Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Karachi · Islamabad · Lahore | |
Languages | |
Arabic(Palestinian Arabic) · English(Pakistani English) · Urdu · other Palestinian languages | |
Religion | |
Islam (predominantlySunni)Christianity (Christian Palestinians) | |
Related ethnic groups | |
OtherPalestinian diaspora,Arabs in Pakistan |
Palestinians in Pakistan (Arabic:فلسطينيو باكستان) once compromised a population of 8,000 during the 1970s.[1] Now, however, the community has considerably grown to figures ranging between 40,000 and 50,000. MostPalestinians found inPakistan are most commonly students ofmedicine andengineering, seeking education in various universities and institutions across the country such asKarachi,Lahore,Hyderabad,Quetta andMultan. Settled families on the other hand, are primarily based inIslamabad and Karachi.[2]
The recent years have shown an increase in the number of Palestinians migrating to the country, as students increasingly opt to complete undergraduate degrees in Universities in Islamabad and Karachi.Pakistani government reserves 50 seats for Palestinian students in universities across the country: 13 are for medicine, 4 fordentistry, 23 forengineering, and 10 forpharmacy. Eight scholarships are also offered. Over 45,000 Palestinian students have graduated from universities and institutes in Pakistan.[3][4]
From the postZulfiqar Bhutto-era of the 1970s, Palestinian families settled across Pakistan in large numbers, as many seats and employment opportunities were offered to students and professionals. After the 1990s however, tougher-implemented foreign policies restricted the open mass-migration patterns and only a limited number of people entered the country. During the Afghan-RussianCold War, there were numerous Palestinians who took aid and shelter in Pakistan while fighting alongside theU.S.-backed guerillas against theSoviet Union.[5] A particular incident citing the presence of these fighters was the November 24, 1989Peshawar car bomb-explosion, which killed three Palestinians who had lived in Pakistan (including Abdullah Yusuf Azzam) for 15 months, embroiled in Afghanistan's decade-old war, fighting on the side of anti-Communist guerrillas.[6]
There is an organisation of Palestinian students, called the General Union of Palestinian Students (Islamabad).[7]