From Zoha Waseem's Twitter (Kings War Studies PhD student):In 2014 at least 1816 civilians and at least 140 police officers were killed in Karachi due to crime and terrorism-related violence.
From Zoha Waseem's Twitter (Kings War Studies PhD student):In 2014 at least 1816 civilians and at least 140 police officers were killed in Karachi due to crime and terrorism-related violence.
davidbfpo
I don't trust the numbers I'm providing, but they are probably approximate and Karachi seems relatively safe to many cities in America.
http://www.asecurelife.com/most-dang...-in-the-world/
The following list doesn't even list Karachi in the top 50 (doesn't mean its right):The lists vary from place to place, but here is an average of what the top ten most dangerous cities consist of.
1.San Pedro Sula, Honduras
2.Ciudad Jaurez, Mexico
3.Acapulco, Mexico
4.Caracas, Venezuela
5.Distrito Central, Honduras
6.Maceio, Brazil
7.Baghdad, Iraq
8.Sana’a, Yemen
9.Cape Town, South Africa
10.Karachi, Pakistan
http://www.businessinsider.com/the-m...d-2014-11?op=1
Murder is more common in Latin America than in any other part of the world.And we're worried about Islamists?Thirty-four of the 50 worst cities were located in the region, including repeat murder capital of the world — San Pedro Sula, Honduras — which saw 187 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants in 2013 and is getting steadily worse. A full one-third of global homicides occur in Latin America even though the region has just 8% of the world's population, according to United Nations data.
From the Dawn paper:The report has more:http://www.dawn.com/news/1154281According to official figures, 701 suspects were killed in ‘encounters’ with police and 224 were gunned down in shootouts with the paramilitary Rangers while 143 personnel of police and 17 of Rangers were killed in targeted attacks in the metropolis, said spokespersons for police and Rangers.
Bill,
I wonder if those cities you listed above have similar figures for both civilian and state deaths.
davidbfpo
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