Capital thoughts

Islamabad is a picture of almost soporific indolence — disturbed only by the occasional coup d’état.


A A Sheikh October 03, 2010

Islamabad turned 50 this June. Ensconced in the scenic Margalla Hills, the national capital has traditionally been a quiet town, detached from the bustle and blare of typical Pakistani urban centres. It has long been regarded as socio-culturally inert, peopled mainly by the transplanted population of government servants and their families. Arrayed in planned grids of asphalt and greenery, the town is a picture of almost soporific indolence — disturbed only by the occasional coup d’état.

But things have changed over the years. Islamabad has acquired more of a personality: a very urban one with its various attendant issues. The population has topped a million, and congestion, pollution and water and sanitation concerns have begun to pop up. Small, illegal shantytowns have sprung up, juxtaposed with elite mansions in some cases. Heavy crowds throng the city’s commercial and recreational spots. Newer sectors –residential plots, high-rise apartments and commercial hubs – have emerged, often at the cost of the natural verdancy the town prides itself in.

To relieve growing traffic logjams  – and ensure swift VVIP movement – a nexus of wide, interlocking roads and avenues has been laid out. A major project is underway at Zero Point – the traditional starting point for the town itself – which comprises yet another asphalt-and-concrete invasion of the once pristine Shakarparian Hills and contiguous swaths of greenery. We’d never know the details of trees and wildlife sacrificed to accommodate all this “progress” and “development”, nor would the debate about whether the common commuter really needed this multi-tiered, multi-laned plexus of tarmac reach any satisfactory conclusions. But this is only one insult to environmental injury; the hills have already been ravaged by a needless monument to the country, and another is reputedly in the offing — this one to honour the country’s favourite slain leader. We are truly monumental people, apparently.

There are other state-sponsored eyesores in the capital. One prominent roundabout boasts a large, missile: a priapic tribute to our martial potency. Elsewhere, a replica of the rugged Balochi hills we blasted to showcase our nuclear might admonishes all visitors never to mess with us. And then we have the usual political adverts that successive governments and their toadies blotch the city with: typically, billboards featuring larger-than-life, prodigiously-moustached and airbrushed political wannabes endorsing and extolling their (current) party’s (current) leadership in maudlin tones, offering themselves up for the forthcoming elections with ingratiating, tawdry smiles. In aesthetic terms, at least, they firmly put the “bad” back in Islamabad.

These occasional blemishes aside, the capital remains a beautiful place. Despite its brushes with mismanagement and corruption, the Capital Development Authority  deserves credit for trying to balance urbanisation with a degree of environmental conservationism. The town is still, easily, the cleanest and most verdant in the country. Parks abound, recreational facilities serve their purpose and top-notch eateries have burgeoned in recent years. Likewise, after years of bureaucratic stupor, stuffiness and officially-imposed conservatism, the capital has slowly begun to exert its cultural presence. Theatre groups and music bands – indigenous, national, international – showcase their talents every now and then. As do fashion designers and artists. Despite recent tragedies and threats from zealots and bigots, despite all the barricades and roadblocks, Islamabad’s denizens continue to ply their lives with a degree of stoicism, and the city continues to acquire and exhibit a distinct socio-cultural flair.

Happy fiftieth, Islamabad. May you have many more.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 4th, 2010.

COMMENTS (2)

temporal | 13 years ago | Reply the words missing from this description of islamabad are aloof, and impervious as far as rest of pakistanis are concerned
Syed Nadir El-Edroos | 13 years ago | Reply In the last paragraph everything that you have refereed to as a sign of Islamabad vibrancies points to an ever expanding bubble where the upper and upper middle class can enjoy the "top notch eateries" and "music bands". What has Islamabad given the original inhabitants? A village, Saidpur has turned the inhabitants into show-pieces of a living amusement park. The amount of money spent on developing one model village could have provided basic facilities to a host of villages across the Islamabad Captial Territory. Or take the example of Monal, the plush elitist eatery constructed in a national park under dubious circumstances. The Islamabad Club a favoured haunt of the high and mighty enjoys a 99 year lease for Rs. 11 per acre per year, while for most 99 per cent of Pakistanis living in their nations capital city is near impossible. The state willingly encroaches to set-up club houses, the Citizens Club, in public spaces, yet is unable to regularize many shanty towns that have sprung up on the fringes of the city.The roads may have been widened and the manicured boulevards, but while racing down after a nice meal down the highway, one takes a look outside the windows to see hundreds of labourers sleeping along the roadside. Islamabad has turned into a typical kleptocratic capital of a third world country, where cosmetic changes and rampant consumerism passes for development. Whose capital city is it anyways?
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