Karachi is the largest city,
main seaport and the financial Capital of Pakistan and the capital of the
province of Sindh. It is the 20th largest city of the world in terms of metropolitan population, and is Pakistan's
premier centre of banking, Industry and trade.Karachi is also the home of Pakistan's largest
corporations that are involved in Textiles, Shipping, Automotive Industry, Enterainment, Arts, Fashion, Advertising, Publishing, Software Development and Medical Research. It
also serves as a major hub of higher Education in South Asia, and the wider Islamic World Karachi has been
ranked as a Beta world city, as of 2008. Karachi enjoys its prominent position due to its geographical location on a bay, making it the Financial Capital of the country. It is one of the fastest growing cities in the world. It was the original capital of Pakistan until the construction of Islamabad, and is the location of the Port of Karachi, Port Bin Qasim, one of the region's largest and busiest ports. The city's population has increased dramatically at the time of independence when hundreds of thousands of refugees from India came to settle in the city. Karachi city is spread over 3,530 km² (2,193 sq mi) in area. It is locally known as the "City of Lights" (روشنين جو شهر) for its liveliness, and the "City of the Quaid" (شهرِ قائد), having been the birth and burial place of Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, who also made the city his home after Pakistan's independence. History of Karachi
In 1864, the
first telegraphic message was sent from India to England when a direct
telegraph connection was laid between Karachi and London. In 1878,
the city was connected to the rest of British India by rail. Public building
projects such as Frere Hall (1865) and the Empress Market (1890) were
undertaken. In 1876, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, was born in
the city, which by now had become a bustling city with mosques, churches,
courthouses, kota , paved streets and a magnificent harbour. By 1899 Karachi
had become the largest wheat exporting port in the east. The
population of the city was about 105,000 inhabitants by the end of the 19th
century, with a cosmopolitan mix of Muslims, Hindus, Zoroastrians, Christians
and Jews. There were also various linguistic groups such as Urdu speakers, Punjabis
as well as Pashtuns and Balochis. The multi-ethnic mix can be imagined from the
fact that there are more Pashtuns in Karachi than in any city of the North-West
Frontier Province. In addition to local groups there were also immigrants of Persian,
Lebanese, and European background. By the turn of the century, the city faced
street congestion, which led to South West Asia's first tramway system being
laid down in 1900. British colonialists embarked on a number of public works of
sanitation and transportation - such as gravel paved streets, proper drains,
street sweepers, and a network of trams and horse-drawn trolleys. Colonial
administrators also set up military camps, a European inhabited quarter, and
organised marketplaces, of which the Empress Market is most notable. By the time the
new country of Pakistan was formed in 1947, after which the majority of
Karachi's Hindu population were forced to flee to India, Karachi had become a
bustling metropolis with beautiful classical and colonial European styled
buildings lining the city’s thoroughfares. Karachi was chosen as the capital of
Pakistan, which at the time also included modern day Bangladesh, a region
located more than 1,000 km away and not physically connected to Pakistan.
In 1947, Karachi was the focus for settlement by Muslim immigrants from India,
who drastically expanded the city's population and transformed the demographics
and economy. In 1958, the capital of Pakistan was moved from Karachi to Rawalpindi
and then to the newly built Islamabad in 1960. This marked the start of a long
period of decline in the city, marked by a lack of development. Karachi had a
municipal corporation and a Karachi Divisional Council in the 1960s which
developed plans for schools , colleges, road and municipal gardens and parks
development. The Karachi divisional council worked as committees separate for
education, roads, and residential societies development and planning. Ref;
government archives, Sindh for Municipality and divisional administration.
GeographyKarachi is located in the south of Sindh, on the coast of the Arabian Sea. Most of the land comprised largely of flat or rolling plains, with hills on the western and Manora Island and the Oyster Rocks. The Arabian Sea beach lines the southern coastline of Karachi. Mangroves and creeks of the Indus delta can be found towards the south east side of the city. Towards the west and the north is Cape Monze, locally known as Raas Muari, an area marked with projecting sea cliffs and rocky sandstone promontories. Some excellent beaches can also be found in this area. more article for Karachi from Wikipedia
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