Once Pakistan was formed as a country. Although they initially wanted Pakistan to become an Arabic-speaking country, few people know that Pakistan is a very diverse country for people of different race, culture and language . People speaking different languages oppose such ideas. In other words, it adapts different languages to one language.
The number of individual languages listed for Pakistan is 74. All languages are living languages. Of these, 66 are indigenous peoples and 8 are non indigenous people. Furthermore, 7 is "institution", 17 is "developing", 39 is "active", 9 is "involved in the problem", 2 is "died".
So they finally decided to adopt the normal process. As they saw how India manages its own case on the same issue
After independence of Pakistan, Urdu was declared as national languages of Pakistan. Urdu can be regarded as a universal language - a general language. Urdu is the language the people of Pakistan speak. As time went on, the local language continued to lose importance, Urdu overcame them, but English was the official language of Pakistan. There are many government-level policies that replace Urdu with English as an official language, but that maintains that position.
Pakistan Mandarin is replaced with English and Urdu, English is replaced by Urdu, but it has been tried many times in the past but this has not happened in the past. The unique point of Pakistan is that both English and Urdu are non-native speakers and almost all Pakistani need to learn them as second language and / or third language. There are many regional languages and dialects (the latter usually can not be understood in other dialects of the same language). Many Pakistani who are receiving tertiary education and university education speak English and Urdu, speak the language of each region and use three languages with different fluency.
Language is a major element in nation building and for us it is Urdu. In a speech at the University of Dhaka, Quaid-e-Azam emphasized that Urdu should be the official language of Pakistan. He did not discriminate against Bangladesh as many critics suggested, but rather was a neutral word that could be an international cultural influence. He did not propose that Federal units should give up their language, but states and official languages should be in Urdu. He looks at the future and understands that even though accepting local languages, the country of Pakistan will never appear. Second, the languages of these areas are not as sophisticated as Urdu, it is the power of culture. The reason is that Urdu is one of the youngest international languages to fix structural defects that many other languages must withstand. Today, Urdu is becoming the fast growing international language.