086978-6.
  116. ^ a b c Udupa, Sahana; McDowell, Stephen D. (14 July 2017). Media as Politics in South Asia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-351-97221-5.
  117. ^ Yusuf, Farhat (July 1990). "Afghan refugees population in Pakistan". Journal of Biosocial Science. Journals.cambridge.org. 22 (3): 269–279. doi:10.1017/S0021932000018654. PMID 2169475. S2CID 33827916. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  118. ^ Khan, Nichola (5 April 2010). Mohajir Militancy in Pakistan: Violence and Transformation in the Karachi Conflict. Routledge. ISBN 9781135161927.
  119. ^ Minahan, James (2002). Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World. Vol. 3. Greenwood. pp. 1277–78. ISBN 978-0-313-32111-5.
  120. ^ "PAKISTANIS ATTACK 30 HINDU TEMPLES". The New York Times. 8 December 1992. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  121. ^ Dawn.com, Imtiaz Ali | (7 February 2020). "Karachi jumps 22 points since last year on global crime index". Dawn. Pakistan. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
  122. ^ "KARACHI: Karachi's earthquake history". 26 October 2005.
  123. ^ . The News International, Pakistan. 21 October 2009. Archived from the original on 7 October 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  124. ^ "The case of Karachi, Pakistan" (PDF). University College London. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  125. ^ Birch, Hayley (22 July 2015). "Where is the world's hottest city?". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  126. ^ a b "With Early Warning, Karachi Cools a Heat Wave Threat". Voice of America. 14 November 2017. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  127. ^ Bhutto, Fatima (27 September 2020). "Pakistan's Most Terrifying Adversary Is Climate Change". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  128. ^ a b . Pakistan Meteorological Department, Government of Pakistan. Archived from the original on 22 April 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  129. ^ Report, Dawn (18 August 2006). . DAWN.COM. Archived from the original on 26 October 2010.
  130. ^ "Karachi Extremes". Pakistan: Pakistan Meteorological Department. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  131. ^ "Flood Forecasting Division Lahore". Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  132. ^ . Weather Atlas. Archived from the original on 28 February 2020. Retrieved 4 April 2020.
  133. ^ "Krachi Extremes". Pakistan Meteorological Department. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  134. ^ "41780: Karachi Airport (Pakistan)". ogimet.com. OGIMET. 29 March 2022. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
  135. ^ Gayer, Laurent (2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City. Oxford University Press. p. 33.
  136. ^ a b Askari, Sabiah, ed. (2015). Studies on Karachi: Papers Presented at the Karachi Conference 2013. Cambridge University Scholars. ISBN 978-1-4438-8450-1.
  137. ^ (PDF). City District Government Karachi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 September 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  138. ^ a b c d e f g "Karachi City Diagnostic: livability, sustainability and growth in the city of Karachi" (PDF). Pakistan Development Update: 45–49. November 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  139. ^ . PricewaterhouseCoopers. Archived from the original on 13 May 2011. Retrieved 12 February 2010.
  140. ^ Kaiser Bengali; Mahpara Sadaqat. . Social Policy and Development Center. Archived from the original on 10 April 2008. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  141. ^ . Dawn Group of Newspapers. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  142. ^ . Dawn. Archived from the original on 14 June 2008. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  143. ^ "Sindh share in GDP falls by 1pc". Dawn Group of Newspapers. 2 December 2004. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  144. ^ "When Karachi Bleeds, Pakistan's Economy Bleeds". Center for International Private Enterprise. 22 August 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  145. ^ "The Secret Strength of Pakistan's Economy". Bloomberg. 12 April 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  146. ^ Hasan, Arif (April 2015). "Land contestation in Karachi and the impact on housing and urban development". Environment and Urbanization. 27 (1): 217–230. doi:10.1177/0956247814567263. PMC 4540218. PMID 26321797.
  147. ^ Bouchet, Max; Liu, Sifan; Parilla, Joseph; Kabbani, Nader (June 2018). "Global Metro Monitor 2018" (PDF). Brookings Institution. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  148. ^ . Euromonitor research. Archived from the original on 25 June 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  149. ^ "Mckinsey Urban Mapping (cities)". Mckinsey (Urban Maping).
  150. ^ Intelligence, fDi. "fDi's Asia-Pacific Cities of the Future 2017/18 – the winners". fdiintelligence.com. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  151. ^ Lieven, Anatol (2011). Pakistan : a hard country (1st ed.). New York: PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-61039-021-7. OCLC 710995260.
  152. ^ "What's Next For Asia's Best-Performing Stock Market?". Bloomberg L.P. 20 October 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  153. ^ a b Amos Owen Thomas 2005, pp. 121.
  154. ^ . KTN. Archived from the original on 17 January 2007. Retrieved 20 February 2008.
  155. ^ . Sindh TV. Archived from the original on 2 January 2008. Retrieved 20 February 2008.
  156. ^ "Daily Express Urdu Newspaper – Latest Pakistan News – Breaking News". express.com.pk. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  157. ^ . Dawn Group of Newspapers. Archived from the original on 11 October 2007. Retrieved 15 October 2007.
  158. ^ . Business Recorder. 5 May 2012. Archived from the original on 21 September 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  159. ^ Hasan, Arif. "The case of Karachi, Pakistan" (PDF). Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  160. ^ Sayeed, Asad; Husain, Khurram; Raza, Syed Salim. "INFORMALITY IN KARACHI'S LAND, MANUFACTURING, AND TRANSPORT SECTORS" (PDF). United States Institute for Peace. Retrieved 2 November 2016. Informal manufacturing is more prevalent than formal manufacturing in terms of the number of people employed, land area covered by informal enterprises, and a number of enterprises. Output data are unavailable, but proxy data suggest that informal manufacturing is far smaller in terms of capital employed and value-added.
  161. ^ . Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce & Industry. Archived from the original on 7 September 2011. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  162. ^ . Epb.gov.pk. Archived from the original on 12 January 2014. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  163. ^ . Site-association.org. Archived from the original on 1 October 2015. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  164. ^ "Welcome". Korangi Association of Trade & Industry. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  165. ^ "Landhi.Org". Landhi Association of Trade and Industry. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  166. ^ "North Karachi Association of Trade & Industry". North Karachi Association of Trade & Industry. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  167. ^ "Federal B Area Association of Trade & Industry". Federal B Area Association of Trade & Industry. 17 December 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  168. ^ "Construction approved: Korangi Creek Industrial Park land up for grabs". The Express Tribune. APP. 20 November 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  169. ^ "BQATI {Bin Qasim Association of Trade & Industry}". Bin Qasim Association of Trade & Industry. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  170. ^ . Pakistaneconomist.com. Archived from the original on 1 October 2017. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  171. ^ . Epza.gov.pk. Archived from the original on 17 February 2014. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  172. ^ . Textile City. Archived from the original on 12 February 2014. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  173. ^ a b "site.com.pk". Sindh Industrial Trading Estates. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  174. ^ Janjua (13 October 2015). . Business Recorder. Archived from the original on 4 November 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  175. ^ "The importance of Karachi". The Express Tribune. 12 October 2015. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  176. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 September 2010. Retrieved 12 April 2009.
  177. ^ note: Revenue collected from Karachi includes revenue from some other areas since the Large Tax Unit (LTU) Karachi and Regional Tax Offices (RTOs) Karachi, Hyderabad, Sukkur & Quetta cover the entire province of Sindh and Balochistan[dead link]
  178. ^ a b c d e f "Karachi's population – fiction and reality". The Express Tribune. 14 September 2017. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  179. ^ "2017 census shows ratio of Urdu-speaking populace decreasing in Karachi". The News International. Retrieved 11 February 2023.
  180. ^ (PDF). Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 August 2021. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  181. ^ Jonah Blank, Christopher Clary & Brian Nichiporuk 2014.
  182. ^ Stephen P. Cohen 2004.
  183. ^ . Findpk.com. Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  184. ^ "Karachi Population 2016". World Population Review. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  185. ^ "Karachiites lash out against census results on social media – Samaa TV". samaa.tv. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  186. ^ "Assembly rejects initial census results". The Nation. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  187. ^ . NewsOne. 29 August 2017. Archived from the original on 22 January 2018. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  188. ^ a b c "STATISTICS: THE KARACHI-LAHORE CENSUS CONUNDRUM". Dawn. 10 September 2017. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  189. ^ Laurent Gayer 2014, pp. 26.
  190. ^ . Population Census Organization, Government of Pakistan. Archived from the original on 22 December 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
    Note: The 1998 census showed a population of about nine million but this did not include workers living in Karachi but registered as living elsewhere in Pakistan by the National Database and Registration Authority as well as large numbers of Afghan refugees, Bangladeshis, Indians, Nepalis and others (incl. Filipinos, Iranians, Iraqis, Burmese).
  191. ^ "The Urban Frontier – Karachi". NPR. 2 June 2008. Retrieved 17 January 2010.
  192. ^ a b "Census commissioner rejects political parties' concerns". Dawn. 10 November 2017. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  193. ^ (PDF). Sindh Bureau of Statistics. Government of Sindh. p. 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  194. ^ (PDF). Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2021. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  195. ^ Blood, Peter R. (1986). Pakistan: A Country Study. DIANE Publishing. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-7881-3631-3.
  196. ^ Hinnells, John (2005). The Zoroastrian Diaspora: Religion and Migration. Oxford University Press. p. 193. ISBN 978-0-19-151350-3.
  197. ^ Gayer, Laurent (2014). Karachi: Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for City. HarperCollins Publishers India. ISBN 9789351160861.
  198. ^ BHAVNANI, NANDITA (2014). "3". THE MAKING OF EXILE: SINDHI HINDUS AND THE PARTITION OF INDIA. Westland. p. 434. ISBN 9789384030339.
  199. ^ Bhavnani, Nandita (2014). The Making of Exile: Sindhi Hindus and the Partition of India. Westland. pp. 39–40. ISBN 9789384030339. In June 1947, it was initially proposed to settle the muhajirs on a large plot of land in Bunder Road Extension, a well-heeled suburb of Karachi. This was, however, a residential area dominated by affluent Sindhi Hindus, who became nervous about such a large number of discontented lower-class Muslim refugees living in such close proximity to them. Given their influence, the Hindus were able to sway the government into transferring the proposed resettlement site to Lyari, a more congested and lower middle-class area.
  200. ^ Tan, Tai Yong; Kudaisya, Gyanesh (2000). The Aftermath of Partition in South Asia. Routledge. pp. 234–235. ISBN 978-0-415-17297-4. In 1947, as the new Federal Government of Pakistan struggled to establish itself in Karachi, a large number of Muslim refugees from northern India came and settled down in the city ... Karachi became the preferred destination of northern Indian Urdu-speaking Muslims who hoped to find white-collar employment opportunities in the cosmopolitan commercial and port city.
  201. ^ a b Khalidi, Omar (Autumn 1998). "From Torrent to Trickle: Indian Muslim Migration to Pakistan, 1947–97". Islamic Studies. 37 (3): 339–352. JSTOR 20837002.
  202. ^ M R Narayan Swamy (5 October 2005). "Where Malayalees once held sway & Updates at". Daily News and Analysis. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  203. ^ . Merinews.com. Archived from the original on 30 November 2012. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  204. ^ Obaid-Chinoy, Sharmeen (17 July 2009). "Karachi's Invisible Enemy". PBS. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  205. ^ . The National. 24 August 2009. Archived from the original on 16 January 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  206. ^ "Columnists | The Pakhtun in Karachi". Time. 28 August 2010. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  207. ^ http://www.thefridaytimes.com/beta2/tft/article.php?issue=20110715&page=5 Archived 9 December 2012 at archive.today, thefridaytimes
  208. ^ "UN body, police baffled by minister's threat against Afghan refugees". 10 February 2009. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
  209. ^ a b Jaffrelot, Christophe (2016). Pakistan at the Crossroads: Domestic Dynamics and External Pressures. Columbia University. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-231-54025-4.
  210. ^ Laurent Gayer 2014, pp. 44.
  211. ^ Lieven, Anatol (2021). "An Afghan Tragedy: The Pashtuns, the Taliban and the State". Survival: Global Politics and Strategy. 63 (3): 7–36. doi:10.1080/00396338.2021.1930403.
  212. ^ Pakistan Christian Post 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine accessed 5 August 2017
  213. ^ . HuffPost. 12 May 2008. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  214. ^ . The News. Archived from the original on 14 August 2015. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  215. ^ Rehman, Zia Ur (23 February 2015). "Identity issue haunts Karachi's Rohingya population". Dawn. Retrieved 26 December 2016. Their large-scale migration had made Karachi one of the largest Rohingya population centres outside Myanmar but afterwards the situation started turning against them.
  216. ^ a b c d "Conflicted Karachi". Dawn. 26 August 2010. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  217. ^ Ramzi, Shanaz (9 July 2001), , Dawn, archived from the original on 15 July 2004, retrieved 26 July 2009
  218. ^ "After Slayings, Americans in Karachi Weigh Choices". Los Angeles Times. 12 June 2009. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  219. ^ . wbj.pl. 13 June 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2014. Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  220. ^ Jaroszyńska-Kirchmann, Anna D (2004). The Exile Mission. ISBN 9780821415269. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  221. ^ a b . The World Factbook. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
  222. ^ a b Curtis, Lisa; Mullick, Haider (4 May 2009). "Reviving Pakistan's Pluralist Traditions to Fight Extremism". The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 31 July 2011
  223. ^ a b a b c "Religions: Islam 95%, other (includes Christian and Hindu, 2% Ahmadiyyah ) 5%". CIA. The World Factbook on Pakistan. 2010. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  224. ^ # ^ International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore: "Have Pakistanis Forgotten Their Sufi Traditions?" by Rohan Bedi April 2006
  225. ^ Peter van der Veer: Handbook of Religion and the Asian City – Aspiration and Urbanization in the Twenty-First Century, California University Press, 2015, ISBN 9780520961081, p. 388
  226. ^ Khan, Nichola (2016). Cityscapes of Violence in Karachi: Publics and Counterpublics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190869786. ... With a population of over 23 million Karachi is also the world's largest Muslim city, the world's seventh-largest conurbation ...
  227. ^ "CENSUS OF INDIA, 1941 VOLUME XII SIND" (PDF). Retrieved 15 September 2021.
  228. ^ "Mapping the Global Muslim Population: A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World's Muslim Population". Pew Research Center. 7 October 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  229. ^ Miller, Tracy, ed. (October 2009). (PDF). Pew Research Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 November 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  230. ^ "Pakistan – International Religious Freedom Report 2008". United States Department of State. 19 September 2008. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  231. ^ "Who are Pakistan's Christians?". BBC. 28 March 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  232. ^ Barbosa, Alexandre Moniz (5 September 2001). "A Dash of Goa in Pakistan". The Times of India. Retrieved 17 November 2016. The city, however, has roughly between 12,000 and 15,000 'Goans', a number that has remained fairly constant for the past 190 years, since the first wave of migrating Goans in dhows washed up on its shores in 1820 and made it their home.
  233. ^ . pakistanhinducouncil.org. Archived from the original on 18 May 2013. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  234. ^ Hinnells, John (28 April 2005). The Zoroastrian Diaspora: Religion and Migration. Oxford University Press. p. 199. ISBN 978-0-19-151350-3.
  235. ^ Hinnells, John (28 April 2005). The Zoroastrian Diaspora: Religion and Migration. Oxford University Press. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-19-151350-3.
  236. ^ "Why is India's wealthy Parsi community vanishing?". BBC. 9 January 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  237. ^ "Two decades from now, Pakistan will have no Parsis".
  238. ^ "In Karachi, 16,562 more vehicles hit the roads each month". Pakistan Today. 24 December 2011
karachi, this, article, about, city, pakistan, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑː, urdu, کراچی, sindhi, ڪراچي, kəˈraːtʃi, listen, largest, city, pakistan, 12th, largest, world, with, population, over, million, situated, southern, country, along, arabian, coast, f. This article is about the city in Pakistan For other uses see Karachi disambiguation Karachi k e ˈ r ɑː tʃ i Urdu کراچی Sindhi ڪراچي IPA keˈraːtʃi listen is the largest city in Pakistan and 12th largest in the world with a population of over 20 million 17 18 19 It is situated at the southern tip of the country along the Arabian Sea coast It is the former capital of Pakistan and capital of the province of Sindh Ranked as a beta global city 20 21 it is Pakistan s premier industrial and financial centre 22 with an estimated GDP of over 200 billion PPP as of 2021 update 15 16 Karachi paid 9 billion 25 of whole country as tax during fiscal year July 2021 to May 2022 according to FBR report Karachi is Pakistan s most cosmopolitan city linguistically ethnically and religiously diverse 23 as well as one of Pakistan s most socially liberal cities 24 25 26 Karachi serves as a transport hub and contains Pakistan s two largest seaports the Port of Karachi and Port Qasim as well as Pakistan s busiest airport Jinnah International Airport 27 Karachi is also a media center home to news channels film and fashion industry of Pakistan Most of Pakistan s multinational companies and banks have their headquarters in Karachi Karachi is also a tourism hub due to its scenic beaches historic buildings and shopping malls Karachi کراچیCityClockwise from top Mazar e Quaid Hawke s Bay Beach Frere Hall Karachi Port Trust Building Mohatta Palace and Port of KarachiNickname s City of the Quaid 1 Paris of the East 2 3 City of Lights 2 Bride of the Cities 4 5 KarachiMap of the city of KarachiShow map of KarachiKarachiLocation within Sindh provinceShow map of SindhKarachiLocation within PakistanShow map of PakistanKarachiLocation within AsiaShow map of AsiaCoordinates 24 51 36 N 67 0 36 E 24 86000 N 67 01000 E 24 86000 67 01000Country PakistanProvince SindhDivisionKarachi DivisionSettled1729Metropolitan council1880 143 years ago 1880 City councilCity Complex Gulshan e Iqbal TownDistricts 6 7 Central KarachiEast KarachiSouth KarachiWest KarachiKorangiMalirKemariGovernment 8 TypeMetropolitan Corporation BodyGovernment of Karachi MayorNone vacant Deputy mayorNone vacant CommissionerIqbal Memon 7 Area 9 Metro3 530 km2 1 360 sq mi Elevation 10 10 m 30 ft Population 2017 census 11 12 City14 916 456 Rank1st Pakistan 12th world Metro16 051 521DemonymKarachiite 13 Time zoneUTC 05 00 PKT Postal codes74XXX 75XXXDialling code021 14 GDP PPP 200 billion 2021 15 16 International airportJinnah International KHI Rapid transit systemKarachi BreezeLargest district by areaMalirLargest area by population 2020 Orangi Town 2 750 000 Largest area by GDP 2020 Saddar Town 40 billion Websitewww wbr kmc wbr gos wbr pkThe region has been inhabited for millennia 28 but the city was formally founded as the fortified village of Kolachi as recently as 1729 29 30 The settlement greatly increased in importance on arrival of the East India Company in the mid 19th century British administrators embarked on substantial projects to transform the city into a major seaport and connect it with the extensive railway network of the Indian subcontinent 30 At the time of the partition of India in 1947 the city was the largest in Sindh with an estimated population of 400 000 people 23 Following the independence of Pakistan the city experienced a dramatic shift in population and demography with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Muhajir Urdu speaking people Muslim refugees from India 31 coupled with a substantial exodus of its Hindu residents whose numbers declined from 51 1 to 1 7 of the total population 32 33 The city experienced rapid economic growth following Pakistan s independence attracting migrants from throughout the country and other regions in South Asia 34 According to the 2017 Census of Pakistan Karachi s total population was 16 051 521 with 14 9 million of those people residing in the urban areas of the city Karachi is one of the world s fastest growing cities 35 and has significant communities representing almost every ethnic group in Pakistan Karachi holds more than two million Bengali immigrants a million Afghan refugees and up to 400 000 Rohingyas from Myanmar 36 37 38 Karachi is now Pakistan s premier industrial and financial centre The city has a formal economy estimated to be worth 190 billion as of 2021 update which is the largest in the country 39 40 Karachi collects 35 of Pakistan s tax revenue 41 and generates approximately 25 of Pakistan s entire GDP 42 43 Approximately 30 of Pakistani industrial output is from Karachi 44 while Karachi s ports handle approximately 95 of Pakistan s foreign trade 45 Approximately 90 of the multinational corporations and 100 of banks operating in Pakistan are headquartered in Karachi 45 Karachi is considered to be Pakistan s fashion capital 46 47 and has hosted the annual Karachi Fashion Week since 2009 48 49 Known as the City of Lights in the 1960s and 1970s for its vibrant nightlife 50 Karachi was beset by sharp ethnic sectarian and political conflict in the 1980s with the large scale arrival of weaponry during the Soviet Afghan War 51 The city had become well known for its high rates of violent crime but recorded crimes sharply decreased following a crackdown operation against criminals the MQM political party and Islamist militants initiated in 2013 by the Pakistan Rangers 52 As a result of the operation Karachi dropped from being ranked the world s 6th most dangerous city for crime in 2014 to 128th by 2022 53 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Kolachi settlement 2 3 British control 2 4 Post independence 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Cityscape 4 Economy 4 1 Finance and banking 4 2 Media and technology 4 3 Industry 4 4 Revenue collection 5 Demographics 5 1 Language 5 2 Population 5 3 District population density per km2 5 4 Ethnicity 5 5 Religion 5 5 1 Islam 5 5 2 Christianity 5 5 3 Hinduism 5 5 4 Zoroastrianism 6 Transportation 6 1 Road 6 2 Rail 6 3 Public transport 6 3 1 Metrobus 6 3 2 People s Bus Service 6 3 3 Karachi Circular Railway 6 3 4 Tramway service 6 4 Air 6 5 Sea 7 Civic administration 7 1 City government 7 1 1 Historical background 7 1 2 Union councils 2001 11 7 1 3 District Municipal Corporations 2011 present 7 2 City planning 8 Municipal services 8 1 Water 8 2 Sanitation 8 3 Electricity 8 4 Police Ambulance Firfighting 9 Education 9 1 Districts literacy rate 10 years and above 9 2 Primary and secondary 9 3 Higher 10 Healthcare 11 Entertainment tourism and culture 11 1 Shopping malls 11 2 Museums and galleries 11 3 Theatre and cinema 11 4 Music 12 Social issues 12 1 Crime amp Lawlessness 12 1 1 Karachi Operation by Pakistan Rangers 12 2 Ethnic amp Linguistic conflict 12 3 Poor infrastructure 12 4 Pollution 12 5 Urban Flooding in Monsoon Season 13 Architecture 14 Sports 14 1 Cricket 14 2 Other sports 15 Notable people 15 1 Armed Forces 15 2 Politicians 15 3 Scientists 15 4 Artists and literary figures 15 5 TV and media personalities 15 6 Sportsperson 15 7 Others 16 Twin towns and sister cities 17 See also 18 References 18 1 Bibliography 19 External linksEtymologyBefore independence the city was widely known as Karanchi in Urdu though the English spelling Karachi became more popular over time 54 Modern Karachi was reputedly founded in 1729 as the settlement of Kolachi jo Goth during the rule of Kalhora dynasty 29 The new settlement is said to have been named in honour of Mai Kolachi whose son is said to have slain a man eating crocodile in the village after his elder brothers had already been killed by it 29 The name Karachee a shortened and corrupted version of the original name Kolachi jo Goth was used for the first time in a Dutch report from 1742 about a shipwreck near the settlement 55 56 HistoryMain articles History of Karachi and Timeline of Karachi history Early history The 15th 18th century Chaukhandi tombs are a Tentative UNESCO World Heritage Site The region around Karachi has been the site of human habitation for millennia Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic sites have been excavated in the Mulri Hills along Karachi s northern outskirts These earliest inhabitants are believed to have been hunter gatherers with ancient flint tools discovered at several sites The expansive Karachi region is believed to have been known to the ancient Greeks and may have been the site of Barbarikon an ancient seaport which was located at the nearby mouth of the Indus River 57 58 59 60 Karachi may also have been referred to as Ramya in ancient Greek texts 61 The ancient site of Krokola a natural harbor west of the Indus where Alexander the Great sailed his fleet for Achaemenid Assyria may have been located near the mouth of Karachi s Malir River 62 63 64 though some believe it was located near Gizri 65 66 No other natural harbor exists near the mouth of the Indus that could accommodate a large fleet 67 Nearchus who commanded Alexander s naval fleet also mentioned a hilly island by the name of Morontobara and an adjacent flat island named Bibakta which colonial historians identified as Karachi s Manora Point and Kiamari or Clifton respectively based on Greek descriptions 68 69 70 Both areas were island until well into the colonial era when silting in led to them being connected to the mainland 71 In 711 CE Muhammad bin Qasim conquered the Sindh and Indus Valley and the port of Debal from where he launched his forces further into the Indus Valley in 712 72 Some have identified the port with Karachi though some argue the location was somewhere between Karachi and the nearby city of Thatta 73 74 Under Mirza Ghazi Beg the Mughal administrator of Sindh the development of coastal Sindh and the Indus River Delta was encouraged Under his rule fortifications in the region acted as a bulwark against Portuguese incursions into Sindh In 1553 54 Ottoman admiral Seydi Ali Reis mentioned a small port along the Sindh coast by the name of Kaurashi which may have been Karachi 75 76 77 The Chaukhandi tombs in Karachi s modern suburbs were built around this time between the 15th and 18th centuries Kolachi settlement The Manora Fort built in 1797 to defend Karachi was captured by the British on 3 February 1839 and upgraded 1888 1889 19th century Karachi historian Seth Naomal Hotchand recorded that a small settlement of 20 25 huts existed along the Karachi Harbour that was known as Dibro which was situated along a pool of water known as Kolachi jo Kun 78 In 1725 a band of Baloch settlers from Makran and Kalat had settled in the hamlet after fleeing droughts and tribal feuds 79 A new settlement was built in 1729 at the site of Dibro which came to be known as Kolachi jo Goth The village of Kolachi 29 The new settlement is said to have been named in honour of Mai Kolachi a resident of the old settlement whose son is said to have slain a man eating crocodile 29 Kolachi was about 40 hectares in size with some smaller fishing villages scattered in its vicinity 80 The founders of the new fortified settlement were Sindhi Baniyas 79 and are said to have arrived from the nearby town of Kharak Bandar after the harbour there silted in 1728 after heavy rains 81 Kolachi was fortified and defended with cannons imported from Muscat Oman Under the Talpurs the Rah i Bandar road was built to connect the city s port to the caravan terminals 82 This road would eventually be further developed by the British into Bandar Road which was renamed Muhammad Ali Jinnah Road 83 84 The name Karachee was used for the first time in a Dutch document from 1742 in which a merchant ship de Ridderkerk is shipwrecked near the settlement 55 56 In 1770s Karachi came under the control of the Khan of Kalat which attracted a second wave of Balochi settlers 79 In 1795 Karachi was annexed by the Talpurs triggering a third wave of Balochi settlers who arrived from central Sindh and southern Punjab 79 The Talpurs built the Manora Fort in 1797 85 86 which was used to protect Karachi s Harbor from al Qasimi pirates 87 In 1799 or 1800 the founder of the Talpur dynasty Mir Fateh Ali Khan allowed the East India Company under Nathan Crow to establish a trading post in Karachi 88 He was allowed to build a house for himself in Karachi at that time but by 1802 was ordered to leave the city 89 The city continued to be ruled by the Talpurs until it was occupied by forces under the command of John Keane in February 1839 90 British control An 1897 image of Karachi s Rampart Row street in Mithadar Some of Karachi s most recognized structures such as Frere Hall date from the British Raj Karachi features several examples of colonial era Indo Saracenic architecture such as the KMC Building The British East India Company captured Karachi on 3 February 1839 after HMS Wellesley opened fire and quickly destroyed Manora Fort which guarded Karachi Harbour at Manora Point 91 Karachi s population at the time was an estimated 8 000 to 14 000 92 and was confined to the walled city in Mithadar with suburbs in what is now the Serai Quarter 93 British troops known as the Company Bahadur established a camp to the east of the captured city which became the precursor to the modern Karachi Cantonment The British further developed the Karachi Cantonment as a military garrison to aid the British war effort in the First Anglo Afghan War 94 Portuguese Goan community started migrating to Karachi in the 1820s as traders The majority of the estimated 100 000 who came to Pakistan are primarily concentrated in Karachi 95 Sindh s capital was shifted from Hyderabad to Karachi in 1840 when Karachi was annexed to the British Empire after Major General Charles James Napier captured the rest of Sindh following his victory against the Talpurs at the Battle of Miani Following the 1843 annexation on 17 February the entire province was amalgamated into the Bombay Presidency for the next 93 years and Karachi remain the divisional headquarter A few years later in 1846 Karachi suffered a large cholera outbreak which led to the establishment of the Karachi Cholera Board predecessor to the city s civic government 96 The city grew under the administration of its new Commissioner Henry Bartle Edward Frere who was appointed in the 1850s Karachi was recognized for its strategic importance prompting the British to establish the Port of Karachi in 1854 Karachi rapidly became a transportation hub for British India owing to newly built port and rail infrastructure as well as the increase in agricultural exports from the opening of productive tracts of newly irrigated land in Punjab and Sindh 97 By 1856 the value of goods traded through Karachi reached 855 103 leading to the establishment of merchant offices and warehouses 98 The population in 1856 is estimated to have been 57 000 99 During the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857 the 21st Native Infantry then stationed in Karachi mutinied and declared allegiance to rebel forces in September 1857 though the British were able to quickly defeat the rebels and reassert control over the city Following the Rebellion British colonial administrators continued to develop the city s infrastructure but continued to neglect localities like Lyari which was home to the city s original population of Sindhi fishermen and Balochi nomads 100 At the outbreak of the American Civil War Karachi s port became an important cotton exporting port 99 with Indus Steam Flotilla and Orient Inland Steam Navigation Company established to transport cotton from rest of Sindh to Karachi s port and onwards to textile mills in England 101 With increased economic opportunities economic migrants from several ethnicities and religions including Anglo British Parsis Marathis and Goan Christians among others established themselves in Karachi 99 with many setting up businesses in the new commercial district of Saddar Muhammad Ali Jinnah the founder of Pakistan was born in Karachi s Wazir Mansion in 1876 to such migrants from Gujarat Public building works were undertaken at this time in Gothic and Indo Saracenic styles including the construction of Frere Hall in 1865 and the later Empress Market in 1889 With the completion of the Suez Canal in 1869 Karachi s position as a major port increased even further 99 In 1878 the British Raj connected Karachi with the network of British India s vast railway system In 1887 Karachi Port underwent radical improvements with connection to the railways along with expansion and dredging of the port and construction of a breakwater 99 Karachi s first synagogue was established in 1893 102 By 1899 Karachi had become the largest wheat exporting port in the East 103 In 1901 Karachi s population was 117 000 with a further 109 000 included in the Municipal area 99 Under the British the city s municipal government was established Known as the Father of Modern Karachi mayor Seth Harchandrai Vishandas led the municipal government to improve sanitary conditions in the Old City as well as major infrastructure works in the New Town after his election in 1911 2 in 1914 Karachi had become the largest wheat exporting port of the entire British Empire 104 after large irrigation works in Sindh were initiated to increase wheat and cotton yields 99 By 1924 the Drigh Road Aerodrome was established 99 now the Faisal Air Force Base Karachi s increasing importance as a cosmopolitan transportation hub leads to the influence of non Sindhis in Sindh s administration Half the city was born outside of Karachi by as early as 1921 105 Native Sindhis were upset by this influence 99 and so on 1 April 1936 Sindh was established as a province separate from the Bombay Presidency with Karachi was once again made capital of Sindh In 1941 the population of the city had risen to 387 000 99 Post independence Lord Mountbatten and his wife Edwina in Karachi 14 August 1947 At the dawn of independence following the success of the Pakistan Movement in 1947 On 15 August 1947 Capital of Sindh shifted from Karachi to Hyderabad and Karachi was made the national capital of Pakistan Karachi was Sindh s largest city with a population of over 400 000 23 The city had a slight Hindu majority with around 51 of the population being Hindu Partition resulted in the exodus of much of the city s Hindu population though Karachi like most of Sindh remained relatively peaceful compared to cities in Punjab 106 Riots erupted on 6 January 1948 after which most of Sindh s Hindu population fled to India 106 with assistance of the Indian government 107 Karachi became the focus for the resettlement of middle class Muslim Muhajir refugees who fled India with 470 000 refugees in Karachi by May 1948 108 leading to a drastic alteration of the city s demography In 1941 Muslims were 42 of Karachi s population but by 1951 made up 96 of the city s population 105 The city s population had tripled between 1941 and 1951 105 Urdu replaced Sindhi as Karachi s most widely spoken language Sindhi was the mother tongue of 51 of Karachi in 1941 but only 8 5 in 1951 while Urdu grew to become the mother tongue of 51 of Karachi s population 105 100 000 Muhajir refugees arrived annually in Karachi until 1952 Muhajirs kept arriving from different parts of India till 2000 105 Karachi was selected as the first capital of Pakistan and was administered as a federal district separate from Sindh beginning in 1948 108 the capital of Sindh shifted again Hyderabad to Karachi until the national capital was shifted to Rawalpindi in 1958 109 While foreign embassies shifted away from Karachi the city is host to numerous consulates and honorary consulates 110 Between 1958 and 1970 Karachi s role as capital of Sindh was ceased due to the One Unit programme enacted by President Iskander Mirza 2 Karachi of the 1960s was regarded as an economic role model around the world with Seoul South Korea borrowing from the city s second Five Year Plan 111 112 Several examples of Modernist architect were built in Karachi during this period including the Mazar e Quaid mausoleum the distinct Masjid e Tooba and the Habib Bank Plaza the tallest building in all of South Asia at the time The city s population by 1961 had grown 369 compared to 1941 105 By the mid 1960s Karachi began to attract large numbers of Pashtun Punjabis and Kashmiris from northern Pakistan 105 The 1970s saw a construction boom funded by remittances and investments from the Gulf States and the appearance of apartment buildings in the city 113 Real estate prices soared during this period leading to a worsening housing crisis 114 The period also saw labour unrest in Karachi s industrial estates beginning in 1970 that were violently repressed by the government of President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto from 1972 onwards 115 To appease conservative forces Bhutto banned alcohol in Pakistan and cracked down of Karachi s discotheques and cabarets leading to the closure of Karachi s once lively nightlife 116 The city s art scene was further repressed during the rule of dictator General Zia ul Haq 116 Zia s Islamization policies lead the Westernized upper middle classes of Karachi to largely withdraw from the public sphere and instead form their own social venues that became inaccessible to the poor 116 This decade also saw an influx of more than one million Behari immigrants into Karachi from the newly made country Bangladesh which separated from Pakistan in 1971 In 1972 the Karachi district divided into three districts East West and South districts The 1980s and 1990s saw an influx of almost one million Afghan refugees into Karachi fleeing the Soviet Afghan War 105 This was followed by refugees escaping from post revolution Iran 117 At this time Karachi was also rocked by political conflict while crime rates drastically increased with the arrival of weaponry from the War in Afghanistan 51 Conflict between the MQM party and ethnic Sindhis Pashtuns Punjabis and Balochis was sharp 118 The party and its vast network of supporters were targeted by Pakistani security forces as part of the controversial Operation Clean up in 1992 an effort to restore peace in the city that lasted until 1994 119 Anti Hindu riots also broke out in Karachi in 1992 in retaliation for the demolition of the Babri Mosque in India by a group of Hindu nationalists earlier that year 120 In 1996 two 02 more districts created in the Karachi division named Central and Malir districts The 2010s saw another influx of hundreds of thousands of Pashtun refugees fleeing conflict in North West Pakistan and the 2010 Pakistan floods 105 By this point Karachi had become widely known for its high rates of violent crime usually in relation to criminal activity gang warfare sectarian violence and extrajudicial killings 100 Recorded crimes sharply decreased following a controversial crackdown operation against criminals the MQM party and Islamist militants initiated in 2013 by the Pakistan Rangers 52 As a result of the operation Karachi went from being ranked the world s 6th most dangerous city for crime in 2014 to 128th by 2022 121 In 2022 at least one million flood affectees from Sindh and Balochistan took refuge in Karachi GeographyMain articles Geography of Karachi and Environment of Karachi Karachi is located on the coastline of Sindh province in southern Pakistan along the Karachi Harbour a natural harbour on the Arabian Sea Karachi is built on a coastal plain with scattered rocky outcroppings hills and marshlands Mangrove forests grow in the brackish waters around the Karachi Harbour and farther southeast towards the expansive Indus River Delta West of Karachi city is the Cape Monze locally known as Ras Muari which is an area characterised by sea cliffs rocky sandstone promontories and beaches Karachi lies very close to a major fault line where the Indian tectonic plate meets the Arabian tectonic plate 122 Within the city of Karachi are two small ranges the Khasa Hills and Mulri Hills which lie in the northwest and act as a barrier between North Nazimabad and Orangi 123 Karachi s hills are barren and are part of the larger Kirthar Range and have a maximum elevation of 528 metres 1 732 feet citation needed Between the hills are wide coastal plains interspersed with dry river beds and water channels Karachi has developed around the Malir River and Lyari Rivers with the Lyari shore being the site of the settlement for Kolachi To the east of Karachi lies the Indus River flood plains 124 Climate Main article Climate of Karachi The Arabian Sea influences Karachi s climate providing the city with more moderate temperatures compared to other areas of Sindh province Karachi has a hot desert climate Koppen BWh dominated by a long Summer Season while moderated by oceanic influence from the Arabian Sea The city has low annual average precipitation levels approx 174 mm 7 in per annum the bulk of which occurs during the July August monsoon season Summers are hot and humid and Karachi is prone to deadly heatwaves 125 On the other hand cool sea breezes typically provide relief during hot summer months A text message based early warning system alerts people to take precautionary measures and helps prevent fatalities during an unusually strong heatwave or thunderstorm 126 The winter climate is dry and lasts between December and February It is dry and pleasant in winter relative to the warm hot season that follows which starts in March and lasts until October Proximity to the sea maintains humidity levels at near constant levels year round Thus the climate is similar to a humid tropical climate except for low precipitation and occasional temperatures well over 100 F 38 C due to dry continental influence The city s highest monthly rainfall 19 in 480 mm occurred in July 1967 127 128 The city s highest rainfall in 24 hours occurred on 7 August 1953 when about 278 1 millimetres 10 95 in of rain lashed the city resulting in major flooding 129 Karachi s highest recorded temperature is 47 8 C 118 0 F which was recorded on 9 May 1938 130 and the lowest is 0 C 32 F recorded on 21 January 1934 128 Climate data for KarachiMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 32 8 91 0 36 5 97 7 42 5 108 5 44 4 111 9 47 8 118 0 47 0 116 6 42 2 108 0 41 7 107 1 42 8 109 0 43 3 109 9 38 5 101 3 35 5 95 9 47 8 118 0 Average high C F 25 9 78 6 27 9 82 2 31 7 89 1 34 5 94 1 35 3 95 5 35 2 95 4 33 1 91 6 31 9 89 4 32 8 91 0 35 1 95 2 32 2 90 0 27 9 82 2 32 0 89 5 Daily mean C F 20 4 68 7 21 2 70 2 25 4 77 7 28 8 83 8 31 0 87 8 31 8 89 2 30 4 86 7 29 2 84 6 28 7 83 7 27 8 82 0 24 6 76 3 20 4 68 7 26 6 80 0 Average low C F 10 8 51 4 13 0 55 4 17 7 63 9 22 5 72 5 26 2 79 2 28 1 82 6 27 5 81 5 26 2 79 2 25 4 77 7 21 4 70 5 16 3 61 3 12 2 54 0 20 6 69 1 Record low C F 0 0 32 0 3 3 37 9 7 0 44 6 12 2 54 0 17 7 63 9 22 1 71 8 22 2 72 0 20 0 68 0 18 0 64 4 10 0 50 0 6 1 43 0 1 3 34 3 0 0 32 0 Average precipitation mm inches 8 4 0 33 7 4 0 29 5 3 0 21 3 0 0 12 0 1 0 00 10 8 0 43 60 0 2 36 60 9 2 40 11 0 0 43 2 6 0 10 0 4 0 02 4 8 0 19 174 7 6 88 Average precipitation days 0 7 0 8 0 7 0 2 0 1 0 9 8 0 3 3 0 7 0 3 0 1 0 7 16 5Mean monthly sunshine hours 269 7 251 4 272 8 276 297 6 231 155 148 8 219 282 1 273 272 8 2 949 2Mean daily sunshine hours 8 7 8 9 8 8 9 2 9 6 7 7 5 4 8 7 3 9 1 9 1 8 8 8 1Percent possible sunshine 81 79 73 72 72 56 37 37 59 78 83 83 68Average ultraviolet index 6 8 10 12 12 12 12 12 11 9 6 5 10Source PMD 1991 2020 131 Weather Atlas 132 and Karachi Extremes 1931 2018 133 134 Cityscape The city first developed around the Karachi Harbour and owes much of its growth to its role as a seaport at the end of the 18th century 135 contrasted with Pakistan s millennia old cities such as Lahore Multan and Peshawar Karachi s Mithadar neighbourhood represents the extent of Kolachi prior to British rule British Karachi was divided between the New Town and the Old Town with British investments focused primarily on the New Town 94 The Old Town was a largely unplanned neighbourhood which housed most of the city s indigenous residents and had no access to sewerage systems electricity and water 94 The New Town was subdivided into residential commercial and military areas 94 Given the strategic value of the city the British developed the Karachi Cantonment as a military garrison in the New Town to aid the British war effort in the First Anglo Afghan War 94 The city s development was largely confined to the area north of the China Creek prior to independence although the seaside area of Clifton was also developed as a posh locale under the British and its large bungalows and estates remain some of the city s most desirable properties The aforementioned historic areas form the oldest portions of Karachi and contain its most important monuments and government buildings with the I I Chundrigar Road being home to most of Pakistan s banks including the Habib Bank Plaza which was Pakistan s tallest building from 1963 until the early 2000s 2 Situated on a coastal plain northwest of Karachi s historic core lies the sprawling district of Orangi North of the historic core is the largely middle class district of Nazimabad and upper middle class North Nazimabad which were developed in the 1950s To the east of the historic core is the area known as Defence an expansive upscale suburb developed and administered by the Pakistan Army Karachi s coastal plains along the Arabian Sea south of Clifton were also developed much later as part of the greater Defence Housing Authority project Karachi s city limits also include several islands including Baba and Bhit Islands Oyster Rocks and Manora a former island which is now connected to the mainland by a thin 12 kilometre long shoal known as Sandspit Gulistan e Johar Gulshan e Iqbal Federal B Area Malir Landhi and Korangi areas were all developed after 1970 The city has been described as one divided into sections for those able to afford to live in planned localities with access to urban amenities and those who live in unplanned communities with inadequate access to such services 136 35 of Karachi s residents live in unplanned communities 136 EconomyMain article Economy of Karachi Karachi is Pakistan s financial and commercial capital 137 Since Pakistan s independence Karachi has been the centre of the nation s economy and remain s Pakistan s largest urban economy despite the economic stagnation caused by sociopolitical unrest during the late 1980s and 1990s The city forms the centre of an economic corridor stretching from Karachi to nearby Hyderabad and Thatta 138 As of 2021 update Karachi had an estimated GDP PPP of 190 billion with a yearly growth rate of 5 5 139 40 Karachi contributes 90 of Sindh s GDP 140 141 142 143 and accounts for approximately 25 of the total GDP of Pakistan 42 43 The city has a large informal economy which is not typically reflected in GDP estimates 144 The informal economy may constitute up to 36 of Pakistan s total economy versus 22 of India s economy and 13 of the Chinese economy 145 The informal sector employs up to 70 of the city s workforce 146 In 2018 The Global Metro Monitor Report ranked Karachi s economy as the best performing metropolitan economy in Pakistan 147 Today along with Pakistan s continued economic expansion Karachi is now ranked third in the world for consumer expenditure growth with its market anticipated to increase by 6 6 in real terms in 2018 148 It is also ranked among the top cities in the world by an anticipated increase of a number of households 1 3 million households with annual income above 20 000 dollars measured at PPP exchange rates by 2025 149 The Global FDI Intelligence Report 2017 2018 published by Financial Times ranks Karachi amongst the top 10 Asia pacific cities of the future for FDI strategy 150 According to Anatol Lieven the economic growth of Karachi is a result of the influx of Muhajirs to Karachi during late 1940s and early 50s 151 Finance and banking Most of Pakistan s public and private banks are headquartered on Karachi s I I Chundrigar Road which is known as Pakistan s Wall Street 2 with a large percentage of the cash flow in the Pakistani economy taking place on I I Chundrigar Road Most major foreign multinational corporations operating in Pakistan have their headquarters in Karachi Karachi is also home to the Pakistan Stock Exchange which was rated as Asia s best performing stock market in 2015 on the heels of Pakistan s upgrade to emerging market status by MSCI 152 Media and technology Main articles Media in Karachi Cinema in Karachi List of television stations in Karachi List of magazines in Karachi and List of newspapers in Karachi Karachi has been the pioneer in cable networking in Pakistan with the most sophisticated of the cable networks of any city of Pakistan 153 and has seen an expansion of information and communications technology and electronic media The city has become a software outsourcing hub for Pakistan citation needed Several independent television and radio stations are based in Karachi including Business Plus AAJ News Geo TV KTN 154 Sindh TV 155 CNBC Pakistan TV ONE Express TV 156 ARY Digital Indus Television Network Samaa TV Abb Takk News Bol TV and Dawn News as well as several local stations Industry Industry contributes a large portion of Karachi s economy with the city home to several of Pakistan s largest companies dealing in textiles cement steel heavy machinery chemicals and food products 157 The city is home to approximately 30 percent of Pakistan s manufacturing sector 44 and produces approximately 42 percent of Pakistan s value added in large scale manufacturing 158 At least 4500 industrial units form Karachi s formal industrial economy 159 Karachi s informal manufacturing sector employs far more people than the formal sector though proxy data suggest that the capital employed and value added from such informal enterprises is far smaller than that of formal sector enterprises 160 An estimated 63 of the Karachi s workforce is employed in trade and manufacturing 138 Karachi Export Processing Zone SITE Korangi Northern Bypass Industrial Zone Bin Qasim and North Karachi serve as large industrial estates in Karachi 161 The Karachi Expo Centre also complements Karachi s industrial economy by hosting regional and international exhibitions 162 Name of estate Location Established Area in acresSITE Karachi SITE Town 1947 4700 163 Korangi Industrial Area Korangi Town 1960 8500 164 Landhi Industrial Area Landhi Town 1949 11000 165 North Karachi Industrial Area New Karachi Town 1974 725 166 Federal B Industrial Area Gulberg Town 1987 167 Korangi Creek Industrial Park Korangi Creek Cantonment 2012 250 168 Bin Qasim Industrial Zone Bin Qasim Town 1970 25000 169 Karachi Export Processing Zone Landhi Town 1980 170 315 171 Pakistan Textile City Bin Qasim Town 2004 1250 172 West Wharf Industrial Area Keamari Town 430SITE Super Highway Phase I Super Highway 1983 300 173 SITE Super Highway Phase II Super Highway 1992 1000 173 Revenue collection The former State Bank of Pakistan building was built during the colonial era As home to Pakistan s largest ports and a large portion of its manufacturing base Karachi contributes a large share of Pakistan s collected tax revenue As most of Pakistan s large multinational corporations are based in Karachi income taxes are paid in the city even though income may be generated from other parts of the country 174 As home to the country s two largest ports Pakistani customs officials collect the bulk of federal duty and tariffs at Karachi s ports even if those imports are destined for one of Pakistan s other provinces 175 Approximately 25 of Pakistan s national revenue is generated in Karachi 42 According to the Federal Board of Revenue s 2006 2007 year book tax and customs units in Karachi were responsible for 46 75 of direct taxes 33 65 of federal excise tax and 23 38 of domestic sales tax 176 Karachi accounts for 75 14 of customs duty and 79 of sales tax on imports 176 and collects 53 38 of the total collections of the Federal Board of Revenue of which 53 33 are customs duty and sales tax on imports 176 177 DemographicsMain articles Demographics of Karachi Ethnic groups in Karachi and Religion in Karachi Bahadurabad Area has a high population density Karachi is the most linguistically ethnically and religiously diverse city in Pakistan 23 The city is a melting pot of ethnolinguistic groups from throughout Pakistan as well as migrants from other parts of Asia The 2017 census numerated Karachi s population to be 14 910 352 having grown 2 49 per year since the 1998 census which had listed Karachi s population at approximately 9 3 million 178 The city s inhabitants are referred to by the demonym Karachiite in English and Karachiwala in Urdu Language Urdu 42 30 Pashto 15 01 Punjabi 10 73 Sindhi 10 67 Saraiki 4 98 Hindko 4 24 Balochi 4 04 Others 8 01 Karachi has the largest number of Urdu speakers in Pakistan 153 179 As per the 2017 census the linguistic breakdown of Karachi Division is Language Rank 2017 census 180 Speakers 1998 census 181 Speakers 1981 census 182 SpeakersUrdu 1 42 30 6 779 142 48 52 4 497 747 54 34 2 830 098Pashto 2 15 01 2 406 011 11 42 1 058 650 8 71 453 628Punjabi 3 10 73 1 719 636 13 94 1 292 335 13 64 710 389Sindhi 4 10 67 1 709 877 7 22 669 340 6 29 327 591Saraiki 5 4 98 798 031 2 11 195 681 0 35 18 228Balochi 6 4 04 648 964 4 34 402 386 4 39 228 636Others 7 12 25 1 963 233 12 44 1 153 126 12 27 639 560All 100 16 024 894 100 9 269 265 100 5 208 132The category of others includes Hindko Kashmiri Kohistani Burushaski Gujarati Memoni Marwari Dari Brahui Makrani Hazara Khowar Gilgiti Balti Arabic Farsi Bengali and Tamil 183 Population At the end of the 19th century Karachi had an estimated population of 105 000 184 By the dawn of Pakistan s independence in 1947 the city had an estimated population of 400 000 23 The city s population grew dramatically with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Muslim refugees from the newly independent Republic of India 31 Rapid economic growth following independence attracted further migrants from throughout Pakistan and South Asia 34 The 2017 census numerated Karachi s population to be 14 910 352 having grown 2 49 per year since the 1998 census which had listed Karachi s population at approximately 9 3 million 178 Lower than expected population figures from the census suggest that Karachi s poor infrastructure law and order situation and weakened economy relative to other parts of Pakistan made the city less attractive to in migration than previously thought 178 The figure is disputed by all the major political parties in Sindh 185 186 187 Karachi s population grew by 59 8 since the 1998 census to 14 9 million while Lahore city grew 75 3 188 though Karachi s census district had not been altered by the provincial government since 1998 while Lahore s had been expanded by Punjab s government 188 leading to some of Karachi s growth to have occurred outside the city s census boundaries 178 Karachi s population had grown at a rate of 3 49 between the 1981 and 1998 census leading many analysts to estimate Karachi s 2017 population to be approximately 18 million by extrapolating a continued annual growth rate of 3 49 Some had expected that the city s population to be between 22 and 30 million 178 which would require an annual growth rate accelerating to between 4 6 and 6 33 178 Historical PopulationYear Pop 1729250 183814 0005 500 0 184215 0007 1 185016 77311 8 185622 22732 5 186156 859155 8 188173 56029 4 1891105 19943 0 1901136 29729 6 1911186 77137 0 1921244 16230 7 1931300 77923 2 1941435 88744 9 19511 137 667161 0 19612 044 04479 7 19723 606 74476 5 19815 437 98450 8 19867 443 66336 9 19989 802 13431 7 201714 910 35252 1 Source 17 189 190 191 Large population rise between 1941 and 1951 due tolarge scale migration after independence in 1947 Political parties in the province have suggested the city s population has been underestimated in a deliberate attempt to undermine the political power of the city and province 192 Senator Taj Haider from the PPP claimed he had official documents revealing the city s population to be 25 6 million in 2013 192 while the Sindh Bureau of Statistics part of by the PPP led provincial administration estimated Karachi s 2016 population to be 19 1 million 193 District population density per km2 According to 2017 Census with 43 063 51 residents per square kilometre Karachi Central is the most densely populated district of the six districts of Karachi as well as the entirety of Pakistan Rank District Population 2017 census 194 Area Sq km Density1 Central 2 971 382 69 43 063 512 Korangi 2 577 556 108 23 866 263 East 2 875 315 139 20 685 724 South 1 769 230 122 14 501 895 West 3 907 065 929 4 205 676 Malir 1 924 364 2 160 890 90All 16 024 894 3 527 4 543 49Ethnicity The oldest portions of modern Karachi reflect the ethnic composition of the first settlement with Balochis and Sindhis continuing to make up a large portion of the Lyari neighbourhood 24 though many of the residents are relatively recent migrants Following Partition large numbers of Hindus left Pakistan for the newly independent Dominion of India later the Republic of India while a larger percentage of Muslim migrant and refugees from India settled in Karachi The city grew 150 during the ten period between 1941 and 1951 with the new arrivals from India 195 who made up 57 of Karachi s population in 1951 196 The city is now considered a melting pot of Pakistan and is the country s most diverse city 24 Karachi is the largest Bengali speaking city outside Bengal region In 2011 an estimated 2 5 million foreign migrants lived in the city mostly from Afghanistan Bangladesh Myanmar and Sri Lanka 197 Karachi is home to large numbers of descendants of refugees and migrants from Hyderabad in southern India who built a small replica of Hyderabad s famous Charminar monument in Karachi s Bahadurabad area Much of Karachi s citizenry descend from Urdu speaking migrants and refugees from North India who became known by the Arabic term for Migrant Muhajir The first Muhajirs of Karachi arrived in 1946 in the aftermath of the Great Calcutta Killings and subsequent 1946 Bihar riots 198 The city s wealthy Hindus opposed the resettlement of refugees near their homes and so many refugees were accommodated in the older and more congested parts of Karachi 199 The city witnessed a large influx of Muhajirs following Partition who were drawn to the port city and newly designated federal capital for its white collar job opportunities 200 Muhajirs continued to migrate to Pakistan throughout the 1950s and early 1960s 201 with Karachi remaining the primary destination of Indian Muslim migrants throughout those decades 201 The Muhajir Urdu speaking community in the 2017 census forms slightly less than 45 of the city s population 188 Muhajirs form the bulk of Karachi s middle class 24 Muhajirs are regarded as the city s most secular community while other minorities such as Christians and Hindus increasingly regard themselves as part of the Muhajir community 24 Karachi is home to a wide array of non Urdu speaking Muslim peoples from what is now the Republic of India The city has a sizable community of Gujarati Marathi Konkani speaking refugees 24 Karachi is also home to a several thousand member strong community of Malabari Muslims from Kerala in South India 202 These ethno linguistic groups are being assimilated in the Urdu speaking community 203 During the period of rapid economic growth in the 1960s large numbers Pashtuns from the NWFP migrated to Karachi with Afghan Pashtun refugees settling in Karachi during the 80 s 204 205 206 207 208 Karachi is home to the world s largest urban Pashtun population 209 with more Pashtun citizens than the Peshawar 2 209 Pashtuns from Afghanistan are regarded as the most conservative community 2 Pashtuns from Pakistan s Swat Valley in contrast are generally seen as more liberal in social outlook 2 The Pashtun community forms the bulk of manual labourers and transporters 210 Anatol Lieven of Georgetown University in Qatar wrote that due to Pashtuns settling the city Karachi not Kabul Kandahar or Peshawar is the largest Pashtun city in the world 211 Migrants from Punjab began settling in Karachi in large numbers in the 1960s and now make up an estimated 14 of Karachi s population 2 The community forms the bulk of the city s police force 2 The bulk of Karachi s Christian community which makes up 2 5 of the city s population is Punjabi 212 Despite being the capital of Sindh province only 6 8 of the city is Sindhi 2 Sindhis form much of the municipal and provincial bureaucracy 2 4 of Karachi s population speaks Balochi as its mother tongue though most Baloch speakers are of Sheedi heritage a community that traces its roots to Africa 2 Following the Indo Pakistani War of 1971 and independence of Bangladesh thousands of Urdu speaking Biharis arrived in the city preferring to remain Pakistani rather than live in the newly independent country Large numbers of Bengalis also migrated from Bangladesh to Karachi during periods of economic growth in the 1980s and 1990s Karachi is now home to an estimated 2 5 to 3 million ethnic Bengalis living in Pakistan 36 37 Rohingya refugees from Myanmar who speak a dialect of Bengali and are sometimes regarded as Bengalis also live in the city Karachi is home to an estimated 400 000 Rohingya residents 213 214 Large scale Rohingya migration to Karachi made Karachi one of the largest population centres of Rohingyas in the world outside of Myanmar 215 Central Asian migrants from Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan have also settled in the city 216 Domestic workers from the Philippines are employed in Karachi s posh locales while many of the city s teachers hail from Sri Lanka 216 Many Sri Lankans moved to Karachi due to the 2022 Economic Crisis in Sri Lanka Expatriates from China began migrating to Karachi in the 1940s to work as dentists chefs and shoemakers while many of their descendants continue to live in Pakistan 216 217 Chinese also reached Karachi after 2015 in large number due to the CPEC project The city is also home to a small number of British and American expatriates 218 During World War II about 3 000 Polish refugees from the Soviet Union with some Polish families who chose to remain in the city after Partition 219 220 Post Partition Karachi also once had a sizable refugee community from post revolutionary Iran 216 Religion Religions in Karachi 221 222 223 224 Religions PercentIslam 96 5 Christianity 2 5 Hinduism 0 86 Others 0 14 With a capacity of 800 000 worshippers Grand Jamia Mosque is the largest mosque in Pakistan and 3rd largest in the world St Patrick s Cathedral built in 1881 serves as the seat of the Archdiocese of Karachi The Swaminarayan Temple is the largest Hindu temple in Karachi Karachi is a religiously homogeneous city with more than 96 per cent of its population adhering to Islam 225 Karachiites adhere to numerous sects and sub sects of Islam as well as Protestant Christianity and community of Goan Catholics The city also is home to large numbers of Hindus and a small community of Zoroastrians and Parsi s According to Nichola Khan Karachi is also the world s largest Muslim city 226 Prior to Pakistan s independence in 1947 the religious demographics of the city was estimated to be 51 1 Hindu 42 3 Muslim with the remaining 7 primarily Christians both British and native Sikhs Jains with a small number of Jews 227 Following the independence of Pakistan the vast majority of Karachi s Sindhi Hindu population left for India while Muslim refugees from India in turn settled in the city This mass migration dramatically changed the religious demographics of the city Islam Karachi is overwhelmingly Muslim 2 though the city is one of Pakistan s most secular cities 24 25 26 Approximately 85 of Karachi s Muslims are Sunnis while 15 are Shi ites 228 229 230 Sunnis primarily follow the Hanafi school of jurisprudence with Sufism influencing religious practices by encouraging reverence for Sufi saints such as Abdullah Shah Ghazi and Mewa Shah Shi ites are predominantly Twelver with a significant Ismaili minority which is further subdivided into Nizaris Mustaalis Dawoodi Bohras and Sulaymanis There are over 3000 mosques in Karachi most famous of which include Grand Jamia Mosque Baitul Mukarram Mosque Masjid e Tooba and Memon Masjid Christianity Approximately 2 5 of Karachi s population is Christian 221 222 223 The city s Christian community is primarily composed of Punjabi Christians and a community of Goan Catholics who are typically better educated and more affluent than their Punjabi co religionists 231 They established the posh Cincinnatus Town in Garden East as a Goan enclave The Goan community dates from 1820 and has a population estimated to be 12 000 15 000 strong 232 Karachi is served by its own archdiocese the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Karachi Hinduism While most of the city s Hindu population left en masse for India following Pakistan s independence Karachi still has a large Hindu community with an estimated population of 250 000 based on 2013 data 233 with several active temples in central Karachi The Hindu community is split into a more affluent Sindhi Hindu and small Punjabi Hindu group that forms part of Karachi s educated middle class while poorer Hindus of Rajasthani and Marwari descent form the other part and typically serve as menial and day laborers Wealthier Hindus live primarily in Clifton and Saddar while poorer ones live and have temples in Narayanpura and Lyari Many streets in central Karachi still retain Hindu names especially in Mithadar Aram Bagh formerly Ram Bagh and Ramswami Many Mandirs exist in Saddar which are over a 100 years old Zoroastrianism Karachi s affluent and influential Parsis have lived in the region in the 12th century though the modern community dates from the mid 19th century when they served as military contractors and commissariat agents to the British 234 Further waves of Parsi immigrants from Persia settled in the city in the late 19th century 235 The population of Parsis in Karachi and throughout South Asia is in continuous decline due to low birth rates and migration to Western countries 236 In 2019 according to Framji Minwalla approximately 1 092 Parsis are left in Pakistan 237 TransportationMain article Transport in Karachi Road Main article List of streets in Karachi Karachi is served by a road network estimated to be approximately 15 500 kilometres 9 600 miles in length 238 serving approximately 5 million vehicles per day Karachi is served by 6 Signal Free Corridors which are designed as urban express roads to permit traffic to transverse large distances without the need to stop at intersections and stoplights The 16 km 10 mi Karsaz Road connects PAF Museum in central Karachi to SITE Industrial Area The Rashid Minhas Road connects Surjani Town with Shah Faisal Town over a 20 km span The 19 km 12 mi University Road connects Karachi s urban centre to the Gulistan e Johar suburb The 18 km 11 mi Shahrah e Faisal connects Karachi s Sadar area to the Jinnah International Airport The 18 km 11 mi Shahrah e Pakistan connects city centre to Federal B Area The 18 km 11 mi Sher Shah Suri Road connects the city centre to Nazimabad The Lyari Expressway is a 16 km controlled access highway along the Lyari River This toll highway is designed to relieve congestion within the city To the north of Karachi lies the 39 km Karachi Northern Bypass M10 which bypasses the city to connect M9 Motorway to N25 National Highway A 39 km 24 mi Malir Expressway is underconstruction along the Malir River It will link Karachi s DHA to Karachi s Malir Town and terminate at Kathore on M 9 Motorway Karachi is the terminus of the M 9 motorway which connects Karachi to Hyderabad M 9 motorway is part of a larger countrywide motorways network many of which were built through China Pakistan Economic Corridor Project From Hyderabad motorways provide high speed road access to all major Pakistani cities like Peshawar Islamabad Lahore Multan and Faisalabad Karachi is also the terminus of the N 5 National Highway which connects the city to the historic medieval capital of Sindh Thatta It offers further connections to northern Pakistan and the Afghan border near Torkham The N 25 National Highway connects Karachi to capital of Balochistan Quetta The N 10 National Highway connects Karachi to the emerging port city of Gwadar Rail Main articles Karachi Circular Railway and List of railway stations in Pakistan Karachi is linked by rail to the rest of the country by Pakistan Railways The Karachi City Station and Karachi Cantonment Railway Station are the city s two major railway stations 2 The city has an international rail link the Thar Express which links Karachi Cantonment Station with Bhagat Ki Kothi station in Jodhpur India 239 The railway system also handles freight linking Karachi port to destinations up country in northern Pakistan 240 The city is the terminus for the Main Line 1 Railway which connects Karachi to Peshawar Pakistan s rail network including the Main Line 1 Railway is being upgraded as part of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor allowing trains to depart Karachi and travel on Pakistani railways at an average speed of 160 km h 100 mph versus the current average speed of 80 km h 50 mph 241 Public transport Metrobus Main article Karachi Metrobus The Pakistani Government is developing the Karachi Metrobus project which is a 6 line 150 kilometre 93 1 4 mile bus rapid transit system 242 The Metrobus project was inaugurated by then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on 25 February 2016 Sharif said the project will be more beautiful than Lahore Metro Bus 243 Orange and Green Lines are operational while Red Line is underconstruction People s Bus Service In 2022 provincial government launched People s Bus Service having fleet size of 100 which run on 12 different routes on nominal fare The buses are air conditioned have wifi have priority seeting for disabled and elderly and are wheelchair accessible Red buses are for general public Pink buses are for women only White buses are environment friendly electric buses having designated charging points Karachi Circular Railway Karachi Circular Railway is a partially active regional public transit system in Karachi which serves the Karachi metropolitan area KCR was fully operational between 1969 and 1999 Since 2001 restoration of the railway and restarting the system had been sought 244 245 In November 2020 the KCR partially revived operations 246 KCR was included in CPEC by Shehbaz Sharif and construction started in 2022 Existing 43 km KCR track and stations would be completely rebuilt into world class automated rapid transit system with environment friendly electric trains The route would not be changed however many underpasses and bridges would be built along the route to eliminate 22 level crossings New KCR would be similar to Lahore s Orange Train New KCR would have joint stations with Karachi Metrobus at points of intersection Project would be operational by 2025 With its hub at Karachi City station on I I Chundrigar Road KCR will be a public transit system that connects the city centre with several industrial commercial and residential districts within the city 247 Tramway service An iconic tramway service was started in 1884 in Karachi but was closed in 1975 because of some reason 248 249 However the revival of tramway service is proposed by Karachi Administrator Iftikhar Ali Turkey has offered assistance in the revival and launching modern tramway service in Karachi 250 Air Karachi s Jinnah International Airport is the busiest airport of Pakistan with a total of 7 2 million passengers in 2018 The current terminal structure was built in 1992 and is divided into international and domestic sections Karachi s airport serves as a hub for the flag carrier Pakistan International Airlines PIA as well as for Air Indus Serene Air and airblue The airport offers non stop flights to destinations throughout East Asia South Asia Southeast Asia Central Asia the Gulf States Europe and North America 251 252 Sea The largest shipping ports in Pakistan are the Port of Karachi and the nearby Port Qasim the former being the oldest port of Pakistan Port Qasim is located 35 kilometres 22 miles east of the Port of Karachi on the Indus River estuary These ports handle 95 of Pakistan s trade cargo to and from foreign ports These seaports have modern facilities which include bulk handling containers and oil terminals 253 The ports are part of the Maritime Silk Road 254 Civic administrationMain articles Politics of Karachi List of mayors of Karachi List of Union Councils of Karachi and Commissioner of Karachi City government Main article Government of Karachi Karachi has a fragmented system of civic government The urban area is divided into six District Municipal Corporations Karachi East Karachi West Karachi Central Karachi South Malir Korangi Each district is further divided into between 22 and 42 Union Committees Each Union Committee is represented by seven elected representatives four of whom can be general candidates of any background the other three seats are reserved for women religious minorities and a union representative or peasant farmer Karachi s urban area also includes six cantonments which are administered directly by the Pakistani military and include some of Karachi s most desirable real estate Key civic bodies such as the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board and KBCA Karachi Building Control Authority among others are under the direct control of the Government of Sindh 255 Additionally Karachi s city planning authority for undeveloped land the Karachi Development Authority is under control of the government while two new city planning authorities the Lyari Development Authority and Malir Development Authority were revived by the Pakistan Peoples Party government in 2011 allegedly to patronize their electoral allies and voting banks 256 Historical background In response to a cholera epidemic in 1846 the Karachi Conservancy Board was organized by British administrators to control its spread 257 258 The board became the Karachi Municipal Commission in 1852 and the Karachi Municipal Committee the following year 257 The City of Karachi Municipal Act of 1933 transformed the city administration into the Karachi Municipal Corporation with a mayor a deputy mayor and 57 councillors 257 In 1976 the body became the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation 257 During the 1900s Karachi saw its major beautification project under the mayoralty of Harchandrai Vishandas New roads parks residential and recreational areas were developed as part of this project In 1948 the Federal Capital Territory of Pakistan was created comprising approximately 2 103 km2 812 sq mi of Karachi and surrounding areas but this was merged into the province of West Pakistan in 1959 259 In 1960 Karachi and Lasbela District merged to create Karachi Bela Division In 1972 Lasbela District transferred to Kalat division and Karachi metropolitan area was divided into three 03 districts East West and South In 1996 again the Karachi metropolitan area was divided into More two 02 districts Central and Malir each with its own municipal corporation 257 Union councils 2001 11 Given the honorary title Father of Service Naimatullah Khan Advocate 2001 2005 was one of the most successful and respected mayors Karachi ever had In 2001 during the rule of General Pervez Musharraf five districts of Karachi were merged to form the city district of Karachi with a three tier structure The two most local tiers are composed of 18 towns and 178 union councils 260 Each tier focused on elected councils with some common members to provide vertical linkage within the federation 261 Naimatullah Khan was the first Nazim of Karachi during the Union Council period while Shafiq Ur Rehman Paracha was the first district coordination officer of Karachi Syed Mustafa Kamal was elected City Nazim of Karachi to succeed Naimatullah Khan in 2005 elections and Nasreen Jalil was elected as the City Naib Nazim Each Union Council had thirteen members elected from specified electorates four men and two women elected directly by the general population two men and two women elected by peasants and workers one member for minority communities two members are elected jointly as the Union Mayor Nazim and Deputy Union Mayor Naib Nazim 262 Each council included up to three council secretaries and a number of other civil servants The Union Council system was dismantled in 2011 District Municipal Corporations 2011 present In July 2011 city district government of Karachi was reverted its original constituent units known as District Municipal Corporations DMC The five original DMCs are Karachi East Karachi West Karachi Central Karachi South and Malir In November 2013 a sixth DMC Korangi District was carved out from District East 263 264 265 266 267 In August 2020 Sindh cabinet approves formation of the seventh district in Karachi Keamari District Keamari District was formed by splitting District West 268 269 270 271 The committees for each district devise and enforce land use and zoning regulations within their district Each committee also manages water supply sewage and roads except for 28 main arteries which are managed by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation 96 Street lighting traffic planning markets regulations and signage are also under the control of the DMCs Each DMC also maintains its own municipal record archive and devises its own local budget 96 Municipal Administration of Karachi is also run by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation KMC which is responsible for the development and maintenance of main arteries bridges drains several hospitals beaches solid waste management as well as some parks and the city s firefighting services 272 The most recent Karachi mayor was Waseem Akhtar 2016 2020 with Arshad Hassan serving as Deputy Mayor both served as part of the KMC The Administrator of Karachi is Dr Syed Saif ur Rehman as of 2022 273 The position of Commissioner of Karachi was created with Iftikhar Ali Shallwani serving this role 274 There are six military cantonments which are administered by the Pakistani Army and are some of Karachi s most upscale neighbourhoods Districts Karachi East Karachi West Karachi South Karachi Central Malir Korangi Kemari Cantonments A Karachi Cantonment B Clifton Cantonment C Korangi Creek Cantonment D Faisal Cantonment E Malir Cantonment F Manora CantonmentCity planning The Karachi Development Authority KDA along with the Lyari Development Authority LDA and Malir Development Authority MDA is responsible for the development of most undeveloped land around Karachi KDA came into existence in 1957 with the task of managing land around Karachi while the LDA and MDA were formed in 1993 and 1994 respectively KDA under the control of Karachi s local government and mayor in 2001 while the LDA and MDA were abolished KDA was later placed under the direct control of the Government of Sindh in 2011 The LDA and MDA were also revived by the Pakistan Peoples Party government at the time allegedly to patronize their electoral allies and voting banks 256 City planning in Karachi therefore is not locally directed but is instead controlled at the provincial level Each District Municipal Corporation regulate land use in developed areas while the Sindh Building Control Authority ensures that building construction is in accordance with building amp town planning regulations Cantonment areas and the Defence Housing Authority are administered and planned by the military Municipal servicesWater Municipal water supplies are managed by the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board KW amp SB which supplies 640 million gallons daily MGD to the city excluding the city s steel mills and Port Qasim of which 440 MGD are filtered treated 96 Most of the supply comes from the Indus River and 90 MGD from the Hub Dam 96 Karachi s water supply is transported to the city through a complex network of canals conduits and siphons with the aid of pumping and filtration stations 96 80 of Karachi households have access to piped water as of 2022 update 275 with private water tankers supplying much of the water required in informal settlements 138 15 of residents in a 2022 survey rated their water supply as bad or very bad while 40 expressed concern at the stability of water supply 275 By 2022 an estimated 35 000 people were dying due to water borne diseases annually 276 The K IV water project is under development at a cost of 876 million It would connect Keenjhar Lake to Karachi hence eradicating water scarcity in eastern and northern parts of the city It is expected to supply 650 million gallons daily of potable water to the city the first phase 260 million gallons upon completion 277 278 Desalination plants are also planned to be built on Arabian Sea coast on western side of Karachi in near future These would resolve water scarcity issues in western parts of the city including SITE Area Shershah and Orangi Town Sanitation 98 of Karachi s households are connected to the city s underground public sewerage system 275 largely operated by the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board KW amp SB The KW amp SB operates 150 pumping stations 25 bulk reservoirs over 10 000 kilometres of pipes and 250 000 manholes 96 The city generates approximately 472 million gallons daily MGD of sewage of which 417 MGD are discharged without treatment 96 KW amp SB has the optimum capacity to treat up to 150 MGD of sewage but uses only about 50 MGD of this capacity 96 Three treatment plants are available in SITE Town Gutter Baghicha Mehmoodabad and Mauripur 96 75 reported in 2022 that Karachi s drainage system overflows or backs up 275 the highest percentage of all major Pakistani cities 275 Parts of the city s drainage system overflow on average 2 7 times per month flooding some city streets 275 Households in Orangi self organized to set up their own sewerage system under the Orangi Pilot Project 279 a community service organization founded in 1980 90 of Orangi streets are now connected to a sewer system built by local residents under the Orangi Pilot Project 279 Residents of individual streets bear the cost of sewerage pipes and provide volunteer labour to lay the pipe 279 Residents also maintain the sewer pipes 279 while the city municipal administration has built several primary and secondary pipes for the network 279 As a result of OPP 96 of Orangi residents have access to a latrine 279 The Sindh Solid Waste Management Board SSWMB is responsible for the collection and disposal of solid waste not only in Karachi but throughout the whole province Karachi has the highest percentage of residents in Pakistan who report that their streets are never cleaned 42 of residents in Karachi report their streets are never cleaned compared to 10 of residents in Lahore 275 Only 17 of Karachi residents reporting daily street cleaning compared to 45 in Lahore 275 69 of Karachi residents rely on private garbage collection services 275 with only 15 relying on municipal garbage collection services 275 53 of Karachi residents in a 2022 survey reported that the state of their neighbourhood s cleanliness was either bad or very bad 275 compared to 35 in Lahore 275 and 16 in Multan 275 Electricity The one and only electricity providing company in Karachi is K Electric It was government owned but was privatised in 2019 Government still has some shares However HUBCO is an Independent Power Producer IPP that owns few major powerplants Karachi mostly gets electricity from oil gas and coal powerplants established either on western coastline or Port Qasim Industrial Zone Most recently built coal powerplants were the 1320MW Port Qasim Powerplant and the 1320MW Hub Coal Powerplant 3 Nuclear Powerplants on western coastline namely KANUPP K 1 K 2 K 3 also feed Karachi Jhimpir a nearby town has Wind Powerplants of more than 1000MW This capacity is going to increase in future expansions Solar Parks are envisioned to be established on western coastline having a starting generation of 1000MW 75 of Karachi receives uninterrupted power supply almost throughout the year 25 areas including industrial areas suffer with up to 6 hours of power outages everyday due to energy generation deficit Power outages increase further in Peak summer and Monsoon season May to August Many slums and unregulated areas are not yet electrified hence they indulge in electricity theft which is locally called Kunda System Police Ambulance Firfighting Police is under the control of provincial government and city government has no authority over it Ambulance is run by private hospitals or NGOs most famous of which are Edhi Chhipa and JDC Firefighting is under control of Local Government and has enough firfighters and vehicles to work quickly during fire EducationMain article Education in Karachi Bai Virbaijee Soparivala B V S Parsi High School Districts literacy rate 10 years and above According to 2017 Census of Pakistan Central is the most literate district among all the districts of Karachi and Sindh Following is the literacy rate of 10 years and above population of the six districts of Karachi Rank District Literate Population 2017 census 280 1 Central 81 52 2 Korangi 80 49 3 South 77 79 4 East 75 96 5 West including Kemari 65 61 6 Malir 63 69 Primary and secondary See also List of schools in Karachi Karachi s primary education system is divided into five levels primary grades one through five middle grades six through eight high grades nine and ten leading to the Secondary School Certificate intermediate grades eleven and twelve leading to a Higher Secondary School Certificate and university programs leading to graduate and advanced degrees Karachi has both public and private educational institutions Most educational institutions are gender based from primary to intermediate Universities are mostly co education Several of Karachi s schools such as St Patrick s High School St Joseph s Convent School and St Paul s English High School are operated by Christian churches and are among Pakistan s most prestigious schools Higher See also List of colleges in Karachi List of universities in Karachi and List of medical schools in Karachi The D J Sindh Government Science College is one of Karachi s oldest universities and dates from 1887 Karachi University is the city s largest by number of students number of departments amp occupied land area Karachi is home to several major public universities Karachi s first public university s date from the British colonial era The Sindh Madressatul Islam founded in 1885 was granted university status in 2012 Establishment of the Sindh Madressatul Islam was followed by the establishment of the D J Sindh Government Science College in 1887 and the institution was granted university status in 2014 The Nadirshaw Edulji Dinshaw University of Engineering and Technology NED was founded in 1921 and is Pakistan s oldest institution of higher learning The Dow University of Health Sciences was established in 1945 and is now one of Pakistan s top medical research institutions The University of Karachi founded in 1951 is Pakistan s largest university with a student population of 24 000 The Institute of Business Administration IBA founded in 1955 is the oldest business school outside of North America and Europe and was set up with technical support from the Wharton School and the University of Southern California The Dawood University of Engineering and Technology which opened in 1962 offers degree programmes in petroleum gas chemical and industrial engineering The Pakistan Navy Engineering College PNEC operated by the Pakistan Navy is associated with the National University of Sciences and Technology NUST in Islamabad Karachi is also home to numerous private universities The Aga Khan University founded in 1983 is Karachi s oldest private educational institution and is one of Pakistan s most prestigious medical schools The Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture was founded in 1989 and offers degree programmes in arts and architectural fields Hamdard University is the largest private university in Pakistan with faculties including Eastern Medicine Medical Engineering Pharmacy and Law The National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences NUCES FAST one of Pakistan s top universities in computer education operates two campuses in Karachi Bahria University BU founded in 2000 is one of the major general institutions of Pakistan with their campuses in Karachi Islamabad and Lahore offers degree programs in Management Sciences Electrical Engineering Computer Science and Psychology Sir Syed University of Engineering and Technology SSUET offers degree programmes in biomedical electronics telecom and computer engineering Karachi Institute of Economics amp Technology KIET has two campuses in Karachi The Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology SZABIST founded in 1995 by former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto operates a campus in Karachi Iqra University Habib University Habib University is a liberal arts college in Karachi Dow University Jinnah Medical and Dental College Jinnah Sindh Medical University Karachi Institute of Economics and Technology United Medical and Dental College Liaquat National Medical College Institute of Cost amp Management Accountants of Pakistan ICMAP Institute of Business Management CBM HealthcareMain articles List of hospitals in Karachi and Environment of Karachi Aga Khan University s hospital Karachi is a centre of research in biomedicine with at least 30 public hospitals 80 registered private hospitals and 12 recognized medical colleges 281 including the Indus Hospital Lady Dufferin Hospital Karachi Institute of Heart Diseases 282 National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases 283 Civil Hospital 284 Combined Military Hospital 285 PNS Rahat 286 PNS Shifa 287 Aga Khan University Hospital Liaquat National Hospital Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre 288 Holy Family Hospital 289 and Ziauddin Hospital In 1995 Ziauddin Hospital was the site of Pakistan s first bone marrow transplant 290 Karachi municipal authorities in 2017 launched a new early warning system that alerted city residents to a forecasted heatwave Previous heatwaves had routinely claimed lives in the city but implementation of the warning system was credited for no reported heat related fatalities 126 During 2020 2021 COVID 19 pandemic vaccines were available in all major hospitals Entertainment tourism and cultureMain article Culture of Karachi See also Culture of Pakistan Muhajir culture and Sindhi culture Shopping malls Main article Cinema in Karachi Karachi is home to Pakistan and South Asia s largest shopping mall Lucky One Mall which hosts more than two hundred stores 291 According to TripAdvisor the city is also home to Pakistan s favorite shopping mall Dolmen Mall Clifton which was also featured on CNN 292 293 In 2023 another mega mall entertainment complex named Mall of Karachi situated at the bottom of Pakistan s tallest skyscraper Bahria Icon Tower will be opened 294 295 Museums and galleries The famous Priest King statue of the Indus Valley civilization is displayed at Karachi s National Museum of Pakistan Built as a home for a wealthy Hindu businessman the Mohatta Palace is now a museum open to the public Karachi is home to several of Pakistan s most important museums The National Museum of Pakistan and Mohatta Palace display artwork while the city also has several private art galleries 296 There are also the Pakistan Airforce Museum the Pakistan Maritime Museum and the country s first interactive science centre the MagnifiScience Centre located in the city 297 Wazir Mansion the birthplace of Pakistan s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah has also been preserved as a museum open to the public Quaid e Azam House the residence of Muhammad Ali Jinnah is also a museum which showcases his furniture and other belongings Other museums include TDF Ghar and the State Bank of Pakistan Museum amp Art Gallery Theatre and cinema Karachi is home to some of Pakistan s important cultural institutions The National Academy of Performing Arts 298 located in the former Hindu Gymkhana offers diploma courses in performing arts including classical music and contemporary theatre Karachi is home to groups such as Thespianz Theater a professional youth based non profit performing arts group which works on theatre and arts activities in Pakistan 299 300 Though Lahore was considered to be home of Pakistan s film industry Karachi is home to Urdu cinema and Kara Film Festival annually showcases independent Pakistani and international films and documentaries 301 Bambino Cinema Capri Cinema Cinepax Cinema Cinegold Plex Cinema Bahria Town Mega Multiplex Cinema Millennium Mall Nueplex Cinema Askari 4 Atrium Mall Cinema Sadar are some of the most popular cinemas in Karachi Music The All Pakistan Music Conference linked to the 45 year old similar institution in Lahore has been holding its annual music festival since its inception in 2004 302 The National Arts Council Koocha e Saqafat has musical performances and mushaira Social issuesCrime amp Lawlessness Sometimes stated to be amongst the world s most dangerous cities 303 the extent of violent crime in Karachi is not as significant in magnitude as compared to other cities 304 According to the Numbeo Crime Index 2014 Karachi was the 6th most dangerous city in the world By the middle of 2016 Karachi s rank had dropped to 31 following the launch of anti crime operations 305 By 2018 Karachi s ranking has dropped to 50 306 In 2021 Karachi s ranking fell to 115 In 2022 the ranking fell further to 128th place ranking Karachi safer than regional cities such as Dhaka 56th place Delhi 90th place and Bangalore 122nd place 307 The city s large population results in high numbers of homicides with a moderate homicide rate 304 Karachi s homicide rates are lower than many Latin American cities 304 and in 2015 was 12 5 per 100 000 308 lower than the homicide rate of several American cities such as New Orleans and St Louis 309 The homicide rates in some Latin American cities such as Caracas Venezuela and Acapulco Mexico are in excess of 100 per 100 000 residents 309 many times greater than Karachi s homicide rate In 2016 the number of murders in Karachi had dropped to 471 which had dropped further to 381 in 2017 310 In the late 1980s and early 1990s Karachi was rocked by political conflict while crime rates drastically increased with the arrival of weaponry from the War in Afghanistan 51 Several of Karachi s criminal mafias became powerful during a period in the 1990s described as the rule of the mafias 311 Major mafias active in the city included land mafia water tanker mafia transport mafia and a sand and gravel mafia 312 311 313 314 Karachi s highest death rates occurred in the mid 1990s In 1995 1 742 killings were recorded with a maximum of 15 killings in a single day 315 316 Karachi Operation by Pakistan Rangers Karachi had become widely known for its high rates of violent crime but rates sharply decreased following a controversial crackdown operation against criminals the MQM political party and Islamist militants initiated in 2013 by the Pakistan Rangers 52 In 2015 1 040 Karachiites were killed in either acts of terror or other crime an almost 50 decrease from the 2 023 killed in 2014 317 and an almost 70 decrease from the 3 251 recorded killed in 2013 the highest ever recorded number in Karachi history 318 Violent crime like target killings kidnappings for ransom or extortion burning or torturing to death drugs and weapons smugling decreased sharply after 2015 Street crime still remains high like snatching of cash phones motorcycles and cars on gunpoint 319 With 650 homicides in 2015 Karachi s homicide rate decreased by 75 compared to 2013 320 In 2017 the number of homicides had dropped further to 381 310 Extortion crimes decreased by 80 between 2013 and 2015 while kidnappings decreased by 90 during the same period 320 By 2016 the city registered a total of 21 cases of kidnap for ransom 321 Terrorist incidents dropped by 98 between 2012 and 2017 according to Pakistan s Interior Ministry 322 As a result of the Karachi s improved security environment real estate prices in Karachi rose sharply after 2015 323 with a rise in business for upmarket restaurants and cafes 324 Ethnic amp Linguistic conflict Insufficient affordable housing infrastructure to absorb growth has resulted in the city s diverse migrant populations being largely confined to ethnically homogeneous neighbourhoods 138 The 1970s saw major labour struggles in Karachi s industrial estates Violence originated in the city s university campuses and spread into the city 325 Conflict was especially sharp between MQM party and ethnic Sindhis Pashtuns and Punjabis The party and its vast network of supporters were targeted by Pakistani security forces as part of the controversial Operation Clean up in 1992 as part of an effort to restore peace in the city that lasted until 1994 The ethnic conflicts kept going between linguistic groups till late 2010s and are no more extreme Poor infrastructure Urban planning and service delivery have not kept pace with Karachi s growth resulting in the city s low ranking on livability rankings 138 The city has no cohesive transportation policy and inadequate transport though up to 1 000 new vehicles are added daily to the city s congested streets 138 Roads and streets are broken at many places but are not repaired in timely manner Many areas are still unpaved Population has increased but roads have not been widened Street lights amp traffic signals are present but do not work Signboards are present but are outdated Gutters have no covers people fall in them Trees are present but nobody to water them Unable to provide housing to large numbers of refugees shortly after independence Karachi s authorities first issued slips to refugees beginning in 1950 which allowed refugees to settle on any vacant land 279 Such informal settlements are known as katchi abadis Approximately half of Karachi s residents still live in these unplanned communities which have limited paved roads and limited utilities 138 Pollution Air quality index is one of the worst in the world Due to desert terrain there is plenty of dust throughout the year except for rainy season Vehicles and industries also contribute to air pollution greenhouse gas emissions and global warming There is alot of noise pollution due to traffic Land pollution is due to solid trash not disposed to dedicated dumping sites Trash is seen here and there and sometimes everywhere Lastly there is water pollution in Lyari and Malir rivers as gutters directly open into these rivers These rivers than directly go into Arabian sea untreated So sewerage and industrial wastewater is directly being thrown into Indian Ocean hence polluting it and destroying marine life under the sea 3 waste water treatment plants exist but are all dysfunctional Urban Flooding in Monsoon Season Size of Drainage system and storm water drains locally known as Naalahs in the city is not enough to handle the heavy rainfalls of monsoon The drainage system and storm water drains are also filled with solid trash When water finds no path it enters streets roads underpasses and even houses during rainfall in July and August of every year Major Naalahs like Orangi Naalah Gujjar Naalah Mehmoodabad Naalah are cleaned every year by government but are polluted by people the next day citation needed Flooding hinders connectivity of different areas of the city Floods cause drown or electric shocks related deaths as well citation needed ArchitectureSee also Pakistani architecture and List of tallest buildings in Karachi Karachi has a collection of buildings and structures of varied architectural styles The downtown districts of Saddar and Clifton contain early 20th century architecture ranging in style from the neo classical KPT building to the Sindh High Court Building Karachi acquired its first neo Gothic or Indo Gothic buildings when Frere Hall Empress Market and St Patrick s Cathedral were completed The Mock Tudor architectural style was introduced in the Karachi Gymkhana and the Boat Club Neo Renaissance architecture was popular in the 19th century and was the architectural style for St Joseph s Convent 1870 and the Sind Club 1883 326 The classical style made a comeback in the late 19th century as seen in Lady Dufferin Hospital 1898 327 and the Cantt Railway Station While Italianate buildings remained popular an eclectic blend termed Indo Saracenic or Anglo Mughal began to emerge in some locations 328 The local mercantile community began acquiring impressive structures Zaibunnisa Street in the Saddar area known as Elphinstone Street in British days is an example where the mercantile groups adopted the Italianate and Indo Saracenic style to demonstrate their familiarity with Western culture and their own The Hindu Gymkhana 1925 and Mohatta Palace are examples of Mughal revival buildings 329 The Sindh Wildlife Conservation Building located in Saddar served as a Freemasonic Lodge until it was taken over by the government There are talks of it being taken away from this custody and being renovated and the Lodge being preserved with its original woodwork and ornate wooden staircase 330 Indus Valley School of Art and Architecture is one of the prime examples of Architectural conservation and restoration where an entire Nusserwanjee building from Kharadar area of Karachi has been relocated to Clifton for adaptive reuse in an art school The procedure involved the careful removal of each piece of timber and stone stacked temporarily loaded on the trucks for transportation to the Clifton site unloaded and re arranged according to a given layout stone by stone piece by piece and completed within three months 331 Architecturally distinctive even eccentric buildings have sprung up throughout Karachi Notable example of contemporary architecture include the Pakistan State Oil Headquarters building The city has examples of modern Islamic architecture including the Aga Khan University hospital Grand Jamia Mosque Masjid e Tooba Faran Mosque Baitul Mukarram Mosque Quaid s Mausoleum and the Textile Institute of Pakistan One of the unique cultural elements of Karachi is that the residences which are two or three story townhouses are built with the front yard protected by a high brick wall I I Chundrigar Road features a range of tall buildings The most prominent examples include the Habib Bank Plaza UBL Tower PRC Towers PNSC Building and MCB Tower 332 Newer skyscrapers are being built in Clifton At least 50 150m buildings were underconstruction in 2022 SportsMain article List of sports venues in Karachi The National Stadium in Karachi Cricket Cricket s history in Pakistan predates the creation of the country in 1947 The first ever international cricket match in Karachi was held on 22 November 1935 between Sindh and Australian cricket teams The match was seen by 5 000 Karachiites 333 Karachi is also the place that innovated tape ball a safer and more affordable alternative to cricket 334 The inaugural first class match at the National Stadium was played between Pakistan and India on 26 February 1955 and since then Pakistani national cricket team has won 20 of the 41 Test matches played at the National Stadium 335 The first One Day International at the National Stadium was against the West Indies on 21 November 1980 with the match going to the last ball The national team has been less successful in such limited overs matches at the ground including a five year stint between 1996 and 2001 when they failed to win any matches The city has been host to a number of domestic cricket teams including Karachi 336 Karachi Blues 337 Karachi Greens 338 and Karachi Whites 339 The National Stadium hosted two group matches Pakistan v South Africa on 29 February and Pakistan v England on 3 March and a quarter final match South Africa v West Indies on 11 March during the 1996 Cricket World Cup 340 Rafi Cricket Stadium under construction in Bahria Town would soon become the largest cricket stadium in Karachi with a capacity of 50 000 spectators Other sports When it comes to sports Karachi has a distinction because some sources cite that it was in 1877 at Karachi in British India where the first attempt was made to form a set of rules of badminton 341 and likely place is said to be Frere Hall Karachi has hosted seven editions of the National Games of Pakistan most recently in 2007 342 In 2005 the city hosted the SAFF Championship at this ground as well as the Geo Super Football League 2007 which attracted capacity crowds during the games The popularity of golf is increasing with clubs in Karachi like Dreamworld Resort Bahria Town Golf Club Hotel amp Golf Club Arabian Sea Country Club DA Country amp Golf Club The city has facilities for field hockey Hockey Club of Pakistan UBL Hockey Ground boxing KPT Sports Complex squash Jahangir Khan Squash Complex and polo There are marinas and boating clubs National Bank of Pakistan Sports Complex is First class cricket venue and Multi purpose sports facility in Karachi Professional teams of KarachiClub League Sport Venue EstablishedKarachi Kings Pakistan Super League Cricket National Stadium 2015Karachi Dolphins National T20 League National One day Championship Cricket National Stadium 2004Karachi Zebras National T20 League National One day Championship Cricket National Stadium 2004HBL FC Pakistan Premier League Football People s Football Stadium 1975K Electric F C Pakistan Premier League Football People s Football Stadium 1913KPT F C Pakistan Premier League Football KPT Football Stadium 1887NBP F C Pakistan Premier League Football KPT Football Stadium N APIA F C Pakistan Premier League Football KPT Football Stadium 1958Karachi United F C Pakistan Premier League Football Karachi United Stadium 1996Diya W F C National Women Football Championship Football N A 2002Notable peopleMain article List of people from Karachi Armed Forces Parvez Musharraf politician president and army chief Rashid Minhas Shaheed Airforce pilot who received Nishan e HaiderPoliticians Muhammad Ali Jinnah founder of Pakistan Iskander Mirza 1st president of Pakistan Abdur Rab Nishtar politician Arif Alvi politician and president Asif Ali Zardari politician and president Benazir Bhutto politician and prime minister Altaf Hussain Pakistani politician politician founder of MQM party Farooq Sattar politician and former mayor Hussain Haqqani political activist and journalist Naimatullah Khan advocate and former mayor Munawar Hasan politician former president of Jamaat e Islami Pakistan Hafiz Naeem ur Rehman politician president of Jamaat e Islami Karachi Syed Mustafa Kamal former mayor Miftah Ismail former finance ministerScientists Abdul Qadeer Khan founder of Pakistan s nuclear program Pervez Hoodbhoy nuclear physicistArtists and literary figures Ibn e Insha poet Ibn e Safi writer and poet Abdul Haq Urdu scholar Father of modern Urdu Jaun Elia poet and philosopher Tabish Dehlvi poet Jamiluddin Aali poet Nasim Amrohvi poet and philosopher Mushtaq Ahmad Yusufi satire and humour writer Sadequain painter and calligrapher Rais Amrohvi poet philosopher and psychoanalystTV and media personalities Moin Akhter Pakistani television film and stage artist humorist comedian impersonator host writer singer director and producer Umer Shareef actor comedian director producer and TV show host Shehzad Roy singer Nazia Hassan singer Zohaib Hassan singer Junaid Jamshed singer turned religious scholar Kamran Khan journalist journalist Anwar Maqsood satirist and humorist Haseena Moin dramatist and playwright Bohemia rapper Pakistani American Punjabi rapper Behroze Sabzwari actor Ahad Raza Mir actor Fawad Khan actor Humayun Saeed actor Fahad Mustafa actor model and TV show host Mahira Khan actress Syra Yousuf VJ and actress Hina Altaf actress and model Mahnoor Baloch actress and model Sarah Khan actress Humaima Malick actress and model Kubra Khan actress and model Sarwat Gilani actress and model Arisha Razi actress Komal Rizvi actress singer writer and TV show host Yumna Zaidi actress Ayeza Khan actress Urwa Hocane actress Mehwish Hayat actress Neelam Muneer actress Saba Qamar actress and model Sanam Jung actress and model Sanam Saeed actress and model Iqra Aziz actress Aiman Khan actress Minal Khan actress Sanam Baloch actress and TV show host Mansha Pasha actress Naveen Waqar actress and model Arij Fatyma Pakistani American actress Nadia Hussain Television actress host model entrepreneur and fashion designer Amna Ilyas model Nadir Ali comedian Kumail Nanjiani actor and comedian Young Stunners hip hop duo Kaifi Khalil singer songwriterSportsperson Javed Miandad cricketer Shahid Afridi cricketer allrounder Sarfaraz Ahmed cricket wicketkeeper batsman former captain Fawad Alam cricketer batsman Danish Kaneria cricketer legspinner Jahangir Khan squash playerOthers Abdul Sattar Edhi philanthropist Zafar Abbas founder of NGO JDC Aamir Liaquat Hussain politician TV show host and comedian Alamgir Khan politician activist head of group Fixit Abdullah Shah Ghazi 8th century Muslim mystic Sufi saint Mufti Tariq Masood religious scholar Mufti Taqi Usmani religious scholarTwin towns and sister citiesMain article List of twin towns and sister cities in Pakistan Mashhad Iran 343 Qom Iran 344 Tianjin China 345 Urumqi China 346 See alsoDevelopments in Karachi Cinema in Karachi Cuisine of Karachi List of cemeteries in Karachi List of hospitals in Karachi List of magazines in Karachi List of newspapers in Karachi List of parks and gardens in Karachi List of people from Karachi List of streets of Karachi List of tallest buildings in Karachi List of tourist attractions in Karachi List of cultural heritage sites in Karachi List of television stations in Karachi List of Union Councils of Karachi Media in Karachi Sister cities of Karachi Transport in KarachiReferences Sarina Singh 2008 p 164 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Paracha Nadeem F 26 September 2014 Visual Karachi From Paris of Asia to City of Lights to Hell on Earth Dawn Pakistan Retrieved 10 March 2016 Ghosh Palash 22 August 2013 Karachi Pakistan Troubled Violent Metropolis Was Once Called Paris Of The East International Business Times Retrieved 8 January 2017 However decades ago Karachi was a very different place so different in fact that in 1942 the city charmed American soldiers enough they dubbed it the Paris of the East Hunt Janin amp Scott A Mandia 2012 p 98 Sind Muslim College 1965 District in Karachi Karachi Metropolitan Corporation Archived from the original on 30 May 2014 Retrieved 6 May 2014 Commissioner vows support for Christmas Interfaith Peace Rally The News International newspaper 10 December 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Government Karachi Metropolitan Corporation Archived from the original on 9 February 2014 Retrieved 6 May 2014 Karachi Metropolitan Corporation City District Government of Karachi Retrieved 4 March 2022 Elevation of Karachi Pakistan Topographic Map Altitude Map Archived from the original on 6 April 2020 Retrieved 4 June 2020 Pakistan Bureau of Statistics Population of Major Cities Census 2017 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 29 August 2017 DISTRICT WISE CENSUS RESULTS CENSUS 2017 PDF pbscensus gov pk Archived from the original PDF on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 3 September 2017 Karachiites to endure another powertariff hike The News International newspaper 5 January 2022 Retrieved 5 January 2022 National Dialing Codes PTCL Archived from the original on 9 November 2015 Retrieved 11 January 2022 a b Karachi The backbone of Pakistan September 2020 a b Finance Division Government of Pakistan a b Ten major cities population up by 74pc Retrieved 21 October 2017 Population size and growth of major cities PDF Pakistan Bureau of Statistics 1998 Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2018 Retrieved 18 February 2016 Amer Khawaja 10 June 2013 Population explosion Put an embargo on industrialisation in Karachi The Express Tribune Retrieved 16 June 2017 GaWC The World According to GaWC 2008 Lboro ac uk 3 June 2009 Retrieved 14 September 2009 GAWC World Cities Ranking List Diserio com Archived from the original on 22 February 2010 Retrieved 14 September 2009 PIGJE pigje com pk Archived from the original on 30 September 2014 Retrieved 25 February 2016 a b c d e Inskeep Steve 2012 Instant City Life and Death in Karachi Penguin Publishing Group p 284 ISBN 978 0 14 312216 6 Retrieved 30 October 2016 a b c d e f g Paracha Nadeem F 26 September 2014 Visual Karachi From Paris of Asia to City of Lights to Hell on Earth Dawn Retrieved 8 March 2016 a b Abbas Qaswar Karachi World s most dangerous city India Today Retrieved 24 October 2016 Karachi Pakistan s largest city with a population of approx 3 0 crore Mumbai has 2 crore people is the country s most educated liberal and secular metropolis a b Pakistani journalists face threats from Islamists Deutsche Welle Retrieved 24 October 2016 This all happened in the heart of Karachi a relatively liberal city with a population of more than 15 million Details The World Factbook www cia gov Archived from the original on 10 July 2021 Retrieved 10 July 2021 Mahim Maher 3 November 2013 Karachi s Stone Age proves history didn t start with the Muslims The Express Tribune Retrieved 16 October 2016 a b c d e Askari Sabiah 2015 Studies on Karachi Papers Presented at the Karachi Conference 2013 Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 7744 2 Retrieved 30 October 2016 a b Gayer Laurent 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for City HarperCollins Publishers p 368 ISBN 9789351160861 Archived from the original on 23 December 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2016 a b Port Qasim About Karachi Port Qasim Authority Retrieved 10 February 2014 CENSUS OF INDIA 1941 VOLUME XII SIND PDF Retrieved 6 December 2021 Population According to Religion PDF Census of Pakistan 1951 p 8 22 a b Brunn Stanley 2008 Cities of the World World Regional Urban Development Rowman amp Littlefield p 647 ISBN 978 0 7425 5597 6 Archived from the original on 23 December 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Kotkin Joel The World s Fastest Growing Megacities Forbes a b Falling back Daily Times Archived from the original on 5 August 2011 Retrieved 24 August 2010 a b Chronology for Biharis in Bangladesh Center for International Development and Conflict Management University of Maryland 10 January 2007 Archived from the original on 2 June 2010 Retrieved 6 May 2010 Craig Time Pakistan cracks down on Afghan immigrants fearing an influx as U S leaves Afghanistan The Washington Post Retrieved 24 October 2016 Qaim Ali Shah the chief minister of Sindh province in southern Pakistan said at a news conference in February that there were already more than 1 million illegal Afghan immigrants living in Karachi a rapidly growing city of 22 million people Ministry of Finance Government of Pakistan finance gov pk a b Karachi Pakistan Lloyd s City Risk Index 2015 2025 Centre for Risk Studies at the University of Cambridge Judge Business School Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 Retrieved 23 November 2016 The importance of Karachi The Express Tribune The Express Tribune 12 October 2015 Retrieved 13 June 2016 a b c Karachi Mega Cities Preparation Project PDF Report Asian Development Bank Archived from the original PDF on 6 August 2011 Retrieved 1 January 2009 a b The Karachi Coastline Case The Trade amp Environment Database Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 1 January 2009 a b Karachi Step motherly treatment Pakistan and Gulf Economist Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2007 a b Drivers of Long Term insecurity and Instability in Pakistan Urbanization Rand Corporation 2014 p 18 ISBN 978 0 8330 8750 8 Isani Aamna Haider 5 May 2013 Fashion through the ages Dawn Pakistan Retrieved 23 November 2018 Karachi the next fashion capital Retrieved 23 November 2018 Khalid Kiran Pakistan s fashionistas We aren t revolutionaries CNN Retrieved 23 November 2018 Waraich Omar 11 November 2009 Fashion Week Comes to Pakistan Amid Mayhem Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 23 November 2018 Gayer Laurent 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City Oxford University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0 19 023806 3 a b c 2011 brings a violent and bloody year of ethnic conflict to Karachi Pakistan Public Radio International 19 January 2012 Retrieved 16 October 2016 a b c ur Rehman Zia 7 November 2015 Crime Down in Karachi Paramilitary in Pakistan Shifts Focus The New York Times Archived from the original on 3 January 2022 Retrieved 22 October 2016 Karachi s ranking improves on World Crime Index www geo tv Retrieved 2 May 2021 Pakistan Emergency Situational Analysis District Karachi PDF Alhasan Systems 2015 p 14 a b The Dutch East India Company VOC and Diewel Sind Pakistan in the 17th and 18th centuries Floor W Institute of Central amp West Asian Studies University of Karachi 1993 1994 p 49 a b The Dutch East India Company s shipping between the Netherlands and Asia 1595 1795 2 February 2015 Retrieved 14 June 2015 Whitfield Susan 2018 Silk Slaves and Stupas Material Culture of the Silk Road University of California Press p 118 ISBN 978 0 520 95766 4 Tan Chung Geng Yinzeng 2005 India and China twenty centuries of civilization interaction and vibrations Project of History of Indian Science Philosophy and Culture Centre for Studies in Civilizations ISBN 978 81 87586 21 0 The Month 1912 Sun Zhixin Jason Hsing I tien Liu Cary Y Lu Pengliang Tseng Lillian Lan ying Hong Yang Yates Robin D S Zhang Zhonglin Yukina 2017 Age of Empires Art of the Qin and Han Dynasties Metropolitan Museum of Art p 14 ISBN 978 1 58839 617 4 Hasan Arif 7 May 2009 From Rambagh to Arambagh The News International Karachi Archived from the original on 2 August 2020 Retrieved 17 April 2020 Kapoor Subodh 2002 Encyclopaedia of Ancient Indian Geography Cosmo Publications ISBN 978 81 7755 298 0 Pithawalla Maneck B 1950 An Introduction to Karachi Its Environs and Hinterland Times Press Pithawalla Maneck B 1959 A Physical and Economic Geography of Sind The Lower Indus Basin Sindhi Adabi Board Samad Rafi U 2002 The Greeks in ancient Pakistan Indus Publications ISBN 978 969 529 001 9 McCrindle John Watson 1896 The Invasion of India by Alexander the Great as Described by Arrian Q Curtius Diodoros Plutarch and Justin Being Translations of Such Portions of the Works of These and Other Classical Authors as Describe Alexander s Campaigns in Afghanistan the Punjab Sindh Gedrosia and Karmania A Constable and Company Pithawalla Maneck B 1938 Identification and description of some old sites in Sind and their relation with the physical geography of the region Vincent William 1797 The Voyage of Nearchus from the Indus to the Euphrates Collected from the Original Journal Preserved by Arrian Containing an Account of the First Navigation Attempted by Europeans in the Indian Ocean T Cadell jun and W Davies p 180 Houtsma M Th 1993 E J Brill s First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 09790 2 Lambrick H T 1975 Sind A General Introduction Sindhi Adabi Board ISBN 9780195772203 Pithawalla Maneck B 1950 An Introduction to Karachi Its Environs and Hinterland Times Press Karachi History www houstonkarachi org Houston Karachi Sister City Association Archived from the original on 7 November 2011 Cunningham Alexander 28 March 2013 The Ancient Geography of India The Buddhist Period Including the Campaigns of Alexander and the Travels of Hwen Thsang Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 05645 8 Elliot Henry Miers 1853 Appendix to the Arabs in Sind Vol III Part 1 of the Historians of India sic S Solomon amp Company p 222 Bloom Jonathan Blair Sheila 2009 Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art amp Architecture Three Volume Set OUP USA ISBN 978 0 19 530991 1 Baillie Alexander Francis 1890 Kurrachee Karachi Past Present and Future Thacker Spink Balocu Nabi Bak h shu K h anu 2002 Sindh Studies Historical Pakistan Study Centre University of Sindh ISBN 978 969 8135 13 3 Haider Azimusshan 1974 History of Karachi With Special Reference to Educational Demographical and Commercial Developments 1839 1900 Haider a b c d Gayer Laurent 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 935444 3 Karachi Pakistan 1984 Brief Sketch of Karachi the Nerve Center of Pakistan The Corporation A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh G Bell and Sons 1874 Preserving cultural assets DAWN COM 10 February 2008 Retrieved 13 April 2020 Sampark Journal of Global Understanding Sampark Literary Services 2004 The Herald Pakistan Herald Publications 1993 Murray publishers John 1859 A handbook for India Part ii Bombay The Persian Gulf Pilot J D Potter 1875 Davies Charles E 1997 The Blood red Arab Flag An Investigation Into Qasimi Piracy 1797 1820 University of Exeter Press ISBN 978 0 85989 509 5 Huttenback Robert A 1962 British Relations with Sind 1799 1843 An Anatomy of Imperialism University of California Press p 3 Sunderlal Pandit 1 August 2018 British Rule in India SAGE Publishing India ISBN 978 93 5280 803 8 Laurent Gayer 2014 pp 42 Neill John Martin Bladen 1846 Recollections of Four Years Service in the East with H M Fortieth Regiment Retrieved 27 November 2009 Baillie Alexander Francis 1890 Kurrachee Karachi Past Present and Future Thacker Spink Preserving cultural assets Dawn Pakistan 10 February 2008 Retrieved 13 April 2020 a b c d e Gayer Laurent 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 935444 3 Celebrating Karachi s Goan connection The Express Tribune tribune com pk 16 April 2022 Retrieved 24 April 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Anwar Farhan ed 2018 LOCAL AND CITY GOVERNMENT HANDBOOK PROVINCE OF SINDH AND KARACHI CITY PDF Shehri ISBN 978 969 9491 14 6 Blood Peter R 1996 Pakistan A Country Study DIANE Publishing p 96 ISBN 978 0 7881 3631 3 Bowden Rob 2005 Settlements of the Indus River Capstone Classroom ISBN 978 1 4034 5723 3 a b c d e f g h i j Heitzman James 31 March 2008 The City in South Asia Routledge p 129 ISBN 978 1 134 28963 9 a b Narayanan Yamini 19 November 2015 Religion and Urbanism Reconceptualising sustainable cities for South Asia Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 75541 8 Clarke S H 1858 The Scinde Railway and Indus Flotilla Companies Their Futility and Hollowness Demonstrated Also an Exposure of the Delusion which Exists Respecting the Five Per Cent Guarantee which Insures No Dividend Whatever to the Respective Shareholders Richardson Brothers Askari Sabiah ed 2015 Studies on Karachi Papers Presented at the Karachi Conference 2013 Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 325 ISBN 978 1 4438 8450 1 Herbert Feldman 1970 Karachi Through a Hundred Years The Centenary History of the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry 1860 1960 2 ed Karachi Oxford University Press 1960 Ansari s Trade amp Industrial Directory of Pakistan Ansari Publishing House a b c d e f g h i Gayer Laurent 1 July 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 023806 3 a b Markovits Claude 22 June 2000 The Global World of Indian Merchants 1750 1947 Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 43127 9 Zamindar Vazira Fazila Yacoobali 14 November 2007 The Long Partition and the Making of Modern South Asia Refugees Boundaries Histories Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 51101 8 a b Zamindar Vazira Fazila Yacoobali 2010 The Long Partition and the Making of Modern South Asia Refugees Boundaries Histories Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 13847 5 Barbara A Weightman 2011 p page needed Party Government and Freedom in the Muslim World Three Articles Reprinted from the Encyclopaedia of Islam 2d Ed V 3 Parts 49 50 Brill Archive 1968 p 37 Planning Commission The Second Five Year Plan 1960 65 Karachi Govt Printing Press 1960 p 393 Planning Commission Pakistan Economic Survey 1964 65 Rawalpindi Govt Printing Press 1965 p 212 Gayer Laurent 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 935444 3 Population Growth and Policies in Mega cities Karachi UN 1988 Khan Nichola 15 July 2017 Cityscapes of Violence in Karachi Publics and Counterpublics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 086978 6 a b c Udupa Sahana McDowell Stephen D 14 July 2017 Media as Politics in South Asia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 351 97221 5 Yusuf Farhat July 1990 Afghan refugees population in Pakistan Journal of Biosocial Science Journals cambridge org 22 3 269 279 doi 10 1017 S0021932000018654 PMID 2169475 S2CID 33827916 Retrieved 6 May 2010 Khan Nichola 5 April 2010 Mohajir Militancy in Pakistan Violence and Transformation in the Karachi Conflict Routledge ISBN 9781135161927 Minahan James 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations Ethnic and National Groups Around the World Vol 3 Greenwood pp 1277 78 ISBN 978 0 313 32111 5 PAKISTANIS ATTACK 30 HINDU TEMPLES The New York Times 8 December 1992 Retrieved 1 December 2017 Dawn com Imtiaz Ali 7 February 2020 Karachi jumps 22 points since last year on global crime index Dawn Pakistan Retrieved 4 March 2020 KARACHI Karachi s earthquake history 26 October 2005 A story behind every name The News International Pakistan 21 October 2009 Archived from the original on 7 October 2015 Retrieved 14 June 2015 The case of Karachi Pakistan PDF University College London Retrieved 1 June 2016 Birch Hayley 22 July 2015 Where is the world s hottest city The Guardian Retrieved 3 March 2016 a b With Early Warning Karachi Cools a Heat Wave Threat Voice of America 14 November 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 Bhutto Fatima 27 September 2020 Pakistan s Most Terrifying Adversary Is Climate Change The New York Times Retrieved 25 May 2021 a b Climate data Karachi Pakistan Meteorological Department Government of Pakistan Archived from the original on 22 April 2010 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Report Dawn 18 August 2006 Rain havoc in Karachi DAWN COM Archived from the original on 26 October 2010 Karachi Extremes Pakistan Pakistan Meteorological Department Retrieved 1 November 2020 Flood Forecasting Division Lahore Retrieved 25 February 2020 Weather Atlas Weather Atlas Archived from the original on 28 February 2020 Retrieved 4 April 2020 Krachi Extremes Pakistan Meteorological Department Retrieved 1 November 2020 41780 Karachi Airport Pakistan ogimet com OGIMET 29 March 2022 Retrieved 30 March 2022 Gayer Laurent 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for the City Oxford University Press p 33 a b Askari Sabiah ed 2015 Studies on Karachi Papers Presented at the Karachi Conference 2013 Cambridge University Scholars ISBN 978 1 4438 8450 1 Annexures PDF City District Government Karachi Archived from the original PDF on 16 September 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2014 a b c d e f g Karachi City Diagnostic livability sustainability and growth in the city of Karachi PDF Pakistan Development Update 45 49 November 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2017 Global city GDP rankings 2008 2025 PricewaterhouseCoopers Archived from the original on 13 May 2011 Retrieved 12 February 2010 Kaiser Bengali Mahpara Sadaqat Provincial Accounts of Pakistan Methodology and Estimates 1973 2000 Social Policy and Development Center Archived from the original on 10 April 2008 Retrieved 1 January 2009 Sindh Balochistan s share in GDP drops Dawn Group of Newspapers Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 1 January 2009 Sindh s GDP estimated at Rs 240 billion Dawn Archived from the original on 14 June 2008 Retrieved 1 January 2009 Sindh share in GDP falls by 1pc Dawn Group of Newspapers 2 December 2004 Retrieved 1 January 2009 When Karachi Bleeds Pakistan s Economy Bleeds Center for International Private Enterprise 22 August 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2016 The Secret Strength of Pakistan s Economy Bloomberg 12 April 2012 Retrieved 2 November 2016 Hasan Arif April 2015 Land contestation in Karachi and the impact on housing and urban development Environment and Urbanization 27 1 217 230 doi 10 1177 0956247814567263 PMC 4540218 PMID 26321797 Bouchet Max Liu Sifan Parilla Joseph Kabbani Nader June 2018 Global Metro Monitor 2018 PDF Brookings Institution Retrieved 23 November 2018 Euromonitor 2018 research Euromonitor research Archived from the original on 25 June 2018 Retrieved 13 May 2018 Mckinsey Urban Mapping cities Mckinsey Urban Maping Intelligence fDi fDi s Asia Pacific Cities of the Future 2017 18 the winners fdiintelligence com Retrieved 23 November 2018 Lieven Anatol 2011 Pakistan a hard country 1st ed New York PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 61039 021 7 OCLC 710995260 What s Next For Asia s Best Performing Stock Market Bloomberg L P 20 October 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2016 a b Amos Owen Thomas 2005 pp 121 Welcome to KTN TV KTN Archived from the original on 17 January 2007 Retrieved 20 February 2008 Sindh TV Sindh TV Archived from the original on 2 January 2008 Retrieved 20 February 2008 Daily Express Urdu Newspaper Latest Pakistan News Breaking News express com pk Retrieved 5 August 2017 World Bank report Karachi termed most business friendly Dawn Group of Newspapers Archived from the original on 11 October 2007 Retrieved 15 October 2007 How important is Karachi to Pakistan Business Recorder 5 May 2012 Archived from the original on 21 September 2016 Retrieved 2 November 2016 Hasan Arif The case of Karachi Pakistan PDF Retrieved 2 November 2016 Sayeed Asad Husain Khurram Raza Syed Salim INFORMALITY IN KARACHI S LAND MANUFACTURING AND TRANSPORT SECTORS PDF United States Institute for Peace Retrieved 2 November 2016 Informal manufacturing is more prevalent than formal manufacturing in terms of the number of people employed land area covered by informal enterprises and a number of enterprises Output data are unavailable but proxy data suggest that informal manufacturing is far smaller in terms of capital employed and value added The Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce amp Industry Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce amp Industry Archived from the original on 7 September 2011 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Full Service Interactive Agency MAGSNET LIMITED Epb gov pk Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Welcome To S I T E Association of Industry of Karachi Site association org Archived from the original on 1 October 2015 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Welcome Korangi Association of Trade amp Industry Retrieved 10 February 2014 Landhi Org Landhi Association of Trade and Industry Retrieved 10 February 2014 North Karachi Association of Trade amp Industry North Karachi Association of Trade amp Industry Retrieved 10 February 2014 Federal B Area Association of Trade amp Industry Federal B Area Association of Trade amp Industry 17 December 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Construction approved Korangi Creek Industrial Park land up for grabs The Express Tribune APP 20 November 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2014 BQATI Bin Qasim Association of Trade amp Industry Bin Qasim Association of Trade amp Industry Retrieved 10 February 2014 Export Processing Zone Authority Pakistaneconomist com Archived from the original on 1 October 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Welcome To EPZA Epza gov pk Archived from the original on 17 February 2014 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Textile City Textile City Archived from the original on 12 February 2014 Retrieved 10 February 2014 a b site com pk Sindh Industrial Trading Estates Retrieved 10 February 2014 Janjua 13 October 2015 Karachi contributing 70 of federal tax revenue a myth Business Recorder Archived from the original on 4 November 2016 Retrieved 2 November 2016 The importance of Karachi The Express Tribune 12 October 2015 Retrieved 2 November 2016 a b c Federal Board of Revenue Year Book 2006 2007 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 September 2010 Retrieved 12 April 2009 note Revenue collected from Karachi includes revenue from some other areas since the Large Tax Unit LTU Karachi and Regional Tax Offices RTOs Karachi Hyderabad Sukkur amp Quetta cover the entire province of Sindh and Balochistan dead link a b c d e f Karachi s population fiction and reality The Express Tribune 14 September 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 2017 census shows ratio of Urdu speaking populace decreasing in Karachi The News International Retrieved 11 February 2023 TABLE 11 POPULATION BY MOTHER TONGUE SEX AND RURAL URBAN PDF Pakistan Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original PDF on 7 August 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Jonah Blank Christopher Clary amp Brian Nichiporuk 2014 Stephen P Cohen 2004 Karachi Findpk com Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Karachi Population 2016 World Population Review Retrieved 25 February 2016 Karachiites lash out against census results on social media Samaa TV samaa tv Retrieved 24 January 2018 Assembly rejects initial census results The Nation Retrieved 24 January 2018 After PPP and PSP MQM Pakistan rejects census 2017 results NewsOne 29 August 2017 Archived from the original on 22 January 2018 Retrieved 24 January 2018 a b c STATISTICS THE KARACHI LAHORE CENSUS CONUNDRUM Dawn 10 September 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 Laurent Gayer 2014 pp 26 Population size and growth of major cities Population Census Organization Government of Pakistan Archived from the original on 22 December 2010 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Note The 1998 census showed a population of about nine million but this did not include workers living in Karachi but registered as living elsewhere in Pakistan by the National Database and Registration Authority as well as large numbers of Afghan refugees Bangladeshis Indians Nepalis and others incl Filipinos Iranians Iraqis Burmese The Urban Frontier Karachi NPR 2 June 2008 Retrieved 17 January 2010 a b Census commissioner rejects political parties concerns Dawn 10 November 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 Sindh at a Glance 2016 PDF Sindh Bureau of Statistics Government of Sindh p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2017 TABLE 4 AREA POPULATION BY SEX SEX RATIO POPULATION DENSITY URBAN PROPORTION HOUSEHOLD SIZE AND ANNUAL GROWTH RATE OF SINDH PDF Pakistan Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2021 Retrieved 22 October 2021 Blood Peter R 1986 Pakistan A Country Study DIANE Publishing p 96 ISBN 978 0 7881 3631 3 Hinnells John 2005 The Zoroastrian Diaspora Religion and Migration Oxford University Press p 193 ISBN 978 0 19 151350 3 Gayer Laurent 2014 Karachi Ordered Disorder and the Struggle for City HarperCollins Publishers India ISBN 9789351160861 BHAVNANI NANDITA 2014 3 THE MAKING OF EXILE SINDHI HINDUS AND THE PARTITION OF INDIA Westland p 434 ISBN 9789384030339 Bhavnani Nandita 2014 The Making of Exile Sindhi Hindus and the Partition of India Westland pp 39 40 ISBN 9789384030339 In June 1947 it was initially proposed to settle the muhajirs on a large plot of land in Bunder Road Extension a well heeled suburb of Karachi This was however a residential area dominated by affluent Sindhi Hindus who became nervous about such a large number of discontented lower class Muslim refugees living in such close proximity to them Given their influence the Hindus were able to sway the government into transferring the proposed resettlement site to Lyari a more congested and lower middle class area Tan Tai Yong Kudaisya Gyanesh 2000 The Aftermath of Partition in South Asia Routledge pp 234 235 ISBN 978 0 415 17297 4 In 1947 as the new Federal Government of Pakistan struggled to establish itself in Karachi a large number of Muslim refugees from northern India came and settled down in the city Karachi became the preferred destination of northern Indian Urdu speaking Muslims who hoped to find white collar employment opportunities in the cosmopolitan commercial and port city a b Khalidi Omar Autumn 1998 From Torrent to Trickle Indian Muslim Migration to Pakistan 1947 97 Islamic Studies 37 3 339 352 JSTOR 20837002 M R Narayan Swamy 5 October 2005 Where Malayalees once held sway amp Updates at Daily News and Analysis Retrieved 10 February 2014 Political and ethnic battles turn Karachi into Beirut of South Asia Crescent Merinews com Archived from the original on 30 November 2012 Retrieved 24 November 2012 Obaid Chinoy Sharmeen 17 July 2009 Karachi s Invisible Enemy PBS Retrieved 24 August 2010 In a city of ethnic friction more tinder The National 24 August 2009 Archived from the original on 16 January 2010 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Columnists The Pakhtun in Karachi Time 28 August 2010 Retrieved 8 September 2011 http www thefridaytimes com beta2 tft article php issue 20110715 amp page 5 Archived 9 December 2012 at archive today thefridaytimes UN body police baffled by minister s threat against Afghan refugees 10 February 2009 Retrieved 24 January 2012 a b Jaffrelot Christophe 2016 Pakistan at the Crossroads Domestic Dynamics and External Pressures Columbia University p 128 ISBN 978 0 231 54025 4 Laurent Gayer 2014 pp 44 Lieven Anatol 2021 An Afghan Tragedy The Pashtuns the Taliban and the State Survival Global Politics and Strategy 63 3 7 36 doi 10 1080 00396338 2021 1930403 Pakistan Christian Post Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine accessed 5 August 2017 From South to South Refugees as Migrants The Rohingya in Pakistan HuffPost 12 May 2008 Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Bengali and Rohingya leaders gearing up for LG polls The News Archived from the original on 14 August 2015 Retrieved 18 December 2015 Rehman Zia Ur 23 February 2015 Identity issue haunts Karachi s Rohingya population Dawn Retrieved 26 December 2016 Their large scale migration had made Karachi one of the largest Rohingya population centres outside Myanmar but afterwards the situation started turning against them a b c d Conflicted Karachi Dawn 26 August 2010 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Ramzi Shanaz 9 July 2001 The melting pot by the sea Dawn archived from the original on 15 July 2004 retrieved 26 July 2009 After Slayings Americans in Karachi Weigh Choices Los Angeles Times 12 June 2009 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Warsaw Business Journal Online Portal wbj pl 13 June 2011 Archived from the original on 4 March 2014 Retrieved 10 February 2014 Jaroszynska Kirchmann Anna D 2004 The Exile Mission ISBN 9780821415269 Retrieved 14 June 2015 a b Religions in Pakistan The World Factbook Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 9 July 2013 a b Curtis Lisa Mullick Haider 4 May 2009 Reviving Pakistan s Pluralist Traditions to Fight Extremism The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 31 July 2011 a b a b c Religions Islam 95 other includes Christian and Hindu 2 Ahmadiyyah 5 CIA The World Factbook on Pakistan 2010 Retrieved 28 August 2010 International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Nanyang Technological University Singapore Have Pakistanis Forgotten Their Sufi Traditions by Rohan Bedi April 2006 Peter van der Veer Handbook of Religion and the Asian City Aspiration and Urbanization in the Twenty First Century California University Press 2015 ISBN 9780520961081 p 388 Khan Nichola 2016 Cityscapes of Violence in Karachi Publics and Counterpublics Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190869786 With a population of over 23 million Karachi is also the world s largest Muslim city the world s seventh largest conurbation CENSUS OF INDIA 1941 VOLUME XII SIND PDF Retrieved 15 September 2021 Mapping the Global Muslim Population A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World s Muslim Population Pew Research Center 7 October 2009 Retrieved 28 August 2010 Miller Tracy ed October 2009 Mapping the Global Muslim Population A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World s Muslim Population PDF Pew Research Center Archived from the original PDF on 8 November 2009 Retrieved 28 August 2010 Pakistan International Religious Freedom Report 2008 United States Department of State 19 September 2008 Retrieved 28 August 2010 Who are Pakistan s Christians BBC 28 March 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Barbosa Alexandre Moniz 5 September 2001 A Dash of Goa in Pakistan The Times of India Retrieved 17 November 2016 The city however has roughly between 12 000 and 15 000 Goans a number that has remained fairly constant for the past 190 years since the first wave of migrating Goans in dhows washed up on its shores in 1820 and made it their home Population of Hindus in the World pakistanhinducouncil org Archived from the original on 18 May 2013 Retrieved 21 April 2013 Hinnells John 28 April 2005 The Zoroastrian Diaspora Religion and Migration Oxford University Press p 199 ISBN 978 0 19 151350 3 Hinnells John 28 April 2005 The Zoroastrian Diaspora Religion and Migration Oxford University Press p 202 ISBN 978 0 19 151350 3 Why is India s wealthy Parsi community vanishing BBC 9 January 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Two decades from now Pakistan will have no Parsis In Karachi 16 562 more vehicles hit the roads each month Pakistan Today 24 December 2011 span, 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.