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Indo-Pakistani border

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I'm learning Pakistan's history and I have a serious question. Can somebody explain me why this crayoned course of the border wasn't implemented in the first place?
 
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Because in the independence bill 3 june 1947 that was written only muslim majority areas will be apart of Pakistan if their local muslims or their elected members vote in favour of Pakistan thay even cut the Muslim majority districts of east punjab to give india access towards Kashmir e.g gurdaspur ,ferozpur , pathankot zeera ,nabha ,and others
 
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I'm learning Pakistan's history and I have a serious question. Can somebody explain me why this crayoned course of the border wasn't implemented in the first place?
besides Pakistan (Punjab, Afghania, Kashmir, Sindh and Balochistan) and Modern Bangladesh there is not a single state of Muslim majority in India. The area shown between Pakistan and Bangladesh consists of several Indian states including Uttar Pradesh which itself is bigger than Pakistan in terms of population.

If two nations were formed from British India with the help of map shown above, I highly doubt Muslims would have formed a majority. Even if they were, it was impossible to have Muslim state due to high proportion of Hindu and Sikh population. The bottom line is, it would have killed the purpose and demand for separate Muslim nation and challenged the core principles and agenda under which Pakistan was founded.
 
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Because in the independence bill 3 june 1947 that was written only muslim majority areas will be apart of Pakistan if their local muslims or their elected members vote in favour of Pakistan thay even cut the Muslim majority districts of east punjab to give india access towards Kashmir e.g gurdaspur ,ferozpur , pathankot zeera ,nabha ,and others
Simply because Muslim people were minority in that region. And greed isn't good for people.
 
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I'm learning Pakistan's history and I have a serious question. Can somebody explain me why this crayoned course of the border wasn't implemented in the first place?

British India was partitioned between the two new dominions, the Union of India (later Republic of India), and Dominion of Pakistan (later Islamic Republic of Pakistan) on the grounds of provincial religious majorities. As such provinces that had Muslim majorities went to Pakistan and vice versa. Two anomalies were Punjab and Bengal in which Muslims had a majority but the British decided to carve these provinces up so as to join non-Muslim majority districts within these provinces with India. This led many Pakistanis to allege foul play on the part of the British in favor of India (and recent evidence suggests there is truth behind this, e.g. Radcliffe's (man responsible for the partition boundary) private secretary has repeatedly mentioned in his memoirs how Lord Mountbatten (The viceroy representing the British Queen in British India) would repeatedly bend the rules in favor of India (see the BBC article below). From a Pakistani pov hence the British boundary award is similar to how Sevres was for you Turks. Maybe not as extreme, but certainly many regions that should rightfully have gone to Pakistan, were instead handed to India. Kashmir is their legacy at the end of the day.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/6926464.stm
 
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implemented in the first place?
Your looking at this from the wrong angle, my friend. The British colony was made up of various provinces. These were mostly centred around a ethnic group - although it was not quite perfect. Here below is map of these provinces. In the west Baluchistan, Sindh, Punjab, NWFP and Kashmir were Muslim majority. It was these that voted to join the federation called Pakistan. They had anything between 70-90 per cent Muslim majorities.

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On the map you posted (bottom of the page) I have drawn a saffron circle - that centres on the Ganges River Basin in India. This core region of India and is densely packed. It probably has about 600 million people living within it. Although the number of Muslims could be as high as 60 million in the Ganga River Basin but they are dwarfed by the 540 million Hindus. Futher most of the Muslims are indigenous to the ethnic groups there - that means they are more similar to their neighbours then those Muslims in the far West of what is now Pakistan, which of course is dominated by Punjabi, Pashtun, Baloch, Sindhi ethnic groups. All of these groups that make Pakistan are located inside the green rectangle - which is centred over the Indus River basin. Kashmir also falls inside the green rectangle but as you know that is where the dispute is.


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And your idea would never have worked. As the example of Bangladesh showed in 1971 war it is better to have more compact, cohesive, integrated and geographically contigous country then one that is huge but spread over vareigated regions and ethnic groups held together just with a loose notion of Islam.

I hope this helps.


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Pakistan - primarily a compound of these provinces/ethnic groups -

NWFP today K-PK ~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pashtuns (also found in Afghanistan)
Punjabi ~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punjabis (also found in India mostly Sikhs)
Balochistan ~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baloch_people (also found in Iran)
Sindhi ~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindhis

* These groups make probably about 94% of the population. Another 5% are ethnic 'Mohahir' who are of various Indian ethnic groups and are migrants fro India mostly from 1947. This group is mostly congregated in Karachi where they form the majority.

In addition there is is sliver of Azad Kashmir (Free Kashmir) in Pakistan jurisdiction.


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If you get time read these links. They will give you idea how the name Pakistan evolved.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choudhry_Rahmat_Ali
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistan_Declaration

@KediKesenFare
 
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I'm learning Pakistan's history and I have a serious question. Can somebody explain me why this crayoned course of the border wasn't implemented in the first place?
There were multiple factors; one being culture, ethnicity, shared history and ect...
Pakistan wasn't completely based off of religion
P - Punjab
A - Afghania
K - Kashmir
S - Sindh
I - Indus
TAN - Balochistan

Other than religion, we would've had barely anything else in common with these 'North Indians' except in Indian Punjab. This would've led to an inevitable break-away as we saw in East Pakistan (Bangladesh). This Indus Basin (Pakistan) has always been distinct and different compared to West (Iranics) and East (Indians) - this is a fact as we form our very own genetic cluster, we've had mostly different 'Kingdoms/Empires', we look different, have different accents, different cultures and ect...

Personally, i'm happy with what we have.
 
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