Email a copy of 'Great Rats to Fly With!' to a friend
Email a copy of 'Great Rats to Fly With!' to a friend

Dear Readers,
While All Things Pakistan has remained alive and online, it has been dormant since June 11, 2011 - when, on the blog's 5th anniversary, we decided that it was time to move on. We have been heartened by your messages and the fact that a steady traffic has continued to enjoy the archived content on ATP. While the blog itself will remain dormant, we are now beginning to add occasional (but infrequent) new material by the original authors of the blog, mostly to archive what they may now publish elsewhere. We will also be updating older posts to make sure that new readers who stumble onto this site still find it useful.
We hope you will continue to find ATP a useful venue to reflect upon and express your Pakistaniat. - Editors
It is refreshing to see a blogger who truly cares about their audience and provides content that is genuinely helpful, and badak178 wanted to express my gratitude for your commitment to excellence because it sets you apart from many others in the niche, and I will definitely be following your work closely from now on.
Presence of rats in hospitals, hotels, airports, grocery shops ets. is really a sensitive issue. Rats not only damage the property but also cause diseases by contaminating the food materials with their dopping, hair and urine. Growing population of wild pigs is another important issue which should be addressed seriously. Is there any government agency dealing with these issues?
Many airlines experience such nuisance indifferent part of the world. Kuala Lampur international airport is built on a plantation infested with rats. Occasionally airplanes turnaround after takeoff from KL. In case of Qantas, there were snakes in cargo hold.
Let s=us be easy on PIA. Of course there is room for improvement but the incidence expose Brimingham airport. If it would have been Karachi with a foreign airline – imagine the media coverage at that time.