New Delhi: Two Indian cities—Mumbai and Kota—have been named among the world’s most crowded in a list topped by Dhaka, said World Economic Forum (WEF) citing UN Habitat data.
With a population density of 44,500 people per square kilometre, Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, is the most crowded city on the planet, followed by India’s financial capital Mumbai, home to 31,700 people per square kilometre (km) at the second place. Kota in Rajasthan with 12,100 people per square km was ranked seventh.
Others in the list include Medellin in Columbia ranked third with 19,700 people per square km; Manila, Philippines (4th, 14,800); Casablanca, Morocco (5th, 14,200); Lagos, Nigeria (6th, 13,300); Singapore (8th, 10,200) and Jakarta, Indonesia (9th, 9,600).
“There are various reasons why vast numbers of people decide to settle in urban areas, but in the majority of cases it boils down to the simple fact that cities are where the work is,” WEF said.
More than half of the world’s population currently lives in urban areas and the United Nations (UN) expects that proportion to increase to 66% by 2050, with close to 90% of the increase concentrated in Asia and Africa.
Kibera, Africa’s biggest slum, is just 5 km from Nairobi city centre and is infamous for its poverty and its metal shacks built millimetres away from railway lines, while Dharavi in Mumbai has a reported density of over 2,00,000 people per square km, the report said.
“There are clearly pros and cons to being a city dweller, although people’s overall quality of life will always depend on where they can afford to live,” it added.
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