|
Introducing
Pakistan
Pakistan
displays some of Asia’s most
magnificent landscapes as it stretches
from the Arabian Sea, its southern
border, to some of the world’s
most spectacular mountain ranges
in the north. Pakistan is also home
to sites that date back to word’s
earliest settlements rivaling those
of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia.
Location
Located
in South Asia, Pakistan shares an
eastern border with India and a
north-eastern border with China.
Iran makes up the country’s
south-west border, and Afghanistan
runes along its western and northern
edge. The Arabian Sea is Pakistan’s
southern boundary with 1,064 km
of coastline.
The country has a total area of
796,095 sq km and is nearly four
times the size of the United Kingdom.
From Gwadar Bay in it’s south-eastern
corner, the country extends more
than 1,800 km to the Khunjerab Pass
on China’s border.
Basic
Facts
| Official
Name |
Islamic
Republic of Pakistan |
 |
| Father
of the Nation |
Quaid-i-Azam
Muhammad Ali Jinnah (1876-1948) |
| National
Poet |
Allama
Muhammad Iqbal (1877-1938) |
| Head
of the State |
Asif
Ali Zardari, President |
| Head
of Government |
Syed
Yousaf Raza Gilani, Prime
Minister |
| Capital |
Islamabad |
| Area |
| Total |
796,095
Sq. km. |
| Punjab |
205,344 Sq.
km. |
| Sindh |
140,914 Sq.
km. |
| Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
74,521 Sq.
km. |
| Balochistan |
347,190
Sq. km. |
| Federally
Administered Tribal
Areas |
27,220 Sq.
km. |
| Islamabad
(Capital) |
906 Sq.
km. |
|
| Population |
153.96
million (E) |
| Administrative
Setup |
Pakistan
is divided into four provinces
viz., Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab,
Sindh and Balochistan. The
tribal belt adjoining Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
is managed by the Federal
Government and is named
FATA i.e., Federally Administered
Tribal Areas. Azad Kashmir
and Northern Areas have
their own respective political
and administrative machinery,
yet certain of their subjects
are taken care of by the
Federal Government through
the Ministry of Kashmir
Affairs and Northern Areas.
Provinces of Pakistan are
further divided into Divisions
and Districts
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| |
Divisions |
Districts |
| Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
7 |
24 |
| Punjab |
8 |
34 |
| Sindh |
5 |
21 |
| Balochistan |
6 |
22 |
While FATA
consist of 13 Areas/Agencies
and Azad Kashmir and Northern
Areas have 7 and 5 Districts
respectively. |
| Religion |
95%
Muslims, 5% others. |
| Currency |
Pak.
Rupee. |
| Imports |
Industrial
equipment, chemicals, vehicles,
steel, iron ore, petroleum,
edible oil, pulses, tea. |
| Exports |
Cotton,
textile goods, rice, leather
items carpets, sports
goods, handi-crafts, fish
and fish prep. and fruit |
| Languages |
Urdu (National)
and English (Official) |
| Literacy
rate |
53% |
| Government |
Parliamentary
form |
| Parliament |
Parliament
consists of two Houses i.e.,
the Senate (Upper House)
and the National Assembly
(Lower House).
Back
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The Senate
is a permanent legislative
body and symbolises a process
of continuity in the national
affairs. It consists of
100 members. The four Provincial
Assemblies, Federally Administered
Tribal Areas and Federal
Capital form its electoral
college.
The National
Assembly has a total membership
of 342 elected through adult
suffrage (272 general seats,
60 women seats and 10 non-Muslim
seats). |
| Pakistan
National Flag |
Dark
green with a white vertical
bar, a white crescent and
a five-pointed star in the
middle. The Flag symbolizes
Pakistan's profound commitment
to Islam, the Islamic world
and the rights of religious
minorities. |
| National
Anthem |
Approved
in August, 1954
Verses Composed by: Abdul
Asar Hafeez Jullundhri
Tune Composed by: Ahmed G.
Chagla
Duration: 80 seconds |
| State
Emblem |
The
State Emblem consists of:
1. The crescent and star which
are symbols of Islam
2. The shield in the centre
shows four major crops
3. Wreath surrounding the
shield represents cultural
heritage and
4. Scroll contains Quaid's
motto: Unity Faith, Discipline |
| Pakistan's
Official Map |
Drawn
by Mian Mahmood Alam Suhrawardy
(1920-1999) |
| National
Flower |
Jasmine. |
| National
Tree |
Deodar
(Cedrus Deodara). |
| National
Animal |
Markhor. |
| National
Bird |
Chakor
(Red-legged partridge) |
| Flora |
Pine,
Oak, Poplar, Deodar, Maple,
Mulberry |
| Fauna |
The
Pheasant, Leopard, Deer, Ibex,
Chinkara, Black buck, Neelgai,
Markhor, Marco-Polo sheep,
Green turtles, River &
Sea fish, Crocodile, Waterfowls |
| Popular
games |
Cricket,
Hockey, Football, Squash. |
| Tourist's
resorts |
Murree,
Quetta, Hunza, Ziarat, Swat,
Kaghan, Chitral and Gilgit |
| Archaeological
sites |
Moenjo
Daro, Harappa, Taxila, Kot
Diji, Mehr Garh, Takht Bhai. |
| Major
Cities |
Islamabad,
Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar,
Quetta, Rawalpindi, Hyderabad,
Faisalabad, Multan and Sialkot |
| Major
Crops |
Cotton,
Wheat, Rice and Sugarcane |
| Agricultural
Growth Rate |
7.5%
in 2004-05 |
| Total
cropped area |
22.94
million hectares |
| Industry |
Textiles,
Cement, Fertiliser, Steel,
Sugar, Electric Goods, Shipbuilding |
| Energy |
| Major
sources |
Electricity
(Hydel, Thermal, Nuclear)
Oil, Coal, and
Liquid Petroleum Gas |
| Power
Generating Capacity |
19,389
MW |
|
| Health |
| Hospitals |
916 |
| Dispensaries |
4,600 |
| Basic
Health Units (BHUs) |
5,301 |
| Maternity
& Child Health
Centres |
906 |
| Rural
Health Centres (RHCs) |
552 |
| Tuberculosis
(TB) Centres |
289 |
| Hospital
Beds |
99,908 |
| Doctors
(registered) |
113,206 |
| Dentists
(registered) |
6,127 |
| Nurses
(registered |
48,446 |
| Paramedics |
23,559 |
| Lady
Health Workers |
6,741 |
|
| Education |
| Primary Schools |
155,000 |
| Middle Schools |
28,728 |
| High Schools |
16,100 |
| Secondary Vocational
Institutions |
636 |
| Arts & Science
Colleges |
1,066 |
| Professional Colleges |
382 |
| Universities |
51 |
|
| Transport
& Communication |
| Total length of
roads |
259, 758 km |
| Pakistan Railway
network |
7,791 km |
| Locomotives |
580 |
| Railway stations |
781 |
| Pakistan International
Airlines |
Covers 38 international
and 24 domestic stations
with a fleet of 49
planes. |
| Major Airports |
8 (Islamabad,
Karachi, Lahore, Quetta,
Peshawar, Multan,
Faisalabad and Gwadar) |
|
| Seaports |
| International |
2 (Karachi
and Bin Qasim) Gwadar
deep sear port is
under construction |
| Fish Harbours-Cum-Mini
Ports |
3 (Minora,
Gawadar, and Keti
Bandar) |
|
| Communications |
| Post Offices |
12,170 |
| Telephone connections |
5,052,000 |
| Public Call Offices |
217,597 |
| Telegraph offices |
299 |
| Internet Connections |
2 million |
| Mobile Phones |
10,542,641 |
|
| Employment |
| Total Labour force |
46.84 million |
| Employed Labour
Force |
43.22 million |
| Agriculture Sector |
18.60 million |
| Manufacturing &
Mining sector |
5.96 million |
| Construction |
2.52 million |
| Trade |
6.39 million |
| Transport |
2.48 million |
| Others |
6.98 million |
|
| Media |
| Print
Media (In accordance
with Central Media
List) |
|
Dailies |
540 |
| Weeklies |
444 |
| Fortnightlies |
55 |
| Monthlies |
268 |
| News
Agencies |
| |
Official |
APP |
| |
Private |
PPI, NNI, On Line
and Sana. |
| Electronic
Media |
| |
TV Centres |
Five
TV centres at Islamabad,
Lahore, Peshawar,
Quetta and Karachi
covering 88.58% population
and 49 re-broadcasting
stations. |
| |
Pakistan Television |
4
channels (PTV-I, PTV-II
(PTV World), PTV-III
& PTV National |
| |
Radio
Stations |
Public: |
Total 25, Home services
in 19 languages. External
Services cover 81
countries in 15 languages |
| Private: |
Radio stations 22.
Pakistan
Electronic Media
Regulatory Authority
has so far awarded
72 FM Radio broadcast
licenses including
nine (9) specialized
subject licenses
for universities.
Fifteen (15) licenses
have been granted
for the establishment
of Satellite TV
Channels. Nine Satellite
TV channels have
started their operation. |
| |
Cable Operators |
900 |
|
| Banks |
| Central Bank |
State Bank of Pakistan |
| Nationalized
Scheduled Banks |
First Woman Bank
Ltd. |
| National Bank of
Pakistan |
| Specialized
Banks |
Zari Taraqiati Bank
(ZTBL) |
| Industrial Development
Bank of Pakistan |
| Punjab Provincial
Cooperative Bank Ltd |
| Private
Scheduled Banks |
Askari Commercial
Bank Limited |
| Bank Al-Falah Limited |
| Bolan Bank Limited |
| Faysal Bank Limited |
| Bank Al-Habib Limited |
| Metropolitan Bank
Limited |
| KASB Commercial
Bank Limited |
| Prime Commercial
Bank Limited |
| PICIC Commercial
Bank Limited |
| Soneri Bank Limited |
| Union Bank Limited |
| Meezan Bank Limited |
| Saudi-Pak Commercial
Bank Limited |
| Crescent Commercial
Bank Limited |
| Dawood Bank Limited |
| NDLC-IFIC Bank Limited
(NIB) |
| Allied Bank of Pakistan
Limited |
| United Bank Limited |
| Habib Bank Limited |
| SME
Banks |
| Foreign
Banks |
ABN
Amro Bank N.V |
| Albaraka Islamic
Bank BSC (EC) |
| American Expresss
Bank Limited |
| Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi
Limited |
| Citibank N.A |
| Deutsche Bank A.G. |
| Habib Bank A.G.
Zurich |
| Hongkong & Shanghai
Banking Corp Limited |
| Oman International
Bank S.O.A.G |
| Rupali Bank Limited |
| Standard Chartered
Bank Limited |
| Development
Financial Institutions |
Pakistan Industrial
Credit and Investment
Corp. Limited |
| Pak Kuwait Investment
Company (Pvt) Limited |
| Pak Libya Holding
Company (Pvt) Limited |
| Pak-Oman Investment
Company (Pvt) Limited |
| Saudi Pak Industrial
and Agricutural Investment
Company (Pvt) Limited |
| Investment
Banks |
Crescent Investment
Bank Limited |
| First International
Investment Bank Limited |
| Atlas Investment
Bank Limited |
| Security Investment
Bank Limited |
| Fidelity Investment
Bank Limited |
| Prudential Investment
Bank Limited |
| Islamic Investment
Bank Limited |
| Asset Investment
Bank Limited |
| Al-Towfeek Investment
Bank Limited |
| Jahangir Siddiqui
Investment Bank Limited |
| Franklin Investment
Bank Limited |
| Orix Investment
Bank (Pak) Limited |
|
| Famous
Mountain Peaks |
| |
Height |
World Rating |
| K-2 (Chagori) |
8616 m |
2nd |
| Nanga Parbat |
8125 m |
8th |
| Gasherbrum-I |
8068 m |
11th |
| Broad Peak |
8065 m |
12th |
| Gasherbrum-II |
8047 m |
14th |
| Gasherbrum-III |
7952 m |
15th |
| Gasherbrum-IV |
7925 m |
16th |
| Disteghil Sar |
7885 m |
20th |
| Kunyang Kish |
7852 m |
22nd |
| Masherbrum (NE) |
7821 m |
24th |
| Rakaposhi |
7788 m |
27th |
| Batura I |
7785 m |
28th |
| Kanjut Sar |
7760 m |
29th |
| Saltoro Kangri |
7742 m |
33rd |
| Trivor |
7720 m |
36th |
| Tirich Mir |
7708 m |
41st |
|
| Famous
Mountain Passes |
| Location |
Province |
| The Khyber Pass |
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
| The Kurram Pass |
FATA |
| The Tochi Pass |
FATA |
| The Gomal Pass |
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
| The Bolan Pass |
Balochistan |
| The Lowari Pass |
Chitral (Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa) |
| The Khunjrab Pass |
Northern Areas |
|
| Rivers |
| |
Length |
| The Indus |
2,896 km |
| Jhelum |
825 km |
| Chenab |
1,242 km |
| Ravi |
901 km |
| |
| Sutlej |
1,551 km |
| Beas (tributary
of Sutlej) |
398 km |
|
| Famous
Glaciers |
| |
Length |
| Siachin |
75 km |
| Batura |
55 km |
| Baltoro |
65 km |
|
| Deserts |
| Name |
Location/Province |
| Thar |
Sindh |
| Cholistan |
Punjab |
| Thal |
Punjab |
|
| Lakes |
| Name |
Location/Province |
| Manchar |
Sindh |
| Keenjar |
Sindh |
| Hanna |
Balochistan |
| Saif-ul-Maluk |
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
| Satpara |
Northern Areas |
| Kachura |
Northern Areas |
|
| Major
Dams |
| Name |
Location/Province |
| Mangla Dam |
Punjab |
| Tarbela Dam |
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
| Warsak Dam |
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa |
|
Land
& People
Back
to top
Pakistan
is a land of many splendours.
The scenery changes northward
from coastal beaches, lagoons
and mangrove swamps in the
south to sandy deserts, desolate
plateaus, fertile plains,
dissected upland in the middle
and high mountains with beautiful
valleys, snow-covered peaks
and eternal glaciers in the
north.
The variety of landscape
divides Pakistan into six
major regions:
the
North High Mountainous Region, the
Western Low Mountainous
Region, the Balochistan
Plateau, the Potohar
Uplands, the Punjab
and the Sindh Plains.
High Mountain Region: Stretching
in the North, from east
to west, are a series of
high mountain ranges which
separate Pakistan from China,
Russia and Afghanistan.
They include the Himalayas,
the Karakoram and the Hindukush.
The Himalayas spread in
the north-east and the Karakoram
rises on the north-west
of the Himalayas and extends
eastward up to Gilgit. The
Hindu Kush mountains lie
to the north-west of the
Karakoram, but extend eastward
into Afghanistan. With the
assemblage of 35 giant peaks
over 24,000 ft. high (7,315m),
the region is the climbers'
paradise. Many summits are
even higher than 26,000
ft.(7,925 m) and the highest
K-2(Mt.Godwin Austin) is
exceeded only by Mt.Everest.
Inhospitable and technically
more difficult to climb
than even Everest, they
have taken the biggest toll
of human lives in the annals
of mountaineering.
The
passes are rarely lower
than the summit of Mt. Blanc
and several are over 18,000
ft. (5,485 m). The Karakoram
Highway, that passes through
the mountains, is the highest
trade route in the world.
Besides, the region abounds
in vast glaciers, large
lakes and green valleys
which have combined at places
to produce holiday resorts
such as Gilgit, Hunza and
Yasin in the west and the
valleys of Chitral, Dir,
Kaghan and Swat drained
by rivers Chitral, Pankkora,
Kunhar and Swat respectively
in the east. Dotted profusely
with scenic spots having
numerous streams and rivulets,
thick forests of pine and
junipers and a vast variety
of fauna and flora, the
Chitral, Kaghan and Swat
valleys have particularly
earned the reputation of
being the most enchanting
tourist resorts of Pakistan.
South of the high mountains,
the ranges lose their height
gradually and settle down
finally in the Margalla
hills (2,000-3,000 ft.)
in the vicinity of Islamabad,
the Capital of Pakistan,
and Swat and Chitral hills,
north of river Kabul. Although
the climate of the region
is extremely diverse, according
to aspect and elevation,
yet as a whole it remains
under the grip of severe
cold from November to April.
May, June and July are pleasant
months. The southeren slopes
receive heavy rainfall and
consequently are covered
with forest of deodar, pine,
poplar and willow trees.
The more northerly ranges
and north-facing slopes
receive practically no rains
and are, therefore, without
trees.
There is a considerable
trans-humane from the mountains
to the plains in winter
and from plains to the mountains
in summer. The permanent
settlers grow corn, maize,
barely, wheat and rice on
the terraced fields and
also raise orchards of apples,
apricots, peaches and grapes.
Peaks and Glaciers Eric
Shipton, a great mountainer
who perished in Pakistan's
Northern Areas, wrote in
his account. To describe
this region is to indulge
in superlatives, for everywhere
you look are the highest,
the longest and the largest
mountains, glaciers and
rivers in the world.
Making some allowance for
Shipton's tendency towards
slight exaggeration, born
out of awe and fascination,
the fact remains that Pakistan
boasts of the largest share
of the highest mountain
peaks in the world. Its
own highest peak, the famed
and dreaded K-2, is the
second highest in the world,
being just some `ropes'
short of the Everest in
Nepal. With due respect
to the Everest, K-2 is regarded
as far more firmidable to
climb than its relatively
facile superior. Three of
the mightiest mountain systems-
the Hindukush, the Karakorams
and the Himalayas- adorn
the forehead of Pakistan.
The second highest peak
of Himalayas, as also of
Pakistan, is the Nanga Parbat
which literally means the
"Naked Mountain".
Pakistan has seven of the
16 tallest peaks in Asia.
The statistics are simply
baffling: 40 of the world's
50 highest mountains are
in Pakistan; in Baltistan
over 45 peaks touch or cross
the 20,000 foot mark; in
Gilgit within a radius of
65 miles, there are over
two dizens peaks ranging
in height between 18,000
to 26,000 feet.
The awe-inspiring beauty
provided inspiration to
a Pakistani writer to observe
lyrically, "in Pakistan's
lofty mountain regions,
reaching for the sky doesn't
seem too ambitious".
Pakistan's Eight Thousanders:
There are a total of 14
main peaks soaring above
8000 metres in the world.
Out of these, 8 are located
in Nepal, 5 in Pakistan
and 1 in China. It has become
prestigious to make these
peaks as targets by mountaineers
every year. In fact, successful
climb over these peaks is
considered an enviable measure
of their attainment. By
far, the largest number
of mountaineering expeditions
visiting Pakistan has been
coming from Japan.
K-2 (8611m) It is the second
highest mountain the world.
It was first attempted by
Martin Conway's expedition
in 1902 which was composed
of British, Austrian and
Swiss climbers. Ashraf Aman
was the first Pakistani
climber to climb on top
of K-2 with five other climbers
of the Jap-Pak expedition
in 1977, with Ichire Yoshizawa
as its leader and Isao Shinkai
as the technical leader.
Nanga Parbat (8125m) It
is also known as the killer
mountain. It claimed the
life of AF Mummery, leader
of an expedition and two
porters in 1895. Since then
Nanga Parbat has cost scores
of lives, though quite a
few have successfully scaled
it. Harmann Buhl was the
first to set foot on this
formidable peak in 1953.
In spite of its bloody past
record, Nanga Parbat is
still the most sought after
target. Its dangerous challenge
seems to add spurs to the
determination of climbers.
Hidden Peak (8068m) This
peak was first attempted
in 1892 by Martin Conway's
expedition who gave it this
name because it was hidden
by the neighbouring peaks
of Baltoro glacier. The
peak was first conquered
in 1958 by an American expedition.
Nick clinch was the leader.
The climbing leaders Peter
Schoening and Kanfuran were
the two summiters.
Broad Peak (8047m) This
peak was also named by Martin
Conway and was first attempted
by a German expedition headed
by Karl Herligk offer in
1954. The peak was climbed
in 1957 when the entire
team of four climbers with
Marcus Schmuck scaled it.
In the far-north of Pakistan
are valleys which are closed
within the silent, brooding
forts of these mountains
and are almsot as high as
the mountains themselves.
Here dwell, from times immemorial,
various tribes differing
in race and culture. If
one tribe has Mongol features,
its neighbour is obviously
Aryan. Separated by insurmountable
obstacles, these tribes
very often live a totally
land-locked existence blissfully
unaware of the world beyond.
But, a traveller is simply
wonderstruck by one common
element - Islam.
Every-where you hear the
familiar Assalam-o-Alaikum,
the universal Muslim greeting
and welcome. and no matter
how small or poor the inhibtation,
the same muezzin's call
to prayer "Allah-u-Akbar
rings in the thin mountain
air, issuing from the minarets
of mosques hidden in the
inaccessible fold of these
ranges pulsates an infinite
variety of life; animals
reptiles, birds, insects
and plants. There is, of
course, the yak which is
an enormous but docile beast,
at once the beast of burden
and food. It is notable
in the wildlife of these
regions, but, its hunting
is strictly restricted and
in many areas totally forbidden
by law.
Glaciers:
Pakistan has more glaciers
than any other land outside
the North and South Poles.
Pakistan's glacial area
covers some 13,680 sq.km
which represents an average
of 13 per cent of mountain
regions of the upper Indus
Basin. Pakistan's glaciers
can rightly claim to possess
the greatest mass and collection
of glaciated space on the
face of earth. In fact,
in the lap of the Karakoram
of Pakistan alone there
are glaciers whose total
length would add up to abvoe
6,160 sq. km. To put it
more precisely, as high
as 37 per cent of the Karakoram
area is under its glaciers
against Himalayas' 17 per
cent and European Alps'
22 per cent. The Karakorams
have one more claim to proclaim;
its souther flank (east
and west of the enormous
Biafo glacier) has a concentration
of glaciers which works
out to 59 per cent of its
area.
There is a historical reason
for the fact that we, and
the world outside, are better
acquainted with glaciers
in the Nanga Parbat region.
It is through this region,
hazardous though it is,
that man has trudged to
and fro since the beginning
of his civilized history
of movement and migration.
The Siachin glacier is 75
kms. The Hispar (53 kms)
joins the Biafo at the Hispar
La (5154.16 metres (16,910
ft) to form an ice corridor
116.87 kms (72 miles) long.
The Batura, too is 58 kms
in length. But, the most
outstanding of these rivers
of ice is the 62 kms Baltoro.
This mighty glacier fed
by some 30 tributaries constitues
a surface of 1291.39 sq.
kms. Western Low Mountains
Region.
These western low mountains
spread from the Swat and
Chitral hills in a north-south
direction (along which alexander
the Great led his army in
327 B.C) and cover a large
portion of the North-West
Frontier Province. North
of the river Kabul their
altitude ranges from 5,000
to 6,000 ft. in Mohamand
and Malakand hills. The
aspect of these hills is
exceedingly dreary and the
eye is everywhere met by
the dry rivers between long
rows of rocky hills and
crags, scantily covered
with coarse grass, scrub
wood and dwarf palm. South
of the river Kabul spreads
the Koh-e-Sofed Range with
a general height of 10,000
ft. Its highest peak, Skaram,
being 15,620 ft. South of
Koh-e-Sofed are the Kohat
and Waziristan hills (5,000
ft) which are traversed
by the Kurram and Tochi
rivers, and are bounded
on south by Gomal River.
The whole area is a tangle
of arid hills composed of
limestone and sandstone.
South of the Gomal River,
the Sulaiman Mountains run
for a distance of about
483 kilomaters in a north-south
direction, Takht-e-Sulaiman
(11,295 ft.) being its highest
peak. At the southern end
lie the low Marri and Bugti
hills. The area shows an
extraordinary landscape
of innumerable scarps, small
plateaus and steep craggy
out-crops with terraced
slopes and patches of alluvial
basins which afford little
cultivation.
Kirthar Range South of
the Sulaiman Mountains is
the Kirthar Range which
forms a boundary between
the Sindh plain and the
Balochistan plateau. It
consists of a series of
ascending ridges running
generally north to south
with broad flat valleys
in-between. The highgest
peak named Kutte ji Kabar
(dog's grace is 6,878 ft.
above sea level. Bleak,
rugged and barren as these
hills are, they afford some
pasturage for flocks of
sheep and goats. The valleys
are green with grass and
admit cultivation up to
a highest of 4,000 ft. Historical
Passes The western mountains
have a number of passes,
which are of special geographical
and historical interest.
For centuries, they have
been watching numerous kings,
generals and preachers passing
through them and the events
that followed brought about
momentous changes in the
annals of mankind.
Climate
Although the country is
in the monsoon region, it
is arid, except for the
southern slopes of the Himalayas
and the sub-Mountainous
tract which have a rainfall
from 76 to 127 cm. Balochistan
is the driest part of the
country with an average
rainfall of 21 cm. On the
southern ranges of the Himalayas,
127 cm. of precipitation
takes place, while under
the lee of these mountains
(Gilgit and Baltistan) rainfall
is hardly 16 cm. Rainfall
also occurs from western
cyclonic distrubances originating
in the Mediterranean.
It is appreciable in the
western mountains and the
immediate forelying area;
hre the rainfall average
ranges from 27 to 76 cm.
The contribution of these
western distrurbances to
rainfall over the plains
is about 4 cm. A large part
of the precipitation in
the northern mountain system
is in the form of snow which
feeds the rivers. The all-pervasive
aridity over most of Pakistan,
the predominant influence
on the life and habitat
of the people, coupled with
the climatic rhythm, characteristic
of a monsoon climate, are
conducive to homogeneity
of the land.
Seasons The four
well-marked seasons in Pakistan
are:-
(i) Cold season (December
to March).
(ii) Hot season (April to
June).
(iii) Monsoon season (July
to September).
(iv) Post-Monsoon season
(October and November).
The cold season sets in
by the middle of December.
This period is characterised
by fine weather, bracing
air-low humidity and large
diurnal range of temperature.
Winter distrubances in this
season accordingly cause
fairly widespread rain.
Average mimimum and maximum
temperatures are 4 oC and
18 oC, though on occasions
the mercury falls well below
freezing point. The winter
sun is glorious. The hot
season is usually dry. Relative
humidity in May and June
varies from 50 per cent
in the morning to 25 per
cent or less in the afternoon.
The temperature soars to
40 oC and beyond. The highest
recorded temperature at
Jaccobabad in June is 53
oC. While the interior is
blazing hot, the temperature
along the sea coast ranges
between 25 oC to 35 oC,
but the humidity persists
around 70 to 80 per cent.
The south-west monsoon
reaches Pakistan towards
the beginning of July and
establishes itself by the
middle of the month. The
strength of the monsoon
current increases form June
to July; it then remains
steady, and starts retreating
towards the end of August,
though occasionally, it
continues to be active even
in September when some of
the highest floods of the
Indus Basin have been recorded.
From the middle of September
to the middle of November
is the transitory period
which may be called the
post-monsoon season.
In October, the maximum
temperature is of the order
of 34 oC to 37 oC all over
Pakistan, while the nights
are fairly cool with the
minimum temperature around
16 oC. In the month of November,
both the maximum and the
mimimum temperatures fall
by about 6 oC and the weather
becomes pleasant. October
and November are by far
the driest months all over
the plains of Pakistan.
People and Population
The population of the country
as on 1st January, 1994,
is estimated at about 124.45
million with its male/female
ratio of 52.50:47.50 per
cent. The current growth
rate of 3.0 per cent is
the highest among nine most
populous countries of the
world. The population is
expected to reach 150 million
by the year 2000. Density
per square kilometre is
156 persons. Literacy rate
is estimated to be 36.8
per cent. Of the four provinces,
with 25.8 per cent of land
area of the country, Punjab
has 56.5 per cent of the
total population; Sindh,
with 17.7 per cent of land
area, has 22.6 per cent:
Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, (including FATA) with
12.8 per cent of land area,
has 15.7 per cent; Balochistan,
with 43.6 per cent of land
area, has 5.1 per cent.
Thus, Punjab is the most
densely (240 persons per
sq km) populated province,
follwed by Sindh and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.
Balochistan is the least
populated province, with
19 persons per square kilomatre.
The overall population density
of the country is 156 persons
per square kilometre as
estimated in 1994. Sindh
is the urbainised province
with 43 per cent of the
people living in urban areas
including Karachi City.
The urban population of
Punjab is 28 per cent followed
by Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, 21 per cent, and
Balochistan 16 per cent.
About 67 per cent of the
total urban population of
the country lives in 28
cities with population of
100,000 and above, while
57 per cent of the total
urban population lives in
12 cities with population
lives in 12 cities with
population of 200,000 and
above. Age Composition According
to the Labour Force Survey,
1990-91, 46.93 of the population
is under 15 years of age;
49.66 per cent is between
the age groups of 15 and
64 years, while 3.41 per
cent comprises persons 65
years old and above. |
Pakistan's
Historical Background
Back
to top
HISTORY IN CHRONOLOGICAL
ORDER
Pakistan emerged
on the world map on August 14,1947.
It has its roots into the remote
past. Its establishment was the
culmination of the struggle by Muslims
of the South-Asian subcontinent
for a separate homeland of their
own and its foundation was laid
when Muhammad bin Qasim subdued
Sindh in 711 A.D. as a reprisal
against sea pirates that had taken
refuge in Raja Dahir's kingdom.
The advent of Islam further strengthened
the historical individuality in
the areas now constituting Pakistan
and further beyond its boundaries.
Stone Age Some of the earliest relics
of Stone Age man in the subcontinent
are found in the Soan Valley of
the Potohar region near Rawalpindi,
with a probable antiquity of about
500,000 years. No human skeleton
of such antiquity has yet been discovered
in the area, but the crude stone
implements recovered from the terraces
of the Soan carry the saga of human
toil and labor in this part of the
world to the inter-glacial period.
These Stone Age men fashioned their
implements in a sufficiently homogenous
way to justify their grouping in
terms of a culture called the Soan
Culture. About 3000 B.C, amidst
the rugged wind-swept valleys and
foothills of Balochistan, small
village communities developed and
began to take the first hesitant
steps towards civilization. Here,
one finds a more continuous story
of human activity, though still
in the Stone Age.
These pre-historic men established
their settlements, both as herdsmen
and as farmers, in the valleys or
on the outskirts of the plains with
their cattle and cultivated barley
and other crops. Red and buffer
Cultures Careful excavations of
the pre-historic mounds in these
areas and the classification of
their contents, layer by layer,
have grouped them into two main
categories of Red Ware Culture and
Buff Ware Culture. The former is
popularly known as the Zhob Culture
of North Balochistan, while the
latter comprises the Quetta, Amri
Nal and Kulli Cultures of Sindh
and South Balochistan. Some Amri
Nal villages or towns had stone
walls and bastions for defence purposes
and their houses had stone foundations.
At Nal, an extensive cemetery of
this culture consists of about 100
graves. An important feature of
this composite culture is that at
Amri and certain other sites, it
has been found below the very distinctive
Indus Valley Culture. On the other
hand, the steatite seals of Nal
and the copper implements and certain
types of pot decoration suggest
a partial overlap between the two.
It probably represents one of the
local societies which constituted
the environment for the growth of
the Indus Valley Civilization.
The pre-historic site of Kot Diji
in the Sindh province has provided
information of high significance
for the reconstruction of a connected
story which pushes back the origin
of this civilization by 300 to 500
years, from about 2500 B.C.. to
at least 2800 B.C. Evidence of a
new cultural elements of pre-Harappan
era has been traced here. Pre-Harappan
Civilization When the primitive
village communities in the Balochistan
area were still struggling against
a difficult highland environment,
a highly cultured people were trying
to assert themselves at Kot Diji,
one of the most developed urban
civilizations of the ancient world
which flourished between the years
2500 and 1500 B.C. in the Indus
Valley sites of Moenjodaro and Harappa.
These Indus Valley people possessed
a high standard of art and craftsmanship
and a well developed system of quasi
pictographic writing, which despite
continuing efforts still remains
undeciphered. The imposing ruins
of the beautifully planned Moenjodaro
and Harappa towns present clear
evidence of the unity of a people
having the same mode of life and
using the same kind of tools. Indeed,
the brick buildings of the common
people, the public baths, the roads
and covered drainage system suggest
the picture of a happy and contented
people. Aryan Civilization In or
about 1500 B.C., the Aryans descended
upon the Punjab and settled in the
Sapta Sindhu, which signifies the
Indus plain. They developed a pastoral
society that grew into the Rigvedic
Civilization. The Rigveda is replete
with hymns of praise for this region,
which they describe as "God
fashioned". It is also clear
that so long as the Sapta Sindhu
remained the core of the Aryan Civilization,
it remained free from the caste
system. The caste institution and
the ritual of complex sacrifices
took shape in the Gangetic Valley.
There can be no doubt that the Indus
Civilization contributed much to
the development of the Aryan civilization.
Gandhara Culture The discovery of
the Gandhara grave culture in Dir
and Swat will go a long way in throwing
light on the period of Pakistan's
cultural history between the end
of the Indus Culture in 1500 B.C.
and the beginning of the historic
period under the Achaemenians in
the sixth century B.C. Hindu mythology
and Sanskrit literary traditions
seem to attribute the destruction
of the Indus civilization to the
Aryans, but what really happened,
remains a mystery. The Gandhara
grave culture has opened up two
periods in the cultural heritage
of Pakistan: one of the Bronze Age
and the other of the Iron Age. It
is so named because it presents
a peculiar pattern of living in
hilly zones of the Gandhara region
as evidenced in the graves. This
culture is different from the Indus
Culture and has little relations
with the village culture of Balochistan.
Stratigraphy as well as the artifacts
discovered from this area suggest
that the Aryans moved into this
part of the world between 1,500
and 600 B.C. In the sixth century
B.C., Buddha began his teachings,
which later on spread throughout
the northern part of the South-Asian
subcontinent. It was towards the
end of this century, too, that Darius
I of Iran organized Sindh and Punjab
as the twentieth satrapy of his
empire.
There are remarkable similarities
between the organizations of that
great empire and the Mauryan empire
of the third century B.C., while
Kautilya's Arthshastra also shows
a strong Persian influence, Alexander
of Macedonia after defeating Darius
III in 330 B.C. had also marched
through the South-Asian subcontinent
up to the river Beas, but Greek
influence on the region appears
to have been limited to contributing
a little to the establishment of
the Mauryan empire. The great empire
that Asoka, the grandson of Chandragupta
Maurya, built in the subcontinent
included only that part of the Indus
basin which is now known as the
northern Punjab. The rest of the
areas astride the Indus were not
subjugated by him. These areas,
which now form a substantial part
of Pakistan, were virtually independent
from the time of the Guptas in the
fourth century A.D. until the rise
of the Delhi Sultanate in the thirteenth
century. Gandhara Art Gandhara Art,
one of the most prized possessions
of Pakistan, flourished for a period
of 500 years (from the first to
the fifth century A.D.) in the present
valley of Peshawar and the adjacent
hilly regions of Swat, Buner and
Bajaur. This art represents a separate
phase of the cultural renaissance
of the region. It was the product
of a blending of Indian, Buddhist
and Greco-Roman sculpture. Gandhara
Art in its early stages received
the patronage of Kanishka, the great
Kushan ruler, during whose reign
the Silk Route ran through Peshawar
and the Indus Valley, bringing great
prosperity to the whole area. Advent
of Islam The first followers of
prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon
him), to set foot on the soil of
the South-Asian subcontinent, were
traders from the coast land of Arabia
and the Persian Gulf, soon after
the dawn of Islam in the early seventh
century A.D.
DAWN OF ISLAM
The first permanent Muslim foothold
in the subcontinent was achieved
with Muhammad bin Qasim's conquest
of Sindh in 711 A.D. An autonomous
Muslim state linked with the Umayyed,
and later, the Abbassid Caliphate
was established with jurisdiction
extending over southern and central
parts of present Pakistan. Quite
a few new cities were established
and Arabic was introduced as the
official language. At the time of
Mahmud of Ghazna's invasion, Muslim
rule still existed, though in a
weakened form, in Multan and some
other regions. The Ghaznavids (976-1148)
and their successors, the Ghaurids
(1148-1206), were Central Asian
by origin and they ruled their territories,
which covered mostly the regions
of present Pakistan, from capitals
outside India. It was in the early
thirteenth century that the foundations
of the Muslim rule in India were
laid with extended boundaries and
Delhi as the capital. From 1206
to 1526 A.D., five different dynasties
held sway. Then followed the period
of Mughal ascendancy (1526-1707)
and their rule continued, though
nominally, till 1857. From
the time of the Ghaznavids, Persian
more or less replaced Arabic as
the official language. The economic,
political and religious institutions
developed by the Muslims bore their
unique impression. The law of the
State was based on Shariah and in
principle the rulers were bound
to enforce it. Any long period of
laxity was generally followed by
reinforcement of these laws under
public pressure. The impact of Islam
on the South-Asian subcontinent
was deep and far-reaching. Islam
introduced not only a new religion,
but a new civilization, a new way
of life and new set of values. Islamic
traditions of art and literature,
of culture and refinement, of social
and welfare institution, were established
by Muslim rulers throughout the
subcontinent. A new language, Urdu,
derived mainly from Arabic and Persian
vocabulary and adopting indigenous
words and idioms, came to be spoken
and written by the Muslims and it
gained currency among the rest of
the Indian population.
URDU IS THE NATIONAL LANGUAGE
OF PAKISTAN
Apart from religion, Urdu also
enabled the Muslim community during
the period of its ascendancy to
preserve its separate identity in
the subcontinent.
Muslim Identity -- The question
of Muslim identity, however assumed
seriousness during the decline of
Muslim power in South Asia. The
first person to realize its acuteness
was the scholar theologian, Shah
Waliullah (1703-62). He laid the
foundation of Islamic renaissance
in the subcontinent and became a
source of inspiration for almost
all the subsequent social and religious
reform movements of the nineteenth,
and twentieth centuries. His immediate
successors, inspired by his teachings,
tried to establish a modest Islamic
state in the north-west of India
and they, under the leadership of
Sayyed Ahmad Shaheed Barelvi (1786-1831),
persevered in this direction. British
Expansionism and Muslim Resistance
Meanwhile, starting with the East
India Company, the British had emerged
as the dominant force in South Asia.
Their rise to power was gradual
extending over a period of nearly
one hundred years. They replaced
the Shariah by what they termed
as the Anglo-Muhammadan law whereas
Urdu was replaced by English as
the official language. These and
other developments had great social,
economic and political impact especially
on the Muslims of South Asia. The
uprising of 1857, termed as the
Indian Mutiny by the British and
the War of Independence by the Muslims,
was a desperate attempt to reverse
the adverse course of events. Religious
Institutions The failure of the
1857 War of Independence had disastrous
consequences for the Muslims as
the British placed all the responsibility
for this event on them. Determined
to stop such a recurrence in future,
the British followed deliberately
a repressive policy against the
Muslims. Properties and estates
of those even remotely associated
with the freedom fighters were confiscated
and conscious efforts were made
to close all avenues of honest living
for them. The Muslim response to
this situation also aggravated their
plight. Their religious leaders,
who had been quite active, withdrew
from the mainstream of the community
life and devoted themselves exclusively
to imparting religious education.
Although the religious academies
especially those of Deoband, Farangi
Mahal and Rai Bareilly, established
by the Ulema, did help the Muslims
to preserve their identity, the
training provided in these institutions
hardly equipped them for the new
challenges. Educational Reform The
Muslims kept themselves aloof from
western education as well as government
service. But, their compatriots,
the Hindus, did not do so and accepted
the new rulers without reservation.
They acquired western education,
imbibed the new culture and captured
positions hitherto filled in by
the Muslims. If this situation had
prolonged, it would have done the
Muslims an irreparable damage. The
man to realise the impending peril
was Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (1817-1889),
a witness to the tragic events of
1857. He exerted his utmost to harmonize
British Muslim relations. His assessment
was that the Muslims' safety lay
in the acquisition of western education
and knowledge. He took several positive
steps to achieve this objective.
He founded a college at Aligarh
to impart education on western lines.
Of equal importance was the Anglo-Muhammadan
Educational Conference, which he
sponsored in 1886, to provide an
intellectual forum to the Muslims
for the dissemination of views in
support of western education and
social reform. Similar were the
objectives of the Muhammadan Literary
Society, founded by Nawab Adbul
Latif (1828-93), active in Bengal,
Sir Syed Ahmad Khan's efforts transformed
into a movement, known as the Aligarh
Movement, and it left its imprint
on the Muslims of every part of
the South-Asian subcontinent. Under
its inspiration, societies were
founded throughout the subcontinent
which established educational institutions
for imparting education to the Muslims.
Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was averse
to the idea of participation by
the Muslims in any organized political
activity which, he feared, might
revive British hostility towards
them. He also disliked Hindu Muslim
collaboration in any joint venture.
His disillusionment in this regard
stemmed basically from the Urdu
Hindi controversy of the late 1860s
when the Hindu enthusiasts vehemently
championed the cause of Hindi to
replace Urdu. He, therefore, opposed
the Indian National Congress when
it was founded in 1885 and advised
the Muslims to abstain from its
activities. His contemporary and
a great scholar of Islam, Syed Ameer
Ali (1849-1928), shared his views
about the Congress, but, he was
not opposed to Muslims organizing
themselves politically. In fact,
he organised the first significant
political body of the Muslims, the
Central National Muhammadan Association.
Although, its membership was limited,
it had more than 50 branches in
different parts of the subcontinent
and it accomplished some solid work
for the educational and political
advancement of the Muslims. But,
its activities waned towards the
end of the nineteenth century. The
Muslim League At the dawn of the
twentieth century, a number of factors
convinced the Muslims of the need
to have an effective political organization.
Therefore, in October 1906, a deputation
comprising 35 Muslim leaders met
the Viceroy of the British at Simla
and demanded separate electorates.
Three months later, the All-India
Muslim League was founded by Nawab
Salimullah Khan at Dhaka, mainly
with the objective of safeguarding
the political rights and interests
of the Muslims. The British conceded
separate electorates in the Government
of India Act of 1909 which confirmed
the Muslim League's position as
an All-India party. Attempt for
Hindu Muslim Unity The visible trend
of the two major communities progressing
in opposite directions caused deep
concern to leaders of All-India
stature. They struggled to bring
the Congress and the Muslim League
on one platform. Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad
Ali Jinnah (1876-1948) was the leading
figure among them. After the annulment
of the partition of Bengal and the
European Powers' aggressive designs
against the Ottoman Empire and North
Africa, the Muslims were receptive
to the idea of collaboration with
the Hindus against the British rulers.
The Congress Muslim League rapprochement
was achieved at the Lucknow sessions
of the two parties in 1916 and a
joint scheme of reforms was adopted.
In the Lucknow Pact. as the scheme
was commonly referred to, the Congress
accepted the principle of separate
electorates, and the Muslims, in
return for `weightage' to the Muslims
of the Muslim minority provinces,
agreed to surrender their thin majorities
in the Punjab and Bengal. The post
Lucknow Pact period witnessed Hindu
Muslim amity and the two parties
came to hold their annual sessions
in the same city and passed resolutions
of identical contents.
KHILAFAT MOVEMENT
The Hindu Muslim unity reached
its climax during the Khilafat and
the Non-cooperation Movements. The
Muslims of soothsayer, under the
leadership of the Ali Brothers,
Maulana Muhammad Ali and Maulana
Shaukat Ali, launched the historic
Khilafat Movement after the First
World War to protect the Ottoman
Empire from dismemberment. Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948) linked
the issue of Swaraj (self-government)
with the Khilafat issue to associate
the Hindus with the Movement. the
ensuing Movement was the first countrywide
popular movement.
Although the Movement failed in
its objectives, it had a far-reaching
impact on the Muslims of South Asia.
After a long time, they took united
action on a purely Islamic issue
which momentarily forged solidarity
among them. It also produced a class
of Muslim leaders experienced in
organizing and mobilizing the public.
This experience was of immense value
to the Muslims later during the
Pakistan Movement The collapse of
the Khilafat Movement was followed
by a period of bitter Hindu Muslim
antagonism. The Hindus organized
two highly anti Muslim movements,
the Shudhi and the Sangathan. The
former movement was designed to
convert Muslims to Hinduism and
the latter was meant to create solidarity
among the Hindus in the event of
communal conflict. In retaliation,
the Muslims sponsored the Tabligh
and Tanzim organizations to counter
the impact of the Shudhi and the
Sangathan. In the 1920s, the frequency
of communal riots was unprecedented.
Several Hindu-Muslim unity conferences
were held to remove the causes of
conflict, but, it seemed nothing
could mitigate the intensity of
communalism. Muslim Demand Safeguards
In the light of this situation,
the Muslims revised their constitutional
demands. They now wanted preservation
of their numerical majorities in
the Punjab and Bengal, separation
of Sindh from Bombay, constitution
of Balochistan as a separate province
and introduction of constitutional
reforms in the North-West Frontier
Province. It was partly to press
these demands that one section of
the All-India Muslim League cooperated
with the Statutory commission sent
by the British Government under
the chairmanship of Sir John Simon
in 1927.
SIMON COMMISSION
The other section of the League,
which boycotted the Simon Commission
for its all-White character, cooperated
with the Nehru Committee, appointed
by the All-Parties Conference, to
draft a constitution for India.
The Nehru Report had an extremely
anti-Muslim bias and the Congress
leadership's refusal to amend it
disillusioned even the moderate
Muslims. Allama Muhammad Iqbal Several
leaders and thinkers, having insight
into the Hindu-Muslim question proposed
separation of Muslim India. However,
the most lucid exposition of the
inner feeling of the Muslim community
was given by Allama Muhammad Iqbal(1877-1938)
in his Presidential Address at the
All-India Muslim League Session
at Allahabad in 1930. He suggested
that for the healthy development
of Islam in South-Asia, it was essential
to have a separate Muslim state
at least in the Muslim majority
regions of the north-west. Later
on, in his correspondence with Quaid-i-Azam
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, he included
the Muslim majority areas in the
north-east also in his proposed
Muslim state. Three years after
his Allahabad Address, a group of
Muslim students at Cambridge, headed
by Chaudhry Rehmat Ali, issued a
pamphlet, Now or Never, in which
drawing letters from the names of
the Muslim majority regions, they
gave the nomenclature of "Pakistan"
to the proposed State. Very few
even among the Muslim welcomed the
idea at the time. It was to take
a decade for the Muslims to embrace
the demand for a separate Muslim
state. Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali
Jinnah Meanwhile, three Round Table
Conferences were convened in London
during 1930-32, to resolve the Indian
constitutional problem. The Hindu
and Muslim leaders, who were invited
to these conferences, could not
draw up an agreed formula and the
British Government had to announce
a `Communal Award' which was incorporated
in the Government of India Act of
1935. Before the elections under
this Act, the All-India Muslim League,
which had remained dormant for some
time, was reorganized by Quaid-i-Azam
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who had returned
to India in 1934,after an absence
of nearly five years in England.
The Muslim League could not win
a majority of Muslim seats since
it had not yet been effectively
reorganized. However, it had the
satisfaction that the performance
of the Indian National Congress
in the Muslim constituencies was
bad. After the elections, the attitude
of the Congress leadership was arrogant
and domineering. The classic example
was its refusal to form a coalition
government with the Muslim League
in the United Provinces. Instead,
it asked the League leaders to dissolve
their parliamentary arty in the
Provincial Assembly and join the
Congress. Another important Congress
move after the 1937 elections was
its Muslim mass contact movement
to persuade the Muslims to join
the Congress and not the Muslim
League. One of its leaders, Jawaharlal
Nehru, even declared that there
were only two forces in India, the
British and the Congress. All this
did not go unchallenged.
Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah
countered that there was a third
force in South-Asia constituting
the Muslims. The All-India Muslim
League, under his gifted leadership,
gradually and skillfully started
organising the Muslims on one platform.
Towards a Separate Muslim Homeland
The 1930s witnessed awareness among
the Muslims of their separate identity
and their anxiety to preserve it
within separate territorial boundaries.
An important element that brought
this simmering Muslim nationalism
in the open was the character of
the Congress rule in the Muslim
minority provinces during 1937-39.
The Congress policies in these provinces
hurt Muslim susceptibilities. There
were calculated aims to obliterate
the Muslims as a separate cultural
unit. The Muslims now stopped thinking
in terms of seeking safeguards and
began to consider seriously the
demand for a separate Muslim state.
During 1937-39, several Muslim leaders
and thinkers, inspired by Allama
Iqbal's ideas, presented elaborate
schemes for partitioning the subcontinent
according to two-nation theory.
Pakistan Resolution The All-India
Muslim League soon took these schemes
into consideration and finally,
on March 23, 1940, the All-India
Muslim League, in a resolution,
at its historic Lahore Session,
demanded a separate homeland for
the Muslims in the Muslim majority
regions of the subcontinent. The
resolution was commonly referred
to as the Pakistan Resolution. The
Pakistan demand had a great appeal
for the Muslims of every persuasion.
It revived memories of their past
greatness and promised future glory.
They, therefore, responded to this
demand immediately. Cripps Mission
The British Government recognized
the genuineness of the Pakistan
demand indirectly in the proposals
for the transfer of power after
the Second World War which Sir Stafford
Cripps brought to India in 1942.
Both the Congress and the All-India
Muslim League rejected these proposals
for different reasons. The principles
of secession of Muslim India as
a separate Dominion was however,
conceded in these proposals. After
this failure, a prominent Congress
leader, C. Rajgopalacharia, suggested
a formula for a separate Muslim
state in the Working Committee of
the Indian National Congress, which
was rejected at the time, but later
on, in 1944, formed the basis of
the Jinnah-Gandhi talks. Demand
for Pakistan
PAKISTAN MOVEMENT
The Pakistan demand became popular
during the Second World War Every
section of the Muslim community-men
, women, students, Ulema and businessmen-were
organized under the banner of the
All-India Muslim League. Branches
of the party were opened even in
the remote corners of the subcontinent.
Literature in the form of pamphlets,
books, magazines and newspapers
was produced to explain the Pakistan
demand and distributed widely. The
support gained by the All-India
Muslim League and its demand for
Pakistan was tested after the failure
of the Simla Conference, convened
by the Viceroy, Lord Wavell, in
1945. Elections were called to determine
the respective strength of the political
parties. The All-India Muslim League
election campaign was based on the
Pakistan demand. The Muslim community
responded to this call in an unprecedented
way. Numerous Muslim parties were
formed making united parliamentary
board at the behest of the Congress
to oppose the Muslim League. But
the All-India Muslim League swept
all the thirty seats in the Central
Legislature and in the provincial
elections also, its victory was
outstanding. After the elections,
on April 8-9,1946, the All-India
Muslim League called a convention
of the newly-elected League members
in the Central and Provincial Legislatures
at Delhi. This convention, which
constituted virtually a representative
assembly of the Muslims of South
Asia, on a motion by the Chief Minister
of Bengal, Hussain Shaheed Suhrawardy,
reiterated the Pakistan demand in
clearer terms. Cabinet Plan In early
1946, the British Government sent
a Cabinet Mission to the subcontinent
to resolve the constitutional deadlock.
The Mission conducted negotiations
with various political parties,
but failed to evolve an agreed formula.
Finally, the Cabinet Mission announced
its own Plan, which among other
provisions, envisaged three federal
groupings, two of them comprising
the Muslim majority provinces, linked
at the Centre in a loose federation
with three subjects. The Muslim
League accepted the plan, as a strategic
move, expecting to achieve its objective
in not-too-distant a future. The
All-India Congress also agreed to
the Plan, but, soon realising its
implications, the Congress leaders
began to interpret it in a way not
visualized by the authorise of the
Plan. This provided the All-India
Muslim League an excuse to withdraw
its acceptance of the Plan and the
party observed August 16, as a `Direct
Action Day' to show Muslim solidarity
in support of the Pakistan demand.
Partition Scheme In October 1946,
an Interim Government was formed.
The Muslim League sent its representative
under the leadership of its General
Secretary, Mr. Liaquat Ali Khan,
with the aim to fight for the party
objective from within the Interim
Government. After a short time,
the situation inside the Interim
Government and outside convinced
the Congress leadership to accept
Pakistan as the only solution of
the communal problem. The British
Government, after its last attempt
to save the Cabinet Mission Plan
in December 1946, also moved towards
a scheme for the partition of India.
The last British Viceroy, Lord Louis
Mountbatten, came with a clear mandate
to draft a plan for the transfer
of power.
After holding talks with political
leaders and parties, he prepared
a Partition Plan for the transfer
of power, which, after approval
of the British Government, was announced
on June 3,1947. Emergence of Pakistan
Both the Congress and the Muslim
League accepted the Plan. Two largest
Muslim majority provinces, Bengal
and Punjab, were partitioned. The
Assemblies of West Punjab, East
Bengal and Sindh and in Balochistan,
the Quetta Municipality, and the
Shahi Jirga voted for Pakistan.
Referenda were held in the North-West
Frontier Province and the District
of Sylhet in Assam, which resulted
in an overwhelming vote for Pakistan.
As a result, on August 14,1947,
the new state of Pakistan came into
existence.
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