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Pakistan -
Islamic Republic of
Pakistan
Pakistan (Urdu:
پاکستان ),
officially the
Islamic Republic of
Pakistan, is a
country in the Greater Middle East
and South Asia. It
is located in the
region where South
Asia converges with
Central Asia and
the Middle East.
It has a 1,046
kilometre (650 mile)
coastline along the
Arabian Sea in
the south, and is
bordered by Afghanistan and
Iran in the
west,
India in the
east and China in the far
northeast.
Pakistan is the
sixth most populous
country in the
world and has
one of the largest
Muslim populations
in the world. It
was part of British India
prior to partition in
1947 and has a long
history of
settlement and
civilization
including the Indus Valley
Civilization.
The region has been
invaded by the
Greeks,
Persians,
Arabs,
Afghans,
Turks, and
Mongols. The
territory was
incorporated into
British India in the
nineteenth century.
Since its
independence, the
country has been
characterized by
periods of
military and
economic growth
interspersed with
political
instability.
The nation was
founded officially
as the
Dominion of Pakistan
in 1947, under the
leadership of
Muhammad Ali Jinnah
and the
Muslim League,
and was renamed the
Islamic Republic
of Pakistan in 1956.
Pakistan is a
founding member of
the
Organization of the
Islamic Conference
(OIC),
South Asian
Association for
Regional Cooperation
(SAARC),
Developing 8
Countries (D8)
and
Economic Cooperation
Organization
(ECO). It is also a
member of the
United Nations
(UN),
World Trade
Organization
(WTO),
G33 developing
countries,
Group of 77
developing nations
(G77) and is a
nuclear power.
Etymology
The name
Pakistan (IPA:
[paːkɪst̪aːn])
means
Land of (the)
Pure in
Urdu and
Persian. It was
coined in 1934 as
Pakistan by
Choudhary Rahmat Ali,
who published it in
his pamphlet
Now or Never.
The name represented
the "thirty million
Muslims of
PAKISTAN,
who live in the five
Northern Units of
(British) India —
Punjab,
Afghania
(also known as
North-West Frontier
Province),
Kashmir,
Sindh,
and
Baluchistan."
History of Pakistan
The
Indus region
which covers much of
Pakistan, was the
site of several
ancient cultures
including the
Neolithic era
Mehrgarh, and
the Bronze era
Indus Valley
Civilization
(2500 BCE - 1500
BCE) at Harappa
and Mohenjo-Daro.
Waves of
conquerors and
migrants including
Harappan,
Indo-Aryan,
Persian,
Grecian,
Saka,
Parthian,
Kushan,
White Hun,
Afghan,
Arab,
Turkics, and
Mughal settled
in the region
throughout the
centuries,
influencing the
locals and being
absorbed among them.
However, while the
eastern provinces of
Punjab and Sindh
became aligned with
Indo-Islamic
civilisation,
the western areas
became culturally
allied with the
Iranic civilisation
of
Afghanistan and
Iran.
The region is a
crossroads of
historic trade
routes, including
the Silk Road. The
Indus Valley
Civilization
collapsed in the
middle of the second
millennium BCE and
was followed by the
Vedic Civilization,
which extended over
much of the Indo-Gangetic
plains. Successive
empires and kingdoms
ruled the region
from the
Achaemenid
Persian empire
around 543 BCE, to
Alexander the Great
in 326 BCE and the
Mauryan empire.
The
Indo-Greek Kingdom
founded by
Demetrius of Bactria
included
Gandhara and
Punjab from 184
BCE, and reached its
greatest extent
under
Menander,
establishing the
Greco-Buddhist
period with advances
in trade and
culture. The city of
Taxila (Takshashila)
became a major
centre of learning
in ancient times -
the remains of the
city, located to the
west of
Islamabad, are
one of the country's
major
archaeological sites.
In 712
CE, the Arab
general
Muhammad bin Qasim
conquered
Sindh and
Multan
in
southern
Punjab. The
Pakistan
government's
official chronology
states that "its
foundation was laid"
as a result of this
invasion.
This would set the
stage for several
successive Muslim
empires in the
Indian subcontinent,
including the
Ghaznavid Empire,
the
Ghorid Kingdom,
the
Delhi Sultanate
and the
Mughal Empire.
During this period,
Sufi
missionaries played
a pivotal role in
converting a
majority of the
regional Buddhist
and Hindu population
to
Islam. The
gradual decline of
the Mughal Empire in
the early eighteenth
century provided
opportunities for
the
Afghans,
Balochis and
Sikhs to
exercise control
over large areas
until the
British East India
Company
gained ascendancy
over South Asia.
The Indian Rebellion of
1857, also known
as the Indian
Mutiny, in 1857 was
the region's last
major armed struggle
against the British
Raj, and it laid the
foundations for the
generally unarmed
freedom struggle led
by the
Indian National
Congress in the
twentieth century.
The
All India Muslim
League rose to
popularity in the
late 1930s amid
fears of
under-representation
and neglect of
Muslims in politics.
On
29 December
1930,
Allama Iqbal's
presidential address
called for an
autonomous "state in
northwestern India
for Indian Muslims,
within the body
politic of India."
Muhammad Ali Jinnah
espoused the
Two Nation Theory
and led the Muslim
League to adopt the
Lahore Resolution
of 1940 (popularly
known as the
Pakistan Resolution),
which ultimately led
to the formation of
an independent
Pakistan. In early
1947, Britain
announced the end of
its
rule in India.
Governor
General
Jinnah
delivering the
opening
address on
11 August
1947 to
the new state
of Pakistan.
The modern state
of Pakistan was
established on
14 August
1947 with two
Muslim-majority
wings in the eastern
and northwestern
regions of the
British Indian
Empire,
separated from the
rest of the country
with a Hindu
majority, and
comprising the
provinces of
Balochistan,
East Bengal, the
North-West Frontier
Province,
West Punjab and
Sindh. The
partition of the
British Indian
Empire resulted
in communal riots
across India and
Pakistan—millions of
Muslims moved to
Pakistan and
millions of Hindus
and
Sikhs moved to
India. Disputes
arose over several
princely states
including
Muslim-majority
Jammu and Kashmir,
whose ruler had
acceded to India
following an
invasion by Pashtun
warriors, leading to
the
First Kashmir War
in 1948. From 1947
to 1956, Pakistan
was a
Dominion in the
Commonwealth of
Nations. The
republic declared in
1956 was stalled by
a
coup d'etat by
Ayub Khan
(1958–69), who was
president during a
period of internal
instability and a
second war with
India in 1965. His
successor,
Yahya Khan
(1969–71) had to
deal with the
cyclone which
caused 500,000
deaths
in East Pakistan.
Economic and
political dissent in
East Pakistan led to violent
political repression
and tensions
escalating into
civil war
(Bangladesh
Liberation War)
(see also
Causes of Separation
of East Pakistan)
and the Indo-Pakistani War
of 1971 and
ultimately the
secession of East
Pakistan as the
independent state of
Bangladesh.
Estimates of the
number of people
killed during this
episode vary
greatly, from
~30,000 to over 2
million depending on
the source.
The two
wings of
Pakistan in
1970; East Pakistan
separated from
the West wing
in 1971 as an
independent Bangladesh.
Civilian rule
resumed from 1972 to
1977 under
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto,
until he was deposed
and later sentenced
to death in what
amounted to a
judicial murder in
1979 by General
Zia-ul-Haq, who
became the country's
third military
president.
Pakistan's
secular policies
were replaced by
Zia's introduction
of the Islamic
Shariah
legal
code, which
increased religious
influences on the
civil service and
the military. With
the death of General
Zia in a plane crash
in 1988,
Benazir Bhutto,
daughter of Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto, was
elected as the first
female Prime
Minister of
Pakistan. Over the
next decade, she
alternated power
with
Nawaz Sharif, as
the country's
political and
economic situation
worsened. Pakistan
sent 5,000 troops to
the 1991
Gulf War as part
of a US led
coalition and
specifically for the
defence of Saudi Arabia.
Military tensions in
the
Kargil conflict
with India were
followed by a
Pakistani military
coup d'état in 1999
in which General
Pervez Musharraf
assumed executive
powers. In 2001,
Musharraf named
himself
President after
the forced
resignation of
Rafiq Tarar.
After the 2002
parliamentary
elections, Musharraf
transferred
executive powers to
newly elected Prime
Minister Zafarullah Khan
Jamali, who was
succeeded in the
2004
Prime-Ministerial
election by Shaukat Aziz,
followed by a
temporary period in
office by Chaudhry Shujaat
Hussain. On 15th
November, 2007 the
National Assembly
completed its tenure
and so a caretaker
government was
appointed with the
former Chairman of
the Senate, Muhammad Mian Soomro
as caretaker Prime
Minister. However,
the December 2007 assassination of
Benazir Bhutto
underscores the
instability of
Pakistan's political
system. On 25th
March 2008
Yousaf Raza Gillani
was sworn in as
Prime Minister.
Government and
politics of Pakistan
The government of
Pakistan was based
on the
Government of India
Act (1935) for
the first nine years
after independence.
The first
Constitution of
Pakistan was
adopted in 1956, but
was suspended in
1958 by General
Ayub Khan. The
Constitution of
1973, was suspended
in 1977 by
Zia-ul-Haq,
re-instated in 1991
and is the country's
most important
document, laying the
foundations of
government. Pakistan
is a
semi-presidential
federal
democratic republic
with
Islam
as the
state religion. The
bicameral
legislature
comprises a
100-member
Senate and a
342-member
National Assembly.
The
President is the
Head of State
and the
Commander in Chief
of the Armed Forces
and is elected by an
electoral college.
The
prime minister
is usually the
leader of the
largest party in the
National Assembly.
Each province has a
similar system of
government with a
directly elected
Provincial Assembly
in which the leader
of the largest party
or alliance becomes
Chief Minister.
Provincial Governors
are appointed by the
President.
nThe
Pakistani military
has played an
influential role in
mainstream
politics
throughout
Pakistan's history,
with military
presidents ruling
from 1958–71,
1977–88 and from
1999 onwards. The
leftist PPP, led by
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto,
emerged as a major
political player
during the 1970s.
Under the military
rule of
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq,
Pakistan began a
marked shift from
the British-era
secular politics and
policies, to the
adoption of
Shariat
and
other laws based on
Islam. During the
1980s, the anti-feudal,
pro-Muttahida Qaumi
Movement (MQM)
was started by
unorthodox and
educated urban
dwellers of
Sindh and
particularly
Karachi. The
1990s were
characterized by
coalition politics
dominated by the PPP
and a rejuvenated
Muslim League.
In the October
2002 general
elections, the
Pakistan Muslim
League (Q) (PML-Q)
won a
plurality of
National Assembly
seats with the
second-largest group
being the Pakistan
Peoples Party
Parliamentarians (PPPP),
a sub-party of the
PPP.
Zafarullah Khan
Jamali of PML-Q
emerged as Prime
Minister but
resigned on
26 June
2004 and was
replaced by PML-Q
leader
Chaudhry Shujaat
Hussain as
interim Prime
Minister. On
28 August
2004 the
National Assembly
voted 191 to 151 to
elect the
Finance Minister
and former
Citibank Vice
President
Shaukat Aziz
as
Prime Minister. The
Muttahida
Majlis-e-Amal, a
coalition of Islamic
religious parties,
won elections in
North-West Frontier
Province, and
increased their
representation in
the National
Assembly - until
their defeat in the
2008 elections.
Prime
Minister's
Secretariat,
Islamabad
Pakistan is an
active member of the
United Nations
(UN) and the
Organisation of the
Islamic Conference
(OIC), the latter of
which Pakistan has
used as a forum for
Enlightened
Moderation,
a plan to promote a
renaissance and
enlightenment in
the Muslim world.
Pakistan is also a
member of the major
regional
organisations of the
South Asian
Association for
Regional
Cooperation
(SAARC) and the
Economic Cooperation
Organisation
(ECO). In the past,
Pakistan has had
mixed relations with
the United States
especially in the
early 1950s when
Pakistan was the
United States' "most
allied ally in Asia"[29]
and a member of both
the
Central Treaty
Organisation
(CENTO) and the
Southeast Asia
Treaty Organisation
(SEATO). During the
Soviet-Afghan War
in the 1980s
Pakistan was a
crucial US ally, but
relations soured in
the 1990s, when
sanctions were
applied by the US
over suspicions of
Pakistan's nuclear
activities. The
September 11, 2001
attacks and the
subsequent
War on Terrorism
have seen an
improvement in
US–Pakistan ties,
especially after
Pakistan ended its
support of the
Taliban regime
in
Kabul. This was
evidenced by a
drastic increase in
American military
aid, which saw
Pakistan take in $4
billion more in
three years after
the 9/11 attacks
than in the three
years before.
On
November 3,
2007 President
Musharraf declared
an
emergency rule
across Pakistan and
purported to suspend
the
Constitution,
imposing
martial law. In
Islamabad, troops
apparently entered
the
Supreme Court
and were surrounding
the judges' homes
and opposition
leaders like
Benazir Bhutto, Imran Khan were put
on house arrest.
Justice
Abdul Hameed Dogar
has been appointed
as the new chief
justice of Pakistan,
due to the refusal
of the
Iftikhar Muhammad
Chaudhry to
endorse the
emergency order,
declaring it
unconstitutional,
though he himself
took oath under PCO
in 1999.[31]
In response,
Pakistan was
suspended from the
councils of the
Commonwealth of
Nations on
22 November
2007.
Subdivisions of
Pakistan
Provinces
and
territories of
Pakistan
Pakistan is a
federation
of four provinces, a
capital territory
and federally
administered tribal
areas. The
government of
Pakistan exercises
de facto
jurisdiction over
the western parts of
the disputed
Kashmir
region,
organized as two
separate political
entities (Azad
Kashmir and
Northern Areas).
Pakistan also claims
the Indian state of
Jammu and Kashmir.
The third tier of
government was
composed of 26
divisions with
two further tiers (districts
and
tehsils)
administered
directly from the
provincial level.
The divisions were
abolished in 2001[34]
and a new
three-tiered system
of local government
came into effect
comprising
districts, tehsils
and
union councils
with an elected body
at each tier. There
are currently 107
districts in
Pakistan proper,
each with several
tehsils and union
councils. The tribal
areas comprise seven
tribal agencies and
six small frontier
regions detached
from neighbouring
districts whilst
Azad Kashmir
comprises seven
districts and
Northern Areas
comprises six
districts.
Provinces:
-
Balochistan
-
North-West
Frontier Province
(NWFP)
-
Punjab
-
Sindh
-
- Balochistan
and NWFP also
have
Provincially
Administered
Tribal Areas
(PATA) which are
being developed
into regular
districts.
Territories:
-
Islamabad Capital
Territory
-
Federally
Administered
Tribal Areas
Pakistani-administered
portions of Kashmir:
-
Azad Kashmir
-
Northern Areas
Pakistan
Military & Forces
The
armed forces of
Pakistan are a
completely volunteer
force and are the
seventh largest
in the world. The
three main
components are the
Army,
Navy and
Air Force,
supported by a
number of
paramilitary forces
which carry out
internal security
roles and border
patrols. The
National Command
Authority is
responsible for
exercise employment
and development
control of all
strategic nuclear
forces and
organizations.
The Pakistan
military first saw
combat in the
First Kashmir War,
which led to the
capture of
Azad Kashmir
and
the
Northern Areas.
In 1961, the army
repelled a major
Afghan incursion
on Pakistanis western
border. In 1965,
Pakistan fought the
Second Kashmir War
with India, and in
1971 the
Indo-Pakistani War
of 1971 broke
out. In 1973, the
military quelled a
Baloch nationalist
uprising. During
the
Soviet-Afghan war,
Pakistan shot down
several intruding
aircraft, as well as
provided covert
support to the
mujahedeen through
the
Inter-Services
Intelligence
agency. In 1999,
Pakistan was
involved in the
Kargil conflict
with India.
Currently, the
military is engaged
in an
armed conflict
with Islamic
militants in the
north-east of the
country.
The Pakistani
armed forces are the
largest contributors
to
United Nations
peacekeeping
efforts, with more
than 10,000
personnel deployed
in 2007.
Pakistan provided a
military contingent
to the Coalition
during the first
Gulf War and in
the past Pakistani
personnel
volunteered to serve
in the armed forces
of Arab countries
involved in
conflicts with
Israel.
Pakistan
Geography and
climate
K2, at
8,611 metres
(28,251 ft),
is the second
highest peak
in the world.
Pakistan covers
340,403 square miles
(881,640 km˛),
approximately the
combined land areas
of
France and the
United Kingdom,
with its eastern
regions located on
the
Indian tectonic
plate and the
western and northern
regions on the
Iranian plateau
and
Eurasian landplate.
Apart from the
1,046 kilometre
(650 mi)
Arabian Sea
coastline,
Pakistan's land
borders total 6,774 kilometres—2,430 kilometres
(1,509 mi) with
Afghanistan to the
northwest, 523 kilometres
(325 mi) with China
to the northeast,
2,912 kilometres
(1,809 mi) with
India to the east
and 909 kilometres
(565 mi) with Iran
to the southwest.[38]
The different
types of natural
features range from
the sandy beaches,
lagoons, and
mangrove swamps
of the southern
coast to preserved
beautiful moist
temperate forests
and the icy peaks of
the
Himalaya,
Karakoram and
Hindu Kush
mountains in the
north. There are an
estimated 108 peaks
above 7,000 metres
(23,000 ft) high
that are covered in
snow and
glaciers. Five
of the mountains in
Pakistan (including
Nanga Parbat)
are over 8,000 metres
(26,000 ft).
Indian-controlled
Kashmir to the
Northern Areas of
Pakistan and
running the length
of the country is
the
Indus River with
its many
tributaries. The
northern parts of
Pakistan attract a
large number of
foreign tourists. To
the west of the
Indus are the dry,
hilly deserts of
Balochistan; to
the east are the
rolling sand dunes
of the Thar Desert. The
Tharparkar
desert in the
southern province of
Sindh, is the only
fertile desert in
the world. Most
areas of Punjab and
parts of Sindh are
fertile plains where
agriculture is of
great importance.
The climate
varies as much as
the scenery, with
cold winters and hot
summers in the north
and a mild climate
in the south,
moderated by the
influence of the
ocean. The central
parts have extremely
hot summers with
temperatures rising
to 45 °C (113 °F),
followed by very
cold winters, often
falling below
freezing. Officially
the highest
temperature recorded
in Pakistan is
50.55 °C
(122.99 °F)
at Pad Idan.
There is very little
rainfall ranging
from less than 250
millimetres to more
than 1,250
millimetres
(9.8–49.2 in),
mostly brought by
the unreliable
south-westerly
monsoon winds
during the late
summer. The
construction of dams
on the rivers and
the drilling of
water wells in many
drier areas have
temporarily eased
water shortages at
the expense of
down gradient
populations.
Pakistan
Flora and fauna
The
Markhor is
the national
animal of
Pakistan
The wide variety
of landscapes and
climates in Pakistan
allows for a wide
variety of wild
animals and birds.
The forests range
from
coniferous
alpine and
subalpine trees
such as spruce,
pine, and
deodar cedar in
the northern
mountains to
deciduous trees
such as the
mulberry-type
Shisham in the
Sulaiman range
in the south. The
western hills have
juniper and
tamarisk as well
as coarse grasses
and scrub plants.
Along the coast are
mangrove forests
which form much of
the coastal
wetlands.
In the south,
there are crocodiles
in the murky waters
at the mouth of the
Indus River whilst
on the banks of the
river, there are
boars, deer,
porcupines, and
small rodents. In
the sandy scrublands
of central Pakistan
are found jackals,
hyenas, wild cats,
panthers, and
leopards while the
clear blue skies
abound with hawks,
falcons, and eagles.
In the southwestern
deserts are rare
Asiatic cheetahs. In
the northern
mountains are a
variety of
endangered animals
including
Marco Polo sheep,
Urial sheep,
Markhor and
Ibex goats,
black and
brown Himalayan
bears, and the rare
Snow Leopard.
During August 2006,
Pakistan donated an
orphaned snow
leopard cub called
Leo to USA.
Another rare species
is the blind
Indus River Dolphin
of which there are
believed to be about
1,000 remaining,
protected in two
major sanctuaries.
In recent years the
number of wild
animals being killed
for fur and leather
trading led to a new
law banning the
hunting of wild
animals and birds
and the
establishment of
several wildlife
sanctuaries and game
reserves.
Pakistan Business &
Economy
Karachi
port and
harbor aerial
view
Pakistan is a
rapidly developing
country
and a major emerging
market,
with an economic
growth rate of 7
percent per annum
for four consecutive
years up to 2007.
Despite being a very
poor country in
1947, Pakistan's
economic growth rate
was better than the
global average
during the
subsequent four
decades, but
imprudent policies
led to a slowdown in
the late 1990s.
Recently,
wide-ranging
economic reforms
have resulted in a
stronger economic
outlook and
accelerated growth
especially in the
manufacturing
and
financial services
sectors. There
has been great
improvement in the
foreign exchange
position and rapid
growth in
hard currency
reserves in recent
years. The 2005
estimate of foreign
debt was close to
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