Turkey to set up cultural center in Pakistan's Karachi
An aerial view of Karachi, Pakistan, July 24, 2015. (Shutterstock Photo)


Pakistan's commercial capital Karachi will soon get a Turkish cultural center. The center, which will promote Turkish art, language, culture, and history will be established by the Yunus Emre Institute, said an official statement on Monday.

A memorandum of understanding (MoU) will be soon inked between the Turkish Consulate and the Karachi district government, the statement added.

Turkish Consul General in Karachi Cemal Sangu and Karachi Commissioner Iqbal Memon recently visited the city’s historic Burns Garden, where the Yunus Emre Turkish Cultural Center is supposed to be established. Speaking to Anadolu Agency (AA), Sangu said the two sides are finalizing the requirements for establishing the center. The center, he said, would not only help to promote cultural activities in the cities, but also provide opportunities for the researchers, teachers and students to know the Turkish history and culture.

Karachi will be the second Pakistani city after Lahore to have a Turkish cultural center.

Yunus Emre was a Turkish folk poet and Sufi who lived in Anatolia from the mid-13th century to the first quarter of the 14th century. The Yunus Emre Institute is a nonprofit organization (NGO) founded in 2007 to promote Turkish culture, language, and arts across the world. It has expanded to 66 countries, signed agreements with more than 400 universities, and provided 3.5 million Turkish language diplomas worldwide.