Adil Najam
Pictures on the television show Karachi burning. The city is at war. Morchas everywhere. Clashes, violence, firing, deaths.
The Chief Justice is holed up at the airport and the streets are ruled by mobs. Aaj TV is being fired at and Talat Hussain reports that the police and rangers are unable to get their to help because the roads are blocked (to stop the Chief Justice). Of course, these road blocks have not stopped the killers who are firing at the TV station. As of now 15 are reported dead. Over 100 seriously injured. Hospitals in Karachi have declared an emergency. The Prime Minister has called an emergency meeting of his own to respond to what the government is calling a ‘security situation’ but which sounds, smells, looks and feels like the beginning of a war on the streets of Karachi. Flights in and out of the city are stalled. Train traffic is stopped. The city seems to have descended back to its darkest days of street violence.
Meanwhile, the petty blame game continues. But things are changing too fast for one to analyze them. But one thing is certain. Things have gone out of control. Totally out of control. Totally out of everyone’s control. It is a sad sad day for all of us.
I wish I had something more profound to say. All I can hink of right now is what someone wrote on our comments section recently: Khuda Khair Karray!
(Picture credits BBC and The News and pictorial story at Bilal Zuberi’s blog; great blog coverage at Karachi Metroblog).
































































What happened in Karachi just leaves one speechless. It is terrible! Point blank shooting of innocent caught in the fray and the LEAs and others looked on. I am ashamed to call myself a Pakistani. Watching all the videos and photos makes my blood cuddle. There is no hope for this country.
How can KArachi prosper when I read such painful news?
tinyurl.com/2mahho
پولیس Ú©ÙˆÛ
[quote comment=”47315″]Two major groups are angry at each other. What next? Hope history doesn’t repeat itself.[/quote]
Again, seems like you’re in need of some professional help. Two groups are not merely fighting against each other. A bunch of terrorists are killing other people….denial!
Ibrahim, I was going to post same link but thankfully I already read your post. Whatever mentioned in the article is not enough. If you listen early addresses of Altaf then he himself used to say things which are in article.
I wish Altaf wouldn’t have come back from dhaka.