Skip to main content

Karachi

Karachi (kərä´chē), city (1998 pop. 9,269,265), largest city and former capital of Pakistan, SE Pakistan, on the Arabian Sea near the Indus River delta. The capital of Sind prov., it is Pakistan's chief seaport and industrial center, a transportation, commercial, and financial hub, and a military headquarters. It has a large automobile assembly plant, an oil refinery, a steel mill, shipbuilding, railroad yards, jute and textile factories, printing and publishing plants, media and entertainment industries, food processing plants, and chemical and engineering works. Karachi airport is one of the busiest in Asia. Karachi has a university and other educational institutions; the national museum, with a fine archaeological collection; and the tomb of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, founder of Pakistan.

An old settlement, Karachi was developed as a port and trading center by Hindu merchants in the early 18th cent. In 1843 it passed to the British, who made it the seat of the Sind government. Steady improvements in harbor facilities made Karachi a leading Indian port by the late 19th cent., while agricultural development of the hinterland gave it a large export trade. Karachi served as Pakistan's capital from 1947, when the country gained independence, until 1959, when Rawalpindi became the interim capital pending completion of Islamabad. The political base of the Bhutto family (see Bhutto, Zulfikar Ali and Bhutto, Benazir), Karachi has been troubled since the 1980s by violence between local Sindhis and the descendants of muhajirs, the Muslim immigrants who fled to Pakistan following partition in 1947. The lawlessness in the city was further aggravated by Sunni-Shiite fighting beginning in the 1990s and by ethnic tensions involving migrant Pashtuns in the 21st cent. Government efforts beginning in the late 1990s to suppress the violence have been only sporadically successful.
Karachi City and seaport on the Arabian Sease Pakistan; capital of Sind province. Settled in the early 18th century, in 1843 it passed to the British, who developed it as a major port. It was the first capital of Pakistan in 1947 and remains the country's largest city. Karachi is a trading centre for agricultural produce. Industries: steel, engineering, oil refining, motor vehicles, textiles, publishing. Pop. (1998) 9,269,265.
Karachi •Apache, catchy, patchy, scratchy, snatchy •hibachi, Karachi, Liberace, starchy, vivace •sketchy, stretchy, tetchy •squelchy • Strachey •caliche, Campeche, peachy, preachy, screechy •bitchy, itchy, kitschy, pitchy, Richie, titchy, twitchy •Medici • semplice •blotchy, bocce, notchy, splotchy •grouchy, pouchy, slouchy •sotto voceviva voce •Bertolucci, smoochy, Vespucci •archduchy, duchy, touchy •churchy 
Cite this article 
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

مدینے کا شہید

پچھلے موسم میں ایک نامور پاکستانی دانشور بھارت گے، دورے کے اختتام پر ایک غیر سرکاری تنظیم نے دہلی میں اُن کےاعزاز میں ایک نشست کا اہتمام کیا جس میں پاکستانی دانشور کو ”خراجِ عقیدت” پیش کرنے کے لیے چوٹی کے بھارتی دانشور تشریف لائے، نشست کے آخر میں جب سوال وجواب کا سلسلہ شروع ہوا تو ایک ہندو نے اپنے معزز مہمان سے ایک عجیب سوال پوچھا،پوچھنے والے نے پوچھا۔” یہاں بھارت میں تو مسلمان مساجد میں نماز ادا کرتےہیں وہاں پاکستان میں کہاں پڑھتے ہیں؟” پاکستانی دانشور نے اِس سوال کو مذاق سمجھ کر فلک شگاف قہقہ لگایا لیکن جب اُنہیں محفل کی طرف سے کوئی خاص ردعمل موصول نہ ہوا تو اُنہوں نے کھسیانا ساہوکر سوالی کی طرف دیکھا ،ہندو دانشور کے چہرے پر سنجیدگی کے ڈھیرلگے تھے، پاکستانی دانشور نے بے چینی سے پہلو بدل کر جواب دیا۔ ”ظاہر ہے مسجدوں ہی میں پڑھتے ہیں۔” یہ جواب سن کر ہندو دانشور کھڑا ہوا،ایک نظر حاضرین پر ڈالی اور پھر مسکرا کر بولا۔” لیکن ہماری اطلاعات کے مطابق تو پاکستانی مسجدوں میں نماز پڑھنے والوں کو گولی ماردی جاتی ہے۔” ہندو دانشور کا یہ تبصرہ پاکستانی دانشور کو سکڈ میزائل کی طرح لگا اُس کا ماتھا ...

Karachi – the city where your ‘mochi’ can also mend your soul

The 42-year-old Khan took over his father’s mochi business after the latter retired four years ago. PHOTO: SARAH FAZLI Karachi is home to the most diverse of populations across Pakistan. Muslims, non-Muslims, Shia, Sunni, Muhajir, Balochi, Sindhi, Pashtun, Kashmiri, and also many other minority groups; many a people have found home here. Some of them love Karachi, others hate it. But Karachi has embraced them all – giving them the freedom to be themselves. Some folks weave dreams during the day. Some have adopted a nocturnal lifestyle and work during the night. Some read Jane Austen, while some unfalteringly quote  Faiz Ahmad Faiz . Some revere and find solace in its shrines. And yet, others destroy the very sanctity of those shrines. Some try to restore its glory, while others try to slaughter this goose to steal all its golden eggs. All of this happens at once, and this diversity is what makes Karachi both beautiful and painful. Vibrant and colourful, yet...

From spotlight to backstage: the MMA’s decline into obscurity

At best, the alliance can only hope for marginal gains in the 2018 elections. After almost a decade, the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA), which emerged as the third-biggest political force in the 2002 general elections, is back as a five-member religio-political alliance to contest the polls in 2018, comprising the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), Jamaat-i- Islami (JI), Jamiat Ahle Hadith and the Islami Tehreek (IT). It was back in early 2000, after the toppling of Nawaz Sharif in October 1999, that the General Pervez Musharraf-led military government, which had vowed to never allow the return of the exiled leadership of the Pakistan People’s Party and the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), was desperate to find an alternative political force. The JI was on good terms with the military government. Then-JI chief, the late Qazi Hussain Ahmed, even went on a tour of the United States, where he spoke to think-tanks in a bid to portray his image as a mode...