Pakistan, officially Islamic Republic of Pakistan,
republic in South Asia, marking the area where South Asia converges with
Southwest Asia and Central Asia. The capital of Pakistan is Islāmābād; Karāchi is
the country’s largest city.
The area of present-day Pakistan was the cradle of
the earliest known civilization of South Asia, the Indus Valley civilization
(2500?-1700 bc). The territory was
part of the Mughal Empire from 1526 until the 1700s, when it came under British
rule. Pakistan gained independence in August 1947. It initially comprised two
parts, West Pakistan and East Pakistan, which were separated by about 1,600 km
(1,000 mi) of territory within India. In December 1971 East Pakistan seceded and
became the independent republic of Bangladesh.
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II
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LAND AND RESOURCES OF PAKISTAN
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Pakistan is bordered on the west by Iran, on the
north and northwest by Afghanistan, on the northeast by China, on the east and
southeast by India, and on the south by the Arabian Sea. A panhandle of
Afghanistan territory in the northwest, the Wakhan Corridor, separates Pakistan
and Tajikistan. The area of Pakistan is 796,095 sq km (307,374 sq mi), not
including the section of Jammu and Kashmīr under its control. Jammu and Kashmīr
is a disputed territory located between Pakistan and India. Pakistan controls a
portion of the territory as Azad (Free) Kashmīr and the Federally Administered
Northern Areas (FANA), while India controls a portion as the state of Jammu and
Kashmīr.
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A
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Natural Regions
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Pakistan has great extremes of elevation, reaching
the highest point at the Himalayan peak of K2 (also known as Mount Godwin
Austen) in the north and the lowest point at the Arabian Sea coast in the
south. The Indus River flows the length of Pakistan from north to south. The
Indus and its tributaries form a wide river valley with fertile plains in
Punjab and Sind (Sindh) provinces. Pakistan is mountainous in the north and
west. Earthquakes are frequent, and occasionally severe, in the northern and
western areas.
Much of Pakistan is a dry, sun-scorched
region. To the west of the Indus are the rugged dry mountains of the Sulaimān
Range, which merge with the treeless Kīrthar Range in the south. Farther west
are the arid regions of the Baluchistan Plateau and the Khārān Basin. A series
of mostly barren low mountains and hills predominate in the western border
areas. The Thar Desert straddles the border with India in the southeast.
The country also possesses a variety of wetlands,
with the glacial lakes of the Himalayas, the mudflats of the Indus Valley
plains, and the extensive coastal mangroves of the Indus River delta. The wetland
areas cover an estimated area of 7.8 million hectares (19.3 million acres).
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Rivers
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The Indus River is the lifeline of Pakistan.
Without the Indus and its tributaries, the land would have turned into a barren
desert long ago. The Indus originates in Tibet from the glacial streams of the
Himalayas and enters Pakistan in the northeast. It runs generally southwestward
the entire length of Pakistan, about 2,900 km (1,800 mi), and empties into the
Arabian Sea. The Indus and its tributaries provide water to two-thirds of
Pakistan. The principal tributaries of the Indus are the Sutlej, Beās, Chenāb,
Rāvi, and Jhelum rivers. In southwestern Punjab Province these rivers merge to
form the Panjnad (“Five Rivers”), which then merges with the Indus to form a
mighty river. As the Indus approaches the Arabian Sea, it spreads out to form a
delta. Much of the delta is marshy and swampy. It includes 225,000 hectares
(556,000 acres) of mangrove forests and swamps. To the west of the delta is the
seaport of Karāchi; to the east the delta fans into the salt marshes known as
the Rann of Kutch.
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Coastline
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The coastline of Pakistan extends 1,046 km (650 mi)
along the Arabian Sea. The Makran Coast Range forms a narrow strip of mountains
along about 75 percent of the total coast length, or about 800 km (500 mi).
These steep mountains rise to an elevation of up to 1,500 m (5,000 ft). Most of
the coast is underdeveloped, with deserted beaches and only a few fishing
villages.
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Mountain Peaks and Passes
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Pakistan has within its borders some of the world’s
highest and most spectacular mountains. In the northern part of the country,
the Hindu Kush mountains converge with the Karakoram Range, a part of the
Himalayan mountain system. Thirteen of the world’s 30 tallest peaks are in
Pakistan. The tallest include K2, the second highest peak in the world at 8,611
m (28,251 ft), in the Karakoram Range; Nanga Parbat (8,125 m/26,657 ft) in the
Himalayas; and Tirich Mīr (7,690 m/25,230 ft) in the Hindu Kush.
Many mountain passes cross Pakistan’s borders with
Afghanistan and China. Passes crossing over the mountains bordering Afghanistan
include the Khyber, Bolān, Khojak, Kurram, Tochi, and Gomal passes. The most
well-known and well-traveled is the Khyber Pass in the northwest. It links
Peshāwar in Pakistan with Jalālābād in Afghanistan, where it connects to a
route leading to the Afghan capital of Kābul. It is the widest and lowest of
all the mountain passes, reaching a maximum elevation of 1,072 m (3,517 ft).
The route of the Bolān Pass links Quetta in Baluchistan Province with Kandahār
in Afghanistan; it also serves as a vital link within Pakistan between Sind and
Baluchistan provinces. Historically, the Khyber and Bolān passes were used as
the primary routes for invaders to enter India from Central Asia, including the
armies of Alexander the Great. Also historically significant is Karakoram Pass,
on the border with China. For centuries it was part of the trading routes known
as the Silk Road, which linked China and other parts of Asia with Europe.
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Plants and Animals
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The vegetation of Pakistan varies with elevation,
soil type, and precipitation. Forests are largely confined to the mountain
ranges in the north, where coniferous alpine and subalpine trees such as
spruce, pine, and deodar cedar grow. The southern ranges of the Himalayas,
which are of lower elevation, receive heavy rainfall and have dense forests of
deodar, pine, poplar, and willow trees. The more arid Sulaimān and Salt
mountain ranges are sparsely forested with a type of mulberry called shisham,
a broad-leaved, deciduous tree. Dry-temperate vegetation, such as coarse
grasses, scrub plants, and dwarf palm, predominates in the valleys of the
North-West Frontier Province and the Baluchistan Plateau. The arid western
hills are dotted with juniper, tamarisk (salt cedar), and pistachio trees. The
area of Ziārat, Baluchistan, has juniper forests that are believed to be 5,000 years
old; however, they are dwindling due to deforestation. Dry-tropical scrub and
thorn trees are the predominant vegetation in the Indus River plain. Known as rakh,
this vegetation is native to the region and can survive temperatures higher
than 45°C (113°F). Riverine forests, found in the Indus floodplain, require six
weeks of monsoon flooding to sustain them during the dry months. Irrigated tree
plantations are found in Punjab and Sind. Mangrove forests in the coastal
wetlands are an integral part of the marine food chain.
Animal life in Pakistan includes deer, boar, bear,
crocodile, and waterfowl. The wetlands provide an essential habitat for a
number of important mammal species, including coated otter, Indian river
dolphin, fishing cat, hog deer, and wild boar. During the migration season, at
least 1 million waterfowl representing more than 100 species visit the
extensive deltas and wetlands of Pakistan. Pakistan’s rivers and coastal waters
contain many types of freshwater and saltwater fish, including herring,
mackerel, sharks, and shellfish.
Threatened or endangered species include the snow
leopard, Marco Polo sheep (a subspecies of the argali), bharal (blue sheep),
and ibex (a type of wild goat). These animals can still be found in remote and
protected areas of the Himalayas. The houbara bustard has been overhunted as a
game bird in Pakistan and is officially protected.
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Climate
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The climate of Pakistan varies widely, with sharp
differences between the high mountains and low plains. The country experiences
four seasons. In the mountainous regions of the north and west, temperatures
fall below freezing during winter and are mild during summer. In the Indus
plains, temperatures range between about 32° and 49°C (about 90° and 120°F) in
summer, and the average in winter is about 13°C (about 55°F).
Mountainous areas receive most precipitation as heavy
snowfall in winter. In other areas of Pakistan, most precipitation comes with
the summer monsoons during July and August. The summer monsoons are seasonal
winds that bring torrential rainfall, breaking the hot, dry spell and providing
much-needed relief. The rainfall is so heavy that it causes rivers in Punjab
and Sind provinces to flood the lowland areas. Rainfall is scarce the rest of
the year. Punjab Province has the most precipitation in the country, receiving
more than 500 mm (20 in) per year. In contrast, the arid regions of the
southeast (the Thar Desert in Sind) and southwest (Baluchistan) receive less
than 125 mm (5 in) annually.
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Natural Resources
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More than 20 different types of minerals have been
identified in Pakistan, but few are of sufficient quality or quantity to be
commercially exploited. Most mineral deposits are found in the mountainous
regions. Pakistan’s exploited natural resources include coal, natural gas,
petroleum, gypsum, limestone, chromite, iron ore, rock salt, and silica sand.
Pakistan has extensive natural gas reserves, notably in the vicinity of Sui,
Baluchistan, from where it is piped to most of the large cities of Pakistan.
Petroleum is limited, but exploration for additional reserves holds promise.
Most of the country’s coal is of poor quality. The Salt Range in Punjab
Province has large deposits of pure salt. Only about 2.4 percent of Pakistan’s
total land area is forested, and timber is in short supply.
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Environmental Issues
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The wetlands in Pakistan are a precious resource.
In an arid to semiarid environment, these ecosystems have tremendous value.
People, domestic livestock, and wildlife depend on them for livelihood and
survival. The wetlands are also a major source of food staples, livestock
grazing and fodder, fuel wood, and irrigation water. However, the fragile
wetland ecologies are threatened by poor conservation, over-exploitation, and
urban and industrial pollution.
Pakistan’s forests also are in urgent need of protection
and conservation. The country has one of the highest rates of deforestation in
the world. The primary causes of deforestation are population growth and
settlement, lack of fuelwood alternatives, insect damage and diseases, forest
fires, and lack of awareness about the importance of preservation.
In the 1970s the government of Pakistan began
making efforts to protect the country’s forests by creating national parks. The
protected forests of the parks help prevent soil erosion. The parks also serve
as wildlife sanctuaries and game reserves, as well as tourist attractions. One
of the country’s most important alpine biodiversity regions is contained within
Khunjerab National Park, established in 1975. The park is an important habitat
sanctuary for a number of threatened or endangered species, including the snow
leopard. Located in the Himalayas, it is one of the highest-altitude parks in
the world at 5,000 m (16,000 ft).
Pakistan participates in the World Heritage Convention and
the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, and it has one designated biosphere preserve
under the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) Man and the Biosphere Program.
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III
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THE PEOPLE OF PAKISTAN
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The people of Pakistan are ethnically diverse. They
trace their ethnic lineages to many different origins, largely because the
country lies in an area that was invaded repeatedly during its long history.
Migrations of Muslims from India since 1947 and refugees from Afghanistan since
the 1980s have significantly changed the demographics of certain areas of the
country. The people of Pakistan come from ethnic stocks such as Dravidian,
Indo-Aryan, Greek, Scythian, Hun, Arab, Mongol, Persian, and Afghan. Although
an overwhelming majority of the people are Muslim, religion does not supersede
ethnic affiliations. The people follow many different cultural traditions and
speak many different languages and dialects.
Pakistan has a population of 167,762,040 (2008
estimate), yielding an average population density of 215 persons per sq km (558
per sq mi). The country’s population was increasing in 2008 at a rate of 1.8
percent a year. Only 35 percent of the people live in urban areas.
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A
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Cultural Groups
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Pakistan is a multilingual and multiethnic nation.
Most of the people belong to one of the country’s five major ethnolinguistic
groups: Punjabis, Sindhis, Pashtuns (Pakhtuns), Mohajirs (Muslims who migrated
to the newly formed nation of Pakistan after 1947), and Baluch (Baloch).
Ethnically distinct subgroups exist within each of these five categories.
Overall, ethnic identity is multilayered and complex and may be based on a
combination of religion, language, ethnicity, and tribe.
Not all of the ethnolinguistic groups are
equally represented in the power structure of Pakistan. Mohajirs, Punjabis, and
Pashtuns are the dominant groups, while Sindhis and Baluch struggle to advance
and protect their interests.
Punjabis constitute nearly 60 percent of the population
of Pakistan. They have diverse origins, but over the centuries they coalesced
into a coherent ethnic group in the historic Punjab region and developed a
common language, Punjabi. Today most Punjabis prefer to read and write in
Pakistan’s official language, Urdu, and their language-based ethnic identity is
relatively weak. Many Punjabis are farmers in the fertile valley of Punjab
Province. Punjabis also predominate in the military and the federal government.
Sindhis make up about 13 percent of the population.
They are a predominantly rural people. Their traditional homeland is the
province of Sind, where they maintain the country’s largest concentration of
large landholdings. Sindhis have a strong sense of linguistic and cultural
pride and identity. They have a rich literary and folk tradition and prefer to
read and write in their own language, Sindhi.
Pashtuns also make up about 13 percent of the
population. They are primarily farmers, livestock herders, traders, and
soldiers in the Pakistan military. Pashtuns are divided into many tribes, and
their tribal structure is egalitarian. Pashtuns follow a strict code of conduct
known as Pashtunwali (“Pashtun Way”). Pashtun identity, including their
interpretation of Islamic law, is formulated and guided by Pashtunwali. The
code is based on the absolute obligations of providing hospitality and
sanctuary, even to one’s enemies, and exacting revenge at all costs in the
defense of one’s honor. The code also requires Pashtuns to abide by the
decisions of the jirga (council of tribal leaders) in matters of
dispute. Many Pashtuns have blue eyes and claim to be descendants of the European
soldiers who fought for Alexander the Great in the region 2,000 years ago. They
have a rich oral tradition in their ethnic language, Pashto, but many Pashtuns
prefer to read and write in Urdu.
Baluch constitute 4 percent of the country’s
population. Most Baluch reside in their traditional homeland, the Baluchistan
Plateau. They are a predominantly nomadic people, migrating wherever the arid
land provides enough vegetation to raise their animals. Raising livestock,
mainly sheep and goats, and selling their hides and wool constitute the way of
life for many Baluch. They also have apple, almond, and apricot orchards, and
some grow wheat. Baluch tribal organization is strictly hierarchical, and each
tribe is headed by a sardar (tribal chief). Most Baluch speak Baluchi
(Balochi), a language that is similar to Persian. About one-fifth of Baluch
also speak Brahui, a Dravidian-derived language. Baluch are the least educated
and poorest segment of the population and are inadequately represented in
government.
Mohajirs constitute about 8 percent of the population.
They are Muslims who settled in Pakistan after the partition of British India
in 1947. Unlike other cultural groups of Pakistan, they do not have a
tribe-based cultural identity. They are the only people in the country for whom
Urdu, the official language, is their native tongue. Mohajirs were the vanguard
of the Pakistan Movement, which advocated the partition of British India in
order to create the independent nation of Pakistan for Indian Muslims. After
the partition, a large number of Muslims migrated from various urban centers of
India to live in the new nation of Pakistan. These migrants later identified
themselves as mohajirs, meaning “refugees” in both Urdu and Arabic. A
large number of Mohajirs settled in the cities of Sind Province, particularly
Karāchi and Hyderābād. They were better educated than most indigenous
Pakistanis and assumed positions of leadership in business, finance, and
administration. Today they remain mostly urban.
Sindhis felt dispossessed by the preponderance of
Mohajirs in the urban centers of Sind. With the emergence of a Sindhi middle
class in the 1970s and adoption of Sindhi as a provincial language in 1972,
tensions between Mohajirs and Sindhis began to mount. The 1973 constitution of
Pakistan divided Sind into rural and urban districts, with the implication that
the more numerous Sindhis would be better represented in government. Many
Mohajirs felt that they were being denied opportunities and launched a movement
to represent their interests. The movement, which evolved into the Mohajir
Qaumi Movement (MQM) in the mid-1980s, called for official recognition of
Mohajirs as a separate cultural group and advocated improved rights for
Mohajirs. Although factional rivalries and violence within the MQM tarnished
its image and shrunk its power base, the movement continues to be a potent
force in urban centers of the province, particularly Karāchi. The MQM has
contributed to a more defined Mohajir identity within the country.
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Political Regions
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The ethnic groups of Pakistan are distributed
according to their historical settlement in the region. The current political
regions of Pakistan roughly correspond to the settlement patterns established
long before the partition of British India in 1947, when Pakistan was created
as a homeland for Indian Muslims. The four provinces are Punjab, the Muslim
portion of the historic Punjab region; Sind, the traditional homeland of the
Sindhis; the North-West Frontier Province, a small portion of the Pashtun
tribal lands; and Baluchistan, a portion of the Baluch tribal lands. The
traditional homelands of the Pashtuns and Baluch extend beyond the modern
political borders, both provincial and national.
Punjab is the most populated province of
Pakistan, with 72.6 million people (1998). Most of the people are Punjabis. The
province contains most of the country’s largest cities, but the rural
agricultural areas are also densely settled. The province is the second largest
in area.
Sind is the second most populated province in
Pakistan, with about 30 million people (1998). Its population is the most
urbanized in Pakistan. Sindhis make up about 60 percent of the population of
Sind, living mostly in rural areas. Mohajirs constitute the remaining 40 percent
and live mostly in the province’s large cities. Sind is the third largest
province in area.
The North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) has a population
of 17.6 million (1998). The majority of the people are Pashtuns. The province
is part of the historic Pashtun tribal lands, which extend throughout southern
and southeastern Afghanistan and well into western Pakistan, including the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas and northern Baluchistan. The NWFP is
Pakistan’s smallest province in area. In the 1980s refugees from war-torn
Afghanistan began to settle in the province. Refugee camps and rudimentary
villages were set up in the border areas. A large number of refugees also
established communities in cities such as Peshāwar. Many became semipermanent
residents of Pakistan because Afghanistan remained in a state of war through
the mid-1990s. The majority of refugees were Pashtuns, facilitating their
assimilation into the province’s population, in many cases through
intermarriage.
Baluchistan is the most sparsely populated and
least developed province of Pakistan. A majority of the 6.5 million (1998)
people who live in Baluchistan are Baluch. Pashtuns are the second largest
ethnic group in the province. In recent years a large number of Afghan refugees
have settled in Baluchistan. In area, Baluchistan is the largest province of
Pakistan, covering nearly 40 percent of the country’s total territory. However,
the province is an arid and inhospitable hinterland.
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Principal Cities
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Pakistan’s largest city is Karāchi, the capital of Sind
Province. It is the country’s only seaport and a major financial, industrial,
and commercial center. It is also known as the ethnic melting pot of Pakistan.
Lahore, the capital of Punjab Province, is Pakistan’s second largest city and a
cultural and educational center. Faisalābād, in central Punjab, is the center
of textile and fertilizer industries. Multān, the largest city in southern
Punjab, has many ancient Muslim shrines, a huge fertilizer factory, and small
cottage industries such as carpet weaving and pottery. Hyderābād, in Sind
Province, is a manufacturing center with textile and glass factories, as well
as a cultural center with museums, historic mosques, and a medical school.
Peshāwar, the capital of the North-West Frontier Province, is a busy,
overcrowded frontier outpost and a hub of trade with Afghanistan. For centuries
it served as a gateway and trading post between Afghanistan and Southeast Asia.
Islāmābād is the capital of Pakistan and the seat
of the federal government; it forms its own administrative unit, the Islāmābād
Capital Territory. Just to the south, in bordering Punjab Province, is
Rāwalpindi, the headquarters of the Pakistani army and an industrial center.
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D
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Religion
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Islam is the faith of about 97 percent of the
people of Pakistan. About three-quarters of the country’s Muslims are Sunni,
and about one-quarter are Shia. Some small Muslim fringe sects, such as the
Ahmedis and Zikris, also exist. Hindus and Christians form the largest
religious minorities. Other religious groups include Sikhs, Parsis, and a small
number of Buddhists. The constitution defines Pakistan as an Islamic state but
guarantees freedom of religion.
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Languages
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Urdu is the official language of Pakistan. It
is the first language of only a small percentage of the population, but it cuts
across linguistic and provincial boundaries as the national language. More than
75 percent of Pakistanis can speak and understand Urdu. In urban areas about 95
percent of the people communicate in Urdu. Urdu replaced English as the
official language in 1978.
Most Pakistanis speak at least two languages. A large
segment of the population is trilingual, speaking English, Urdu, and an ethnic-based
regional language. Punjabi, Pashto, Sindhi, Baluchi, and Brahui are the major
regional languages. These languages have many regional dialects, including
Saraiki, a widely spoken dialect of Punjabi. Regional languages are recognized
as a potent force because language and ethnic identity are closely
interrelated; even the national census categorizes groups according to their
language, rather than their ethnicity. However, there is growing awareness
among Pakistanis that for social mobility, national cohesion, and individual
success, it is imperative to be fluent in Urdu and proficient in English.
Several factors contributed to the establishment of Urdu
as the lingua franca of Pakistan. It was the language of the educated Muslims
in northern India, who spearheaded the Pakistan Movement. Urdu helped foster a
linguistic identity among Muslims in the region. Although similar to Hindi as a
spoken language, Urdu uses a Persian-derived script and incorporates many Arabic
words. Choosing Urdu as the national language provided a linguistic basis for
the formation of a Muslim national identity. It also provided the country with
a “neutral” language because Urdu does not have ethnic or tribal associations.
Since the founding of Pakistan in 1947, state-controlled electronic and print
media have promoted Urdu. In the public schools of the country, Urdu is the
principal language of instruction.
For all practical purposes, however, English is the
de facto official language. Pakistan’s legal system is based on British common
law, and judicial and government documents are mostly written in English.
Pakistanis of all social strata strive to learn English, which has a certain
elite status. Although the quality of instruction in English has declined,
English continues to be the language of the educated and those who want to move
ahead in life.
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Education
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Pakistan has one of the lowest literacy rates
in the world. In 2005 only 47.4 percent of adult Pakistanis were literate. Male
literacy was 61.4 percent, while female literacy was 32.4 percent. From 1976 to
2001 the number of primary schools doubled, but so did the population. High
levels of population growth continue to hamper educational development in the
country. The government launched a nationwide initiative in 1998 with the aim
of eradicating illiteracy and providing a basic education to all children.
According to the constitution, it is the state’s
responsibility to provide free primary education. Five years has been established
as the period of primary school attendance, but attendance is not compulsory.
While the enrollment rate in primary school is high for boys, less than half of
all girls attend school. In the 2002–2003 school year 68 percent of primary
school-aged children were enrolled in school, while only 23 percent of
secondary school-aged children attended. In 2002–2003, 3 percent of Pakistan’s
college-aged population attended institutions of higher education. The
wealthiest and best students seek education in British and American
universities.
At the time of independence Pakistan had only
one university, the University of the Punjab, founded in 1882 in Lahore.
Pakistan now has more than 20 public universities. Among Pakistan’s leading
public institutions of higher education are Quaid-e-Azam University (1965), in
Islāmābād, the University of Karāchi (1951), the University of Peshāwar (1950),
and the University of Sindh (1947), near Hyderābād.
Since 1978 the government has encouraged the
privatization of education at all levels. This led to the creation of three
major private universities: Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS),
Agha Khan University Medical College (in Karāchi), and Ghulam Ishaq Khan
Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology (in Topi, North-West Frontier
Province). The National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST), in
Rāwalpindi, conducts research in the fields of science and technology for both
the public and private sectors.
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IV
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CULTURE OF PAKISTAN
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Pakistan has a rich and diverse cultural
heritage. Pakistanis celebrate their culture through folk music, dance, and
festivals. They have a strong appreciation for poetic expression and
storytelling. The history of the country comes to life in the splendid
architectural detail of centuries-old mosques and forts. After it became part
of the expansive Mughal Empire in 1526, the region that is now Pakistan entered
a golden age of literature, architecture, and music.
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A
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Literature
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Pakistanis adore poetry and commonly memorize long
poems. A mushaira (poetry reading) in Pakistan can attract hundreds of
listeners. Among classical poets in the Urdu language, Mirza Ghalib is perhaps
the most widely admired. Ghalib, who wrote in the 19th century, is known for
his lyrical and spiritual ghazals. Ghazals are the most popular form of
poetry in the Urdu and Persian languages.
The official national poet of Pakistan is Allama (“the
Wise”) Muhammad Iqbal. He earned the title of poet-philosopher of Pakistan not
only because he was an exceptionally talented poet, but also because he was
active in the politics of his time. In 1930 he called for the creation of a
separate Muslim state in northwestern British India. He wrote poetry in Urdu
and Persian and gave university lectures in English.
Faiz Ahmed Faiz is perhaps the most adored
modern poet in Pakistan. Faiz began writing poetry in the 1950s after a
distinguished journalism career. His ghazals are primarily concerned with class
struggle, rather than the conventional themes of love and beauty. A progressive
writer, Faiz was also a political dissident, and military governments banned
his poetry from television and radio. Ahmad Faraz, Muneer Niazi, and Parveen
Shakir are some of the other popular Urdu-language poets of Pakistan.
Shah Abdul Latif Bhitai, a Sufi mystic who in the
first half of the 18th century wrote about love and Sindhi life, is the most
revered poet of the Sindhi language. His poetry is widely recited by illiterate
and educated Sindhis alike. Khushal Khan Khattak is the most famous poet of the
Pashto language. In the 17th century he wrote poetry describing the beauty of
women and nature, using military metaphors. The most well-known poet of the
Punjabi language is Bulleh Shah, of the 17th century, whose poetry challenged
the religious orthodoxy. In recent years short stories and travelogues have
gained literary prominence, in addition to poetry.
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B
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Music and Film
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The classical music tradition in Pakistan traces
its roots to the 13th-century poet and musician Amir Khosrow, who composed the
earliest ragas, the traditional rhythmic form. To play the ragas, Muslim
musicians invented the sitar, a long guitar-like stringed instrument,
and the tabla, a small pair of hand drums.
Qawwali, a form of devotional
song, arose as part of the Sufi (Islamic religious sect) tradition. This rich
vocal tradition is based on melodic and free-rhythmic song-poems and classical
musical forms. It is traditionally performed at the shrines of Sufi saints, but
today qawwali singers also perform for major secular events. Qawwali singer
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan won international popularity in the late 20th century by
infusing qawwali performances with new form and style. Other traditional
musical forms—including the Punjabi bhangra, the Sindhi juhumar, and
the Pashtun khattack—have also acquired new forms and continue to be
popular for dancing. Punjabi, Pashto, and Sindhi folk songs are popular in
rural Pakistan. Modern Pakistani musical groups and singers have introduced new
forms of pop music based on traditional melodies.
Most Pakistanis prefer and enjoy songs from Pakistani
and Indian movies. These songs are commonly played on radio and television. A
synthesis of musical scores from movies, traditional folk music, and popular
Western music is gaining popularity.
The film industry of Pakistan, known as
Lollywood, is concentrated in Lahore. Most Pakistani movies are long,
melodramatic love stories with plenty of songs. The film industry is often
regulated and censored by the government. Films must follow the conventions of
Islamic law, and the showing of physical contact such as kissing is prohibited.
In the mid-1970s the industry produced about 150 movies a year, but since then
the number has declined. In the 1980s the market for Pakistani films shrunk as
a result of restrictions imposed by the military regime of Muhammad Zia ul-Haq
and the availability of smuggled videotapes of Indian and Western movies.
Television became a major cultural influence in
Pakistan in the 1980s, when the state-controlled network, Pakistan Television,
attained national reach. It aired both Pakistani and American shows. In recent
years satellite and cable television services have significantly increased access
to international networks offering many different cultural and political
perspectives.
|
C
|
Architecture
|
Pakistan has inherited a combination of Mughal and
British colonial architectural forms. Mughal architects combined the Muslim
preferences for large domes, slender towers, and archways with the Hindu use of
red sandstone, white marble, and inlaid jewels. Mughal artists decorated the
monuments with verses from the Quran, the sacred text of Islam. The best
example of this architecture is the Badshahi Mosque and Lahore Fort, built
between the 1580s and 1670s in Lahore by Mughal emperor Aurangzeb. Other
examples of Mughal architecture include Shalimar Gardens (laid out in 1641), in
Lahore; the Shah Jahan Mosque (17th century), in Thatta, Sind Province; and the
mid-18th-century tomb of the great Sindhi poet Shah Abdul Latif Bhitai, in Bhit
Shāh, near Hyderābād.
Pakistan’s most notable example of modern architecture
is the Faisal Mosque in Islāmābād. One of the largest mosques in the world, it
was completed in 1986 as a gift from Saudi Arabia. Turkish architect Vedat
Dalokay designed the mosque to resemble an Arab desert tent, with an
eight-sided prayer hall supported by four towering minarets. The interior
contains the mosaics and calligraphy of the celebrated 20th-century Pakistani
artist Sadequain.
|
D
|
Libraries and Museums
|
Karāchi is the seat of some of the most
important libraries in Pakistan; these include the Liaquat Memorial Library (1950),
the Central Secretariat Library (1950), and the University of Karāchi library.
Also of note are the National Archives of Pakistan, in Islāmābād, and the
Punjab Public Library (1884), in Lahore.
The National Museum of Pakistan (1950), in Karāchi,
is noted for its archaeological material from the Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa
sites in the Indus Valley. Important materials from this ancient civilization
are also found at the Institute of Sindhology, in Jām Shoro, and the Hyderābād
Museum. The Lahore Museum (1864), the country’s largest museum, and the
Peshāwar Museum (1906) also have exhibits on the rich cultural history of the
region. The Industrial and Commercial Museum, in Lahore, contains exhibits on
the manufactures of Pakistan. The National Museum of Science and Technology is
a participatory science center in Lahore.
|
V
|
ECONOMY OF PAKISTAN
|
Like most developing countries, Pakistan has been
confronted with the problems of rapid population growth, chronic budget deficits,
and heavy dependence on foreign aid and loans. Over the years Pakistan has
accumulated a sizable foreign debt. The economy is also strained by the
maintenance of a large military establishment. Debt repayment, defense
spending, and general administrative expenditures tend to consume a large
portion of Pakistan’s annual budget. The social sector is underdeveloped.
In 2006 Pakistan’s gross domestic product (GDP) was
$126.8 billion. The government budget in 2006 included $16.9 billion in
revenues and $19.3 billion in expenditures.
|
A
|
Economic Development
|
After East Pakistan seceded to become the
independent nation of Bangladesh in December 1971, the elected government of Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto tried to pick up the pieces of a truncated Pakistan. It devised
economic policies that led to a drastic devaluation of the Pakistani currency,
thereby boosting agricultural exports. To ease unemployment pressure the
government encouraged the export of Pakistani labor to the Middle East. It also
embarked on the nationalization of industries, banks, and agriculture-based
industries. This expansion of the public sector ultimately shook private-sector
confidence so that investment plummeted. The annual growth rate declined,
averaging between 2.7 percent and 3.7 percent during most of the 1970s.
During the 1980s the country’s economy grew an
average rate of 6 percent annually. This high growth rate was largely created
by three factors: aid from the United States, the influx of foreign exchange
from Pakistanis working abroad, and high crop yields. First, Pakistan received
an average of $600 million per year in economic and military aid from the
United States from 1981 to 1989, largely because of Pakistan’s support for
anti-Soviet forces in the Soviet-Afghan War. (During this decade Pakistan was
the third-largest recipient of U.S. aid, after Israel and Egypt.) Second,
Pakistan received $2.5 billion in remittances from Pakistanis working abroad in
the Persian Gulf States and other countries. Third, good weather conditions
produced bumper cotton and wheat crops.
At the same time, the government did little to
devise policies to boost the confidence of private investors or promote the
welfare of Pakistani citizens. The negative fallout of the Afghan war on
Pakistan was an expansion of the black market (the illicit sale of commodities)
and the proliferation of portable weapons and violence. Despite the high
economic growth rate, the economy remained largely agricultural, and
socioeconomic disparities between the rich and poor widened. Also during the
1980s, the military regime increased defense spending to such an extent that
the fiscal deficit rose to 10 percent of the GDP. In addition, public debt ballooned
from less than 40 percent of the GDP to more than 80 percent.
The economy of Pakistan slowed to an average annual
growth of 3.8 percent during the 1990s. Factors contributing to the sluggish
growth included corruption and mismanagement at the highest levels of
government and the rise of ethnic and sectarian violence in Karāchi and other
urban centers. These factors shook investor confidence.
The economic performance of the 1990s was also related
to the structural adjustment programs (SAPs) of the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). Loans from these international lending
agencies were subject to conditions on Pakistan’s national economic policies.
Pakistan received its first formal loan in 1988. In Pakistan the primary focus
of the IMF-sponsored program was to lower the budget and current-account
deficits. These objectives were to be achieved by reducing public expenditures
and broadening the tax base. In addition, in 1992-1993 the IMF further insisted
that Pakistan reduce defense expenditures, impose an agricultural tax, and
improve methods of tax collection. These reforms were never fully implemented,
however, and the IMF-sponsored program did not achieve the desired result.
Inflation rose from 8 percent in the 1980s to 11 percent in the 1990s, although
a nominal reduction in the budget deficit was visible. Direct foreign
investment did not improve and the export sector remained sluggish.
A high-powered Privatization Commission was created in
1990 to encourage privatization of public-sector industries, economic
deregulation, and other reforms designed to boost confidence in the principles
of a free-market economy. However, the commission was slow to implement its
privatization program.
After Pakistan exploded a nuclear device in May 1998, it
faced the imposition of international sanctions. In September 2001 the United
States lifted most of the economic sanctions it had imposed, brightening
prospects for Pakistan’s economy.
|
B
|
Agriculture
|
About 28 percent of Pakistan’s total land area
is cultivated. Agriculture and related activities, including fishing, engage 42
percent of the workforce and provide 19 percent of the GDP. Principal crops
include sugar cane, wheat, rice, cotton, and corn. Livestock include cattle,
water buffalo, sheep, goats, and poultry.
Land reform is a controversial issue in
Pakistan. At independence in 1947, a large proportion of the arable land was
concentrated in a small number of large estates, many of them owned by absentee
landlords and cultivated by tenant farmers. Land reforms introduced in 1959
provided some security of tenure to tenants but did little to break up the
large estates. In the 1970s the government of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto introduced
more extensive land reforms. The amount of land any individual could own was
significantly reduced, and landlords were not compensated for the land they
surrendered. Most of the expropriated land was distributed to tenants, but the
government retained land that was not suitable for farming. Landlords strongly
resisted the reforms, however, and the government bureaucracy was somewhat lax
in enforcing them. In the end, the reforms shook the landlords but did not
break their hold. By the end of the 20th century, about half of the country’s
arable land was held by only a small percentage of wealthy landowners.
The Bhutto government also developed favorable credit
and loan policies for farmers. The tractor became the new status symbol in
rural Pakistan. Improved mechanization gave a boost to agricultural
productivity. Formerly an importer of wheat, Pakistan achieved self-sufficiency
in the grain by the late 1970s.
|
C
|
Fishing
|
Fishing resources, although underdeveloped, are
extensive. In 2005 the catch was 515,472 metric tons, three-quarters of it obtained
from the Indian Ocean. Types of fish caught include sardines, sharks, and
anchovies.
|
D
|
Manufacturing
|
In 2006 manufacturing accounted for 20 percent of the
GDP. About 21 percent of the labor force is engaged in industry, including
manufacturing and mining. Important products include processed foods, cotton
textiles, silk and rayon cloth, refined petroleum, cement, fertilizers, sugar,
cigarettes, and chemicals. Many handicrafts, such as pottery and carpets, also
are produced.
|
E
|
Energy
|
Pakistan’s total output of electricity in 2003 was 77
billion kilowatt-hours. Hydroelectric dams on the Indus and its tributaries
help furnish the country’s energy needs, but the supply of hydroelectricity
drops sharply during the dry winter months. About 34 percent of the country’s
electricity is produced through dams. The country also exploits its reserves of
natural gas, crude petroleum, and coal. About 64 percent of the country’s electricity
is generated in thermal installations fueled by natural gas and petroleum.
Pakistan has two nuclear power plants, but neither
produces a significant amount of electricity. The Karāchi plant was built with
Canadian help in the early 1960s, and the Chashma plant, on the Indus River in
southern Punjab, was built in the 1980s with financial support from China.
Pakistan is not self-sufficient in energy
production. The country relies on imported petroleum to fuel its
electricity-generating thermal plants. However, the country’s exports bring in
hardly enough revenues to meet the cost of petroleum imports. During the 1990s
rising oil prices had a devastating effect on the economy, leading to a rise in
the country’s foreign debt.
|
F
|
Currency and Banking
|
The basic monetary unit is the Pakistani rupee,
consisting of 100 paisa (60.30 rupees equal US$1; 2006 average). The
State Bank of Pakistan, established in 1948, issues banknotes; manages currency
and credit, the public debt, and exchange controls; and supervises the
commercial banks. Pakistani banks were nationalized in 1974, but in the early
1990s the country transferred two banks to private ownership and issued
licenses for ten new commercial banks. A number of major foreign banks maintain
offices in the country. In conformity with Islamic doctrine, domestic banks in
Pakistan have redefined the payment and collection of interest as profit.
Investment partnerships between the bank and the customer have replaced loans
at interest.
|
G
|
Foreign Trade
|
The foreign trade of Pakistan consists largely
of the export of raw materials and basic products such as cotton yarn and the
import of manufactured products. The United States is the largest trading
partner of Pakistan. In 2003 exports earned $12.7 billion and imports cost
$15.5 billion. The chief exports were cotton textiles, cotton yarn and thread,
clothing, raw cotton, rice, carpets and rugs, leather, fish, and petroleum
products; the main imports were machinery, electrical equipment, petroleum
products, transportation equipment, metal and metal products, fertilizer, and
foodstuffs.
|
H
|
Transportation
|
The lack of modern transportation facilities
is a major hindrance to the development of Pakistan. Its terrain, laced with
rivers and mountains, presents formidable obstacles to internal overland
transportation. The country has 258,340 km (160,525 mi) of roads. The railroad
network totals 7,791 km (4,841 mi).
Karāchi is the principal port of Pakistan. The
coastline is underdeveloped because of the rugged topography, but it has
promise for development. In recent years successive governments of Pakistan
have made efforts to build infrastructure along the Makran Coast. Toward this
end, the government of Pakistan signed an agreement with China in the late
1990s to develop an international shipping port at Gwādar as an alternative to
Karāchi. Gwādar is located on a peninsula that is accessible to large ships
traveling from the Gulf of Oman, which leads to the Persian Gulf.
The Karakoram Highway was constructed between China and
Pakistan in 1978 and opened to regular traffic in 1982. This all-weather road
is 1,300 km (800 mi) long and passes through the Himalayas, reaching an
elevation of 5,000 m (16,000 ft) at Khunjerab Pass. It is of strategic
significance for Pakistan and China, connecting Islāmābād with Kashgar, in the
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China.
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), the national airline,
is in large part government owned. PIA offers flights within Pakistan and to a
number of other countries. In the early 1990s the government ended the PIA’s
monopoly on domestic service, allowing private carriers to offer domestic
flights. Privately owned international airlines also operate in Pakistan. The
country’s main international airports serve Karāchi, Lahore, Islāmābād, and
Rāwalpindi.
|
I
|
Communications
|
In 2005 Pakistan had 34 telephone mainlines
for every 1,000 people. The number of cellular-phone subscribers is growing rapidly.
Radio receivers number 94 and television sets 131 per 1,000 residents.
Television broadcasting began in Lahore in 1964 and in
Karāchi in 1966. Since then television-broadcasting centers have been set up in
Peshāwar, Rāwalpindi, Islāmābād, and Quetta, giving the Pakistani television
network an almost total nationwide reach. In the early 1990s satellite dishes
made it possible for international television programming to reach even the
remotest areas of the country. More recently, the availability of cable
television has improved accessibility to the international networks. Newspapers
are mainly printed in Urdu and English. Pakistan has 291 daily newspapers, most
with small circulations. The major dailies are concentrated in Lahore, Karāchi,
and Islāmābād.
|
VI
|
GOVERNMENT OF PAKISTAN
|
Since independence in 1947 Pakistan has had three
constitutions, adopted in 1956, 1962, and 1973, consecutively. The 1973
constitution was the result of consensus among the political parties that were represented
in the parliament. After a military coup d’état in 1977, martial law was
imposed and the constitution was suspended. In 1985 a civilian government was
reestablished, and the 1973 constitution was restored, although in a radically
amended form. The Eighth Amendment confirmed and legalized all acts and orders
that had been issued under the martial law regime, including amendments to the
constitution. The amended constitution significantly expanded the powers of the
president. It also included clauses that promoted Islam as the supreme law of
Pakistan. In 1997, however, the constitution was amended to repeal the main
provisions of the Eighth Amendment, stripping the president of the power to
dismiss the prime minister and dissolve the parliament. After another military
coup in 1999, the constitution was suspended and the democratically elected
parliament was dissolved. In August 2002 a presidential decree amended the
constitution to grant sweeping powers to the president, restoring the
president’s power to dismiss the prime minister and dissolve the parliament.
Parliamentary elections were held in October to restore civilian rule in the
country. The 1973 constitution was formally revived in November 2002.
|
A
|
Executive
|
Pakistan’s head of state is a president. Under the
constitution, the president is elected to a five-year term by members of the
national and provincial legislatures. A prime minister is the chief executive
official. After legislative elections, the president appoints the leader of the
majority party or majority coalition in the legislature to serve as prime
minister. As amended in August 2002, the constitution allows the president to
dissolve the national legislature, appoint military chiefs and Supreme Court
justices, and chair the National Security Council, a quasi-military advisory
body.
|
B
|
Legislature
|
Under the constitution, legislative power is vested in
the bicameral Federal Legislature. The National Assembly (lower house) has 342
seats; 60 of these seats are reserved for women and 10 are reserved for
non-Muslims on a basis of proportional representation. Members of the National
Assembly are directly elected for four-year terms. The Senate (upper house) has
100 seats; senators are elected indirectly by the provincial and national
legislatures for five-year terms.
|
C
|
Judiciary
|
The highest court in Pakistan is the Supreme
Court. The judicial system in each province is headed by a high court. There is
also a federal Sharia Court, which hears cases that primarily involve Sharia,
or Islamic law. Legislation enacted in 1991 gave legal status to Sharia.
Although Sharia was declared the law of the land, it did not replace the
existing legal code.
|
D
|
Local Government
|
According to the constitution, Pakistan is a
federation. The country is divided into four autonomous (self-governing)
provinces; two federally administered areas; and the Islāmābād Capital Territory,
which consists of the capital city of Islāmābād.
The four provinces are Baluchistan, the North-West
Frontier Province (NWFP), Punjab, and Sind. The provinces are headed by
governors appointed by the president. Under the constitution, each province has
a directly elected provincial assembly headed by a chief minister. However, the
provincial assemblies were suspended following the 1999 military coup.
The Islāmābād Capital Territory, the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), and the Federally Administered Northern Areas
(FANA) are under the jurisdiction of the federal government. In the FATA,
however, tribal leaders manage most internal affairs. Azad (Free) Kashmīr has a
separate and autonomous government but maintains strong ties to Pakistan.
Control of the territory included within FANA and Azad Kashmīr is a matter of
dispute between Pakistan and India (see Jammu and Kashmīr).
|
E
|
Political Parties
|
Pakistan’s founding nationalist party, the Muslim
League, dissolved after martial law was imposed in 1958. The Pakistan Muslim
League (PML) founded in 1962 bore little resemblance to the original party. The
PML subsequently splintered into several factions. In 1967 Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
formed the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) to oppose the regime of Muhammad Ayub
Khan. In the aftermath of the military coup of 1977, political parties were
banned from 1979 until civilian rule was restored in 1985. Although political
parties were not banned after the military coup of 1999, they could not
participate in government because the national and provincial assemblies were
dissolved. In 2002 these legislative bodies were restored following multiparty
elections.
|
F
|
Health and Welfare
|
Health services in Pakistan are limited by a lack
of facilities. In 2004 the country had one physician for every 1,353 people and
one hospital bed for every 1,429 people. In 1976 an old-age pension system was
inaugurated, but it covers relatively few Pakistanis.
|
G
|
Defense
|
Military service in Pakistan is voluntary. In 2004
the country’s armed forces had 619,000 members, including 550,000 in the army,
45,000 in the air force, and 24,000 in the navy. Another 247,000 were in
paramilitary units.
|
VII
|
HISTORY OF PAKISTAN
|
The area of present-day Pakistan has a long history
of human settlement as the cradle of the Indus Valley civilization, the
earliest-known civilization in South Asia. This Bronze Age culture flourished
in the area of the Indus River Valley from about 2500 to 1700 bc. The Indus River is considered the
lifeblood of Pakistan, and the ancient culture that arose there serves as an
icon of Pakistan’s territorial identity. Important archaeological sites in
Pakistan include Mohenjo-Daro (Sindhi for “Mound of the Dead”), in Sind
Province, and Harappā, near the Ravi River (a tributary of the Indus) in Punjab
Province.
Pakistan’s cultural identity is traced to the centuries
of Muslim rule in the region. In ad
711 Mohammad bin Qasim, an Arab general and nephew of Hajjaj, ruler of Iraq and
Persia, conquered Sind and incorporated it into the Umayyad Caliphate.
Thereafter Muslims continued to rule areas of present-day Pakistan for almost
1,000 years. For the first 300 years the region of Sind was the only part of
the Indian subcontinent that was under Muslim rule. Muslim rule began to spread
to other areas after the Afghan sultan Mahmud of Ghaznī, leader of the
Ghaznavids, invaded in 997. After he conquered the region of Punjab in the
early 11th century, he made Lahore his capital. Between 1175 and 1186 the
regions of Sind and Punjab were conquered by Muhammad of Ghur, leader of the
Turkish Ghurid Empire, which was centered in what is now west central
Afghanistan. His generals conquered all of north India by the time he was
assassinated in 1206. That year his general Qutubuddin Aybak laid the
foundations of an independent Muslim kingdom in India, the Delhi Sultanate.
Thirty-five sultans ruled this rich and powerful sultanate from 1206 to 1526.
The sultanate included most of Punjab and Sind during this period.
The golden age of Muslim rule in the Indian
subcontinent came with the glory and grandeur of the Mughal Empire (1526-1858).
Between 1526 and 1707 six powerful Mughal kings ruled in succession: Babur,
Humayun, Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan, and Aurangzeb. As the boundaries of the
empire grew, Islam spread in India through incoming Muslim rulers,
intermarriages, conversions among the lower Hindu castes, and the teachings of
Sufi mystics. The death of Aurangzeb in 1707 marked the beginning of the
decline of the Mughal Empire, and of Muslim rule in India.
|
A
|
British Rule
|
The waning control of the Mughal Empire left the
subcontinent vulnerable to new contenders for power from Europe. The British
changed the course of history by penetrating India from the Bay of Bengal, in
the east; until then invading forces had entered India from the northwest,
mostly by way of the Khyber Pass. The English East India Company established
trading posts in Bengal and represented British interests in the region. In
1757 company forces defeated the nawab (ruler) of Bengal, Siraj-ud-Dawlah, in
the Battle of Plassey.
This victory marked the beginning of British
dominance in the subcontinent. The company continued to expand the area under
its control through military victories and direct annexations, as well as
political agreements with local rulers. The British annexed the area of present-day
Sind Province in 1843. The region of Punjab, then under the control of the Sikh
kingdom of Lahore, was annexed in 1849 after British forces won the second of
two wars against the Sikhs. Some areas of Baluchistan were declared British
territory in 1887.
As the British sought to expand their empire into
the northwest frontier, they clashed with the Pashtun tribes that held lands
extending from the western boundary of the Punjab plains into the kingdom of
Afghanistan. The Pashtuns strongly resisted British invasions into their
territories. After suffering many casualties, the British finally admitted they
could not conquer the Pashtuns. In 1893 Sir Mortimer Durand, the foreign
secretary of the colonial government of India, negotiated an agreement with the
king of Afghanistan, Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, to delineate a border. The
so-called Durand Line cut through Pashtun territories, dividing them between
British and Afghan areas of influence. However, the Pashtuns refused to be
subjugated under British colonial rule. The British compromised by creating a
new province in 1901, named the North-West Frontier Province, as a loosely
administered territory where the Pashtuns would not be subject to colonial
laws.
The British maintained their empire in the Indian subcontinent
for nearly 200 years. The first 100 years were marked by chaos and crisis. The
Sepoy Rebellion, also known as the Indian War of Independence, erupted in 1857
and became a widespread revolt against British rule. After the British quelled
the rebellion in 1858, they immediately took steps to maintain control. The
British government officially abolished the Mughal Empire and exiled Muhammad
Bahadur Shah to Burma. In addition, the British government transferred
authority from the English East India Company to the British crown,
establishing direct imperial rule in India. To help consolidate control the
British initiated a series of educational, administrative, and political
processes between 1858 and 1900. English was introduced as the official language.
The Muslim response to the imposition of British
rule evolved around the ideas and leadership of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan. In 1875
Sir Syed founded Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College (now Aligarh University)
because he believed that Muslims could best improve their social and economic
standing by gaining a Western education, rather than the traditional Islamic
education. He encouraged Muslims to pursue higher education based on the
Western model as a way to advance themselves, and their community, in the new
order. He also encouraged Muslims to seek government jobs and show loyalty to
the British Raj. At the same time he sought British patronage for improving the
lives of the Muslims of India. He demanded a separate Muslim electorate,
arguing that Muslims were at a disadvantage among India’s overwhelming majority
of Hindus. Hindus also were advancing themselves in the new order more quickly
than Muslims, the majority of whom held low socioeconomic status as farmers and
laborers. The emerging educated Muslim groups found Sir Syed’s ideas inspiring.
In the 1880s the British initiated political
reforms that allowed the formation of political parties and local government.
The Indian National Congress was created in 1885 to advocate for Indian
autonomy from British rule. Many Muslims believed the organization focused on
Hindu interests, however, and in 1906 Muslims formed the Muslim League to
represent their interests. Muslims demanded, and were granted, separate
electorates in the Government of India Act of 1909. This guaranteed Muslims
representation in the national and provincial legislative councils, although
the authority of these legislative councils was severely limited under the
British colonial government. Both Muslims and Hindus demanded autonomy
(self-government), and in 1919 constitutional reforms were introduced that gave
the legislative councils greater authority. However, the reforms fell short of
granting autonomy and did not satisfy political demands. The Amritsar Massacre
of 1919 further galvanized nationalist, anti-British sentiment.
The concept of an autonomous Muslim state was
publicly proposed during the Allahābād session of the Muslim League in 1930 by
the leading Muslim poet-philosopher in South Asia, Mohammad Iqbal. He
envisioned a system in which areas that had Muslim majorities would constitute
an autonomous state within India. During the next decade, this concept evolved
into the demand for the partition of India into separate Muslim and Hindu
nations, known as the Two Nations Theory. In 1940 Muslim League president
Mohammed Ali Jinnah presided over the organization’s annual session, held that
year at Lahore, in which the League made its first official demand for the
partition of India. The Lahore Resolution called for an independent, sovereign
Muslim state.
During preindependence talks in 1946, the British government
found that the stand of the Muslim League on separation and that of the
Congress on the territorial unity of India were irreconcilable. The British
then decided on partition and on August 14, 1947, granted independence to
Pakistan. India gained its independence the next day. They both became
independent dominions within the Commonwealth of Nations. Pakistan came into
existence in two parts: West Pakistan, coextensive with the country’s present
boundaries, and East Pakistan, now known as Bangladesh. The two were separated
by 1,600 km (1,000 mi) of Indian territory.
|
B
|
Problems of Partition
|
The division of India caused tremendous dislocation
of populations. Some 3.5 million Hindus and Sikhs moved from Pakistan into
India, and about 5 million Muslim refugees (known as Mohajirs) migrated from
India to Pakistan. The demographic shift caused an initial bitterness between
the two countries that was further intensified by each country’s accession of a
portion of the princely states in the region. Nearly all of these 562 widely
scattered polities joined either India or Pakistan; however, the Muslim princes
of Hyderābād and Jūnāgadh and the Hindu ruler of Kashmīr chose not to join
either country.
On August 14 and 15, 1947, these three
princely states had become technically independent. But when the Muslim ruler
of Jūnāgadh, with its predominantly Hindu population, joined Pakistan a month
later, India annexed his territory. In September 1948 India used force of arms
to annex Hyderābād (now part of Andhra Pradesh state, in central India), which
had a mostly Hindu population. The Hindu ruler of Kashmīr, whose subjects were
85 percent Muslim, decided to join India. Pakistan, however, questioned his
right to do so, and a war broke out between India and Pakistan. Although the
United Nations (UN) subsequently resolved that a plebiscite be held under UN
auspices to determine the future of Kashmīr, India continued to occupy about
two-thirds of the state and refused to hold a plebiscite. Pakistan controlled
the remaining portion as Azad (Free) Kashmīr, an autonomous region, and the
Northern Areas, federally administered. This deadlock, which still persists,
has intensified suspicion and antagonism between the two countries. See also
Indo-Pakistani Wars.
|
C
|
Early Governments and the Constitution of 1956
|
The first government of Pakistan was headed by
Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan and it chose the seaport of Karāchi as its
capital. Jinnah, considered the founder of Pakistan and hailed as the
Quaid-i-Azam (Great Leader), became head of state as governor-general. The
government faced many challenges in setting up new economic, judicial, and
political structures. It endeavored to organize the bureaucracy and the armed
forces, resettle the Mohajirs (Muslim refugees from India), and establish the
distribution and balance of power in the provincial and central governments.
Undermining these efforts were provincial politicians who often defied the
authority of the central government, and frequent communal riots. Before the
government could surmount these difficulties, Jinnah died in September 1948.
In foreign policy, Liaquat established friendly
relations with the United States when he visited President Harry S. Truman in
1950. Pakistan’s early foreign policy was one of nonalignment, with no formal
commitment to either the United States or the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR), the two major adversaries in the Cold War. In 1953, however,
Pakistan aligned itself with the United States and accepted military and
economic assistance.
Liaquat was assassinated in 1951. Khwaja Nazimuddin, an
East Pakistani who had succeeded Jinnah as governor-general, became prime
minister. Ghulam Muhammad became governor-general. Nazimuddin attempted to
limit the powers of the governor-general through amendments to the Government
of India Act of 1935, under which Pakistan was governed pending the adoption of
a constitution. Ghulam Muhammad dismissed Nazimuddin and replaced him with
Muhammad Ali Bogra, Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States, who
subsequently was elected president of the Muslim League.
In the 1954 provincial elections in East Pakistan,
the Muslim League was routed by the United Front coalition, which supported
provincial autonomy. The coalition was dominated by the Awami League. However,
Ghulam Muhammad imposed governor’s rule in the province, preventing the United
Front from taking power in the provincial legislature. After the constituent
assembly attempted to curb the governor-general’s power, Ghulam Muhammad
declared a state of emergency and dissolved the assembly. A new constituent
assembly was indirectly elected in mid-1955 by the various provincial
legislatures. The Muslim League, although still the largest party, was no
longer dominant as more parties, including those of the United Front coalition,
gained representation. Bogra, who had little support in the new assembly, was
replaced by Chaudhri Muhammad Ali, a former civil servant in West Pakistan and
a member of the Muslim League. At the same time, General Iskander Mirza became
governor-general.
The new constituent assembly enacted a bill, which
became effective in October 1955, integrating the four West Pakistani provinces
into one political and administrative unit, known as the One Unit. This change
was designed to give West Pakistan parity with the more populous East Pakistan
in the national legislature. The assembly also produced Pakistan’s first
constitution, which was adopted on March 2, 1956. It provided for a unicameral
(single-chamber) National Assembly with 300 seats, evenly divided between East
and West Pakistan. It also officially designated Pakistan an Islamic republic.
According to its provisions, Mirza’s title changed from governor-general to
president.
|
D
|
Unstable Parliamentary Democracy
|
The new charter notwithstanding, political
instability continued because no stable majority party emerged in the National
Assembly. Prime Minister Ali remained in office only until September 1956, when
he was unable to retain his majority in the National Assembly and was succeeded
by Hussain Shaheed Suhrawardy, founder of the Awami League of East Pakistan. He
formed a coalition cabinet that included the Awami League and the Republican
Party of the West Wing, a new party that was formed by dissident members of the
Muslim League. However, President Mirza forced Suhrawardy to resign after he
discovered that the prime minister was planning to support Firoz Khan Noon,
leader of the Republican Party, for the presidency in the country’s first
general elections, scheduled for January 1959. The succeeding coalition
government, headed by Ismail Ibrahim Chundrigar of the Muslim League, lasted
only two months before it was replaced by a Republican Party cabinet under
Noon.
President Mirza, realizing he had no chance of being
reelected president and openly dissatisfied with parliamentary democracy,
proclaimed martial law on October 7, 1958. He dismissed Noon’s government,
dissolved the National Assembly, and canceled the scheduled general elections.
Mirza was supported by General Muhammad Ayub Khan, commander in chief of the
army, who was named chief martial-law administrator. Twenty days later Ayub
forced the president to resign and assumed the presidency himself.
|
E
|
The Ayub Years
|
President Ayub ruled Pakistan almost absolutely for
a little more than ten years. Although his regime made some notable
achievements, it did not eliminate the basic problems of Pakistani society.
Ayub’s regime increased developmental funds to East Pakistan more than
threefold. This had a noticeable effect on the economy of the province, but the
disparity between the two wings of Pakistan was not eliminated. His regime also
initiated land reforms designed to reduce the political power of the landed
aristocracy. Ayub also promulgated a progressive Islamic law, the Muslim Family
Laws Ordinance of 1961, imposing restrictions on polygamy and divorce and
reinforcing the inheritance rights of women and minors.
In 1959, soon after taking office, Ayub
ordered the planning and construction of a new national capital, to replace Karāchi.
The chosen location of the new capital in the province of Punjab was close to
the military headquarters of Rāwalpindi, which served as an interim capital.
Islāmābād officially became the new capital in 1967, although construction
continued into the 1970s.
Perhaps the most pervasive of Ayub’s changes was
his introduction of a new political system, known as the Basic Democracies, in
1959. It created a four-tiered system of mostly indirect representation in
government, from the local to the national level, allowing communication
between local communities and the highly centralized national government. Each
tier was assigned certain responsibilities in local administration of
agricultural and community development, such as maintenance of elementary schools,
public roads, and bridges. All the councils at the tehsil (subdistrict),
zilla (district), and division levels were indirectly elected. The
lowest tier, on the village level, consisted of union councils. Members of the
union councils were known as Basic Democrats and were the only members of any
tier who were directly elected.
A new constitution promulgated by Ayub in 1962
ended the period of martial law. The new, 156-member National Assembly was
elected that year by an electoral college of 120,000 Basic Democrats from the
union councils. After the legislative elections political parties were again
legalized. Ayub created the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) as the official
government party. The presidential election of January 1965, also determined by
electoral college rather than direct vote, resulted in a victory for Ayub,
although opposition parties were allowed to participate.
Ayub was skillful in maintaining cordial
relations with the United States, stimulating substantial economic and military
aid to Pakistan. This relationship deteriorated in 1965, when another war with
India broke out over Kashmīr. The United States then suspended military and
economic aid to both countries. The USSR intervened to mediate the conflict,
inviting Ayub and Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri of India to meet in
Toshkent (Tashkent). By the terms of the so-called Toshkent Agreement of
January 1966, the two countries withdrew their forces to prewar positions and
restored diplomatic, economic, and trade relations. Exchange programs were
initiated, and the flow of capital goods to Pakistan increased greatly.
The Toshkent Agreement and the Kashmīr war, however,
generated frustration among the people and resentment against President Ayub.
Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who opposed Pakistan’s capitulation,
resigned his position and founded the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) in
opposition to the Ayub regime. Ayub tried unsuccessfully to make amends, and
amid mounting public protests he declared martial law and resigned in March
1969. Instead of transferring power to the speaker of the National Assembly, as
the constitution dictated, he handed it over to the commander in chief of the
army, General Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan, who was the designated martial-law
administrator. Yahya then assumed the presidency.
|
F
|
Yahya Regime
|
In an attempt to make his martial-law regime
more acceptable, Yahya dismissed almost 300 senior civil servants and
identified 32 families that were said to control about half of Pakistan’s gross
national product. To curb their power Yahya issued an ordinance against
monopolies and restrictive trade practices in 1970. He also committed to the
return of constitutional government and announced the country would hold its
first general election on the basis of universal adult franchise in late 1970.
Yahya determined that representation in the National
Assembly would be based on population. In July 1970 he abolished the One Unit,
thereby restoring the original four provinces in West Pakistan. As a result,
East Pakistan emerged as the largest province of the country, while in West
Pakistan the province of Punjab emerged as the dominant province. East Pakistan
was allocated 162 seats in the 300-seat National Assembly, and the provinces of
West Pakistan were allocated a total of 138.
|
G
|
Civil War
|
The election campaign intensified divisions between East
and West Pakistan. A challenge to Pakistan’s unity emerged in East Pakistan
when Sheikh Mujibur Rahman (“Mujib”), leader of the Awami League, insisted on a
federation under which East Pakistan would be virtually independent. He
envisaged a federal government that would deal with defense and foreign affairs
only; even the currencies would be different, although freely convertible.
Mujib’s program had great appeal for many East
Pakistanis, and in the December 1970 election called by Yahya, he won by a
landslide in East Pakistan, capturing 160 seats in the National Assembly.
Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) emerged as the largest party in West
Pakistan, capturing 81 seats (predominantly in Punjab and Sind). This gave the
Awami League an absolute majority in the National Assembly, a turn of events
that was considered unacceptable by political interests in West Pakistan
because of the divided political climate of the country. The Awami League
adopted an uncompromising stance, however, and negotiations between the various
sides became deadlocked.
Suspecting Mujib of secessionist politics, Yahya in
March 1971 postponed indefinitely the convening of the National Assembly. Mujib
in return accused Yahya of collusion with Bhutto and established a virtually
independent government in East Pakistan. Yahya opened negotiations with Mujib
in Dhaka in mid-March, but the effort soon failed. Meanwhile Pakistan’s army
went into action against Mujib’s civilian followers, who demanded that East
Pakistan become independent as the nation of Bangladesh.
There were many casualties during the ensuing
military operations in East Pakistan, as the Pakistani army attacked the poorly
armed population. India claimed that nearly 10 million Bengali refugees crossed
its borders, and stories of West Pakistani atrocities abounded. The Awami
League leaders took refuge in Calcutta (now Kolkata) and established a government
in exile. India finally intervened on December 3, 1971, and the Pakistani army
surrendered 13 days later. East Pakistan declared its independence as
Bangladesh.
Yahya resigned, and on December 20 Bhutto was
inaugurated as president and chief martial law administrator of a truncated
Pakistan. Mujib became the first prime minister of Bangladesh in January 1972.
When the Commonwealth of Nations admitted Bangladesh later that year, Pakistan
withdrew its membership, not to return until 1989. However, the Bhutto
government gave diplomatic recognition to Bangladesh in 1974.
|
H
|
The Bhutto Government
|
Under Bhutto’s leadership Pakistan began to rearrange
its national life. Bhutto nationalized the basic industries, insurance
companies, domestically owned banks, and schools and colleges. He also
instituted land reforms that benefited tenants and middle-class farmers. He
removed the armed forces from the process of decision making, but to placate
the generals he allocated about 6 percent of the gross national product to
defense. In July 1972 Bhutto negotiated the Simla Agreement, which confirmed a
line of control dividing Kashmīr and prompted the withdrawal of Indian troops
from Pakistani territory.
In April 1972 Bhutto lifted martial law and
convened the National Assembly, which consisted of members elected from West
Pakistan in 1970. After much political debate, the legislature drafted the
country’s third constitution, which was promulgated on August 14, 1973. It
changed the National Assembly into a two-chamber legislature, with a Senate as
the upper house and a National Assembly as the lower house. It designated the
prime minister as the most powerful government official, but it also set up a
formal parliamentary system in which the executive was responsible to the
legislature. Bhutto became prime minister, and Fazal Elahi Chaudry replaced him
as president.
Although discontented, the military grudgingly accepted the
supremacy of the civilian leadership. Bhutto embarked on ambitious
nationalization programs and land reforms, which he called “Islamic socialism.”
His reforms achieved some success but earned him the enmity of the
entrepreneurial and capitalist class. In addition, religious leaders considered
them to be un-Islamic. Unable to deal constructively with the opposition, he
became heavy-handed in his rule. In the general elections of 1977, nine
opposition parties united in the Pakistan National Alliance (PNA) to run
against Bhutto’s PPP. Losing in three of the four provinces, the PNA alleged
that Bhutto had rigged the vote. The PNA boycotted the provincial elections a
few days later and organized demonstrations throughout the country that lasted
for six weeks.
|
I
|
Zia Regime
|
The PPP and PNA leadership proved incapable of
resolving the deadlock, and the army chief of staff, General Muhammad Zia
ul-Haq, staged a coup on July 5, 1977, and imposed another martial-law regime.
Bhutto was tried for authorizing the murder of a political opponent and found
guilty; he was hanged on April 4, 1979. The PPP was reorganized under the
leadership of his daughter, Benazir Bhutto.
Zia formally assumed the presidency in 1978 and
embarked on an Islamization program. Through various ordinances between 1978
and 1985, he instituted the Islamization of Pakistan’s legal and economic
systems and social order. In 1979 a federal Sharia (Islamic law) court was
established to exercise Islamic judicial review. Other ordinances established
interest-free banking and provided maximum penalties for adultery, defamation,
theft, and consumption of alcohol.
On March 24, 1981, Zia issued a Provisional
Constitutional Order that served as a substitute for the suspended 1973
constitution. The order provided for the formation of a Federal Advisory
Council (Majlis-e-Shoora) to take the place of the National Assembly. In early
1982 Zia appointed the 228 members of the new council. This effectively
restricted the political parties, which already had been constrained by the
banning of political activity, from organizing resistance to the Zia regime
through the election process.
The Soviet intervention in Afghanistan in December 1979
heightened Pakistan’s insecurity and changed the fortunes of General Zia’s
military regime. Afghan refugees began to pour into Pakistan. After about a
year, the United States responded to the crisis. In September 1981 Zia accepted
a six-year economic and military aid package worth $3.2 billion from the United
States. (The United States approved a second aid package worth $4.0 billion in
1986 but then suspended its disbursement in 1989 due to Pakistan’s
nuclear-weapons program.) After a referendum in December 1984 endorsed Zia’s
Islamization policies and the extension of his presidency until 1990, Zia
permitted elections for parliament in February 1985. A civilian cabinet took
office in April, and martial law ended in December. Zia was dissatisfied,
however, and in May 1988 he dissolved the government and ordered new elections.
Three months later he was killed in an airplane crash possibly caused by
sabotage, and a caretaker regime took power until elections could be held.
|
J
|
Shifting Civilian Governments
|
Benazir Bhutto became prime minister after her PPP won
the general elections in November 1988. She was the first woman to head a
modern Islamic state. A civil servant, Ghulam Ishaq Khan, was appointed
president. In August 1990 he dismissed Bhutto’s government, charging
misconduct, and declared a state of emergency. Bhutto and the PPP lost the
October elections after she was arrested for corruption and abuse of power.
The new prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, head of the
Islamic Democratic Alliance (a coalition of Islamic parties including the
Pakistan Muslim League), introduced a program of privatizing state enterprises
and encouraging foreign investment. Fulfilling Sharif’s election promise to
make Sharia (Islamic law) the supreme law of Pakistan, the national legislature
passed an amended Shariat Bill in 1991. Sharif also promised to ease continuing
tensions with India over Kashmīr. The charges against Bhutto were resolved, and
she returned to lead the opposition. In early 1993 Sharif was appointed the
leader of the Pakistan Muslim League.
In April 1993 Ishaq Khan once again used his
presidential power, this time to dismiss Sharif and to dissolve parliament.
However, Sharif appealed to the Supreme Court of Pakistan, and in May the court
stated that Khan’s actions were unconstitutional, and the court reinstated
Sharif as prime minister. Sharif and Khan subsequently became embroiled in a
power struggle that paralyzed the Pakistani government. In an agreement
designed to end the stalemate, Sharif and Khan resigned together in July 1993,
and elections were held in October of that year. Bhutto’s PPP won a plurality
in the parliamentary elections, and Bhutto was again named prime minister.
In 1996 Bhutto’s government was dismissed by
President Farooq Leghari amid allegations of corruption. New elections in
February 1997 brought Nawaz Sharif back to power in a clear victory for the
Pakistan Muslim League. One of Sharif’s first actions as prime minister was to
lead the National Assembly in passing a constitutional amendment stripping the
president of the authority to dismiss parliament. The action triggered a power
struggle between Sharif, Leghari, and Supreme Court Chief Justice Sajjad Ali
Shah. When the military threw its support behind Sharif, Leghari resigned and
Shah was removed. Sharif’s nominee, Rafiq Tarar, was then elected president.
Pakistan was beset by domestic unrest beginning in
the mid-1990s. Violence between rival political, religious, and ethnic groups
erupted frequently in Sind Province, particularly in Karāchi. Federal rule was
imposed on the province in late 1998 due to increasing violence.
|
K
|
Relations with India
|
Relations between India and Pakistan became more tense
beginning in the early 1990s. Diplomatic talks between the two countries broke
down in January 1994 over the disputed Kashmīr region. In February Bhutto
organized a nationwide strike to show support for the militant Muslim rebels in
Indian Kashmīr involved in sporadic fighting against the Indian army. She also
announced that Pakistan would continue with its nuclear weapons development
program, raising concerns that a nuclear arms race could start between Pakistan
and India, which has had nuclear weapons since the 1970s. In January 1996,
despite some controversy, the United States lifted economic and some military
sanctions imposed against Pakistan since 1990. The sanctions, imposed to
protest Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program, were lifted to allow U.S. companies
to fulfill contracts with Pakistan and to help foster diplomatic relations
between the two countries.
In early 1997 Sharif resumed talks with India
over the Kashmīr region; however, negotiations quickly broke down when armed
hostilities erupted again. Tensions escalated further in 1998, when India
conducted several nuclear tests. Pakistan responded with its own tests,
detonating nuclear weapons for the first time in its history. The Pakistani
government then declared a state of emergency, invoking constitutional
provisions that operate when Pakistan’s security comes under “threat of
external aggression.” Many foreign countries, including the United States,
imposed economic sanctions against both India and Pakistan for exploding
nuclear devices. In the months following the explosions, the leaders of
Pakistan and India placed a moratorium on further nuclear testing, and the
United States initiated negotiations between the two countries aimed at
reducing tensions and circumventing an arms race in the region.
In early 1999 Sharif and Indian prime minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee signed the Lahore Declaration, which articulated a
commitment to work toward improved relations. However, in April fears of a
nuclear arms race revived when both countries tested medium-range missiles
capable of carrying nuclear warheads. Furthermore, in May 1999 Kashmīri
separatists, widely believed to be backed by Pakistan, seized Indian-controlled
territory near Kargil in the disputed Kashmīr region. Fighting between Indian
forces and the separatists raged until July, when Sharif agreed to secure the
withdrawal of the separatists and India suspended its military campaign.
The Pakistani military accused Sharif of giving in too
easily to pressure from India and for pinning the blame for the Kargil attack
on army chief Pervez Musharraf. In October 1999 Sharif tried to dismiss General
Musharraf from his position. He attempted to prevent Musharraf’s return to
Pakistan from abroad by refusing to let his airplane land. The commercial
airplane was forced to circle the Karāchi airport until army forces loyal to
Musharraf took over the airport. Army forces also seized control of the
government in a bloodless coup that lasted less than three hours.
|
L
|
Pakistan Under Musharraf
|
Musharraf declared himself the chief executive of
Pakistan, suspended the constitution, and dissolved the legislature. He
appointed an eight-member National Security Council to function as the
country’s supreme governing body. Many Pakistanis, already chafing under
Sharif’s increasingly autocratic rule and suffering from a sagging Pakistani
economy after ten years of government excesses and corruption, welcomed the
coup. Sharif was arrested, and in April 2000 he was convicted of abuse of power
and other charges and sentenced to life imprisonment; his sentence was
subsequently commuted and he was allowed to live in exile in Saudi Arabia.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court of Pakistan set a deadline of October 2002 for
holding national elections to restore civilian rule. The Commonwealth of
Nations, however, formally suspended Pakistan’s membership because the coup
ousted a civilian government.
After assuming power, Musharraf’s military government adopted
a reformist posture. It identified economic reform as the most urgent measure
needed to restore the confidence of foreign and local investors. As part of
this strategy, Musharraf initiated an ambitious program based on
accountability, improved governance, and widening of the tax net. However, in
the wake of the coup new international sanctions were imposed to oppose the
military regime. Donor agencies such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
were unwilling to provide new loans or reschedule Pakistan’s foreign debt.
|
L1
|
Pakistan Allies with United States
|
In 2001 Pakistan established itself as a vital U.S.
ally and key regional player after the September 11 terrorist attacks in the
United States. Pakistan became a frontline state of high strategic importance
as the U.S.-led war on terrorism unfolded in neighboring Afghanistan. Pakistan
had been an ally of the Taliban, which had established a fundamentalist Islamic
regime in Afghanistan in 1996. The Taliban was accused of harboring the suspected
mastermind of the terrorist attacks, Osama bin Laden. The Taliban and bin
Laden’s international terrorist network, al-Qaeda, became the target of
U.S.-led air strikes in Afghanistan that began on October 7. The Musharraf
government agreed to provide logistical support and use of Pakistan’s airspace
for the offensive, and to share military intelligence to fight global
terrorism. Formally breaking with the Taliban, Pakistan withdrew all of its
diplomats from Afghanistan and officially closed its shared border. On
September 22, meanwhile, the United States lifted most of the economic
sanctions it had imposed after Pakistan exploded nuclear devices in 1998,
brightening prospects for Pakistan’s economy.
Musharraf’s cooperation with the United States evoked hostility
from hardline Islamic fundamentalist groups within Pakistan. In December 2003
the Pakistani president survived two assassination attempts. Suspicions
centered on militant Islamic groups within Pakistan, on al-Qaeda, or a joint
conspiracy between the two groups. The attacks appeared to encourage Musharraf
to crack down on the militant fundamentalists and to bolster Pakistan’s
cooperation with the United States in pursuing al-Qaeda and Taliban forces
along the Pakistani border with Afghanistan.
|
L2
|
Constitutional Amendments and Elections
|
Musharraf pledged to hold provincial and
parliamentary elections in October 2002. In a bid to secure his position as
president, a title he had adopted in 2001, Musharraf called a referendum in
April 2002 on extending his presidency for five years. The referendum returned
a majority of votes in favor of the proposal, although low voter turnout, loose
voting rules, and the absence of poll monitors tainted the results. In
addition, political parties denounced the referendum because under the
constitution, the president is to be selected by members of the national and
provincial legislatures. In August 2002 Musharraf granted himself sweeping new
powers, unilaterally enacting the Legal Framework Order that introduced 29
amendments to Pakistan’s constitution. Among other powers, the amendments
allowed him to dissolve the parliament, force the resignation of the prime
minister, and appoint Supreme Court justices.
In the October 2002 elections no single party
or coalition of parties won a majority of seats in the National Assembly (lower
house). The largest number of seats went to the Pakistan Muslim League
(Quaid-e-Azam), or PML-Q, a new PML faction formed as a pro-Musharraf party.
Pro-democracy parties, which had formed the Alliance for the Restoration of
Democracy, also made a strong showing, as did hardline Islamic parties.
Afterward, Britain announced that in restoring an elected civilian government,
Pakistan qualified for readmission to the Commonwealth of Nations.
In December 2003 the parliament passed a
constitutional-amendment bill that legitimized Musharraf’s rule and approved
most of the special powers that he had awarded himself in 2002. It also
specified that Musharraf would have to relinquish his post as chief of army
staff by the end of 2004. Before the deadline approached, however, both houses
of parliament voted to allow Musharraf to remain in the dual role of president
and army chief until 2007. Opposition leaders vehemently opposed the vote,
which passed by a simple majority. Musharraf continued to insist that a formal
role for the military in governing the country was necessary to ensure
stability.
|
L3
|
Regional Diplomacy
|
Tensions escalated between Pakistan and India following
violent attacks on Indian targets by Kashmīri separatists in late 2001 and
early 2002. By mid-2002 the two countries had amassed an estimated 1 million
troops along their shared border, with most of the military buildup in the
disputed Jammu and Kashmīr region. The threat of armed conflict between the two
nuclear powers prompted intense international diplomacy, which ultimately
helped defuse the crisis.
In May 2003 India and Pakistan agreed to
restore diplomatic ties. High-level contacts followed. In late November Indian
prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee accepted Musharraf’s offer of a cease-fire
in Jammu and Kashmīr. For the first time in 14 years, artillery fire ceased
along the 1,100-km (700-mi) border. The two leaders also made moves toward
restoring and improving trade and transportation ties between their countries.
In January 2004 India and Pakistan agreed to resume talks on a range of issues,
including the status of Kashmīr.
|
L4
|
Pakistan’s Nuclear Weapons Program
|
In February 2004 the founder of Pakistan’s
nuclear weapons program, Abdul Qadeer Khan, admitted that he had shared nuclear
weapons technology with other nations. Through these deals Khan became
enormously wealthy. In a nationally televised address Khan apologized for his
actions. The next day Musharraf pardoned Khan, who is regarded as a national
hero within Pakistan. Khan’s ties with Pakistan’s main nuclear weapons
laboratory had previously been severed in 2001 due to financial irregularities.
He was placed under house arrest in early 2004 after the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) and several Western intelligence agencies confronted
Musharraf with overwhelming evidence that Khan had passed nuclear weapons
secrets to Iran, Libya, and North Korea.
|
L5
|
Deadly Earthquake
|
In October 2005 a 7.6-magnitude earthquake
struck Pakistan’s mountainous northern regions. Near the epicenter, located
about 105 km (65 mi) northeast of Islāmābād, entire villages were reduced to
rubble. The quake killed at least 73,000 people and left about 3 million
homeless in Pakistan. International donors pledged more than $5 billion for
reconstruction, and aid agencies quickly moved in to provide humanitarian
relief. However, the remoteness of many communities impeded aid efforts. As
heavy winter snows set in, many survivors were forced to live in tents and
other inadequate shelters. A year later about 30,000 people faced another
brutally cold winter without adequate shelter, due to the slow pace of
rebuilding. The Pakistani government estimated that reconstruction would take
several years to complete.
|
L6
|
Opposition to Musharraf
|
In March 2007 Musharraf formally suspended the
chief justice of the Supreme Court, Iftikhar Chaudhry, and replaced him with an
acting chief justice of his own choosing. The dismissal of Chaudhry sparked
daily street protests by lawyers and opposition politicians, who accused
Musharraf of undermining the independence of the judiciary in the run-up to the
presidential elections due in October. The Supreme Court reinstated Chaudhry in
July, ruling that Musharraf had acted illegally and exceeded his constitutional
authority. The opposition against Musharraf gained new impetus from the ruling.
The following month, the Supreme Court ruled that
former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, whom Musharraf had deposed in 1999, had an
“inalienable right” to return to Pakistan from exile in Saudi Arabia. Sharif,
who had maintained his leadership of the PML faction loyal to him (the PML-N),
announced his intention to return and contest upcoming elections. Upon his
arrival in September 2007, Sharif was promptly arrested by government forces
and sent back to Saudi Arabia. However, in November he was allowed to return to
Pakistan.
In early October, Musharraf easily won reelection
as president. Most opposition parties boycotted the election, which was held by
an electoral college comprising members of the national and provincial
assemblies. Although the Supreme Court had allowed the election to go ahead as
scheduled, it decided to hear challenges to Musharraf’s right to reelection,
thus postponing his inauguration. At issue was his eligibility to run for
president while retaining his role as army chief. Musharraf indicated he would
give up his military title once his reelection as president was secured.
Meanwhile, Musharraf engaged in negotiations with former
prime minister Benazir Bhutto, the widely popular PPP leader who had remained
in self-imposed exile since 1999. Bhutto sought to gain amnesty from the
longstanding corruption charges against her, as well as the right to serve a
third term as prime minister (disallowed under the amended constitution). In
return Bhutto reportedly agreed to accept Musharraf as president, providing he
resigned as army chief. In October 2007 Musharraf granted Bhutto amnesty, and
she promptly returned to Pakistan.
Bhutto’s arrival procession in Karāchi drew throngs of
supporters, but the homecoming celebration turned into a tragedy as
suicide-bomb attacks killed at least 136 people and injured hundreds more.
Afterward, the government instituted restrictions on public political
gatherings. Suicide-bomb attacks, attributed to Islamic militants, had been on
the rise in Pakistan for several months.
Musharraf declared a state of emergency in November
2007, claiming that the country was “on the verge of destabilization” due to
increasing activity by pro-Taliban militants. Musharraf suspended the
constitution and dissolved the Supreme Court but stopped short of shutting down
the parliament. Only the state-run television station was allowed to broadcast,
and telephone lines were disabled. Chief Justice Chaudhry refused to endorse
the emergency order and was promptly dismissed and put under house arrest.
Chaudhry’s supporters and others who staged protests against the imposition of
emergency rule were met with baton-wielding police and tear gas.
Musharraf resigned his military post in late November
and was subsequently inaugurated as president, this time as a civilian. He
lifted the state of emergency in mid-December. Later that month Bhutto was
assassinated while campaigning in Rāwalpindi. Parliamentary elections,
originally scheduled for January 2008, were postponed until February. The PPP
emerged as the largest party in the National Assembly, followed by Sharif’s
PML-N. The pro-Musharraf PML-Q and its allies suffered a crushing defeat,
losing their majority. The PPP and PML-N formed a coalition government in
opposition to Musharraf. Yusuf Raza Gillani of the PPP was named prime
minister.



