| Bangalore
India Demographics |
As
of 2005 Bangalore had a population of over six million, making
it the 3rd most populous city in India and the 27th largest
city in the world by population. With a decadal growth rate
of 38%, Bangalore was the fastest-growing Indian metropolis
after New Delhi for the decade 1991–2001. Residents
of Bangalore are referred to as Bangaloreans in English or
Bengaloorigaru in Kannada. While Kannadigas are the majority
of the population, other minorities from Tamil Nadu, Kerala,
Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh exist. Scheduled Castes and
Tribes account for 14.3% of the city's population. Kannada,
the official language of the state of Karnataka, is widely
spoken in Bangalore, as are Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, Tulu, Urdu,
and Malayalam. English is the lingua franca of the city's
white-collar workforce.
According
to the 2001 census of India, 79.37% of Bangalore's population
is Hindu — roughly the same as the national average.
Muslims comprise 13.37% of the population, which again is
roughly the same as the national average, while Christians
and Jains account for 5.79% and 1.05% of the population, respectively,
double that of their national averages. Women make up 47.5%
of Bangalore's population. Bangalore has the second highest
literacy rate (83%) for an Indian metropolis, after Mumbai.
The city's workforce structure is predominantly non-agrarian,
with only 6% of Bangalore's workforce being engaged in agriculture-related
activities. Roughly 10% of Bangalore's population lives in
slums— a relatively low proportion when compared to
other cities in the developing world such as Mumbai (54%)
and Nairobi (60%). The 2004 National Crime Records Bureau
statistics indicate that Bangalore accounts for 9.2% of the
total crimes reported from 35 major cities in India. Delhi
and Mumbai accounted for 15.7% and 9.5% respectively. Tensions
between the city's two lingual groups, the majority Kannadigas
and minority Tamils, have led to numerous altercations. In
early 1991, tensions between the two groups flared up with
the proposed installation of a statue honouring the Tamil
poet Thiruvalluvar in the city. Widespread agitation and protests
organised by groups sympathetic to Kannadigas led the Commissioner
of the Bangalore City Corporation to withdraw permission to
unveil the statue, which remains wrapped under cloth. Later
the same year, the Karnataka Government, acting upon the directives
of the Government of India, agreed to release 205 tmc of water
from the river Kaveri to the Government of Tamil Nadu, which
resulted in anti-Tamil riots that left 20 people dead. After
the demolition of the Babri Masjid in the North Indian city
of Ayodhya in 1992, communal violence between Hindus and Muslims
spread to Bangalore during which Muslim houses and huts as
well as an Arabic school for Muslim girls were raided and
torched.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chandigarh
India
|
Chennai
India
|
Coimbatore
India
|
Dlhi
India |
Goa
India |
Gujarat
India |
Gurgaon
India |
Hyderabad
India |
Pakistan
India |
Jaipur
India |
Karnataka
India |
Kerala
India |
Kolkata
India |
Maharashtra
India |
Mumbai
India |
New
Delhi India |
Noida
India |
Thane
India |
|