

A couple of weeks later, the translator and I lunched under an umbrella by the pool at KLM’s Midway House (thus named as it was roughly midway on the flying route between Amsterdam and Djakarta). Off-duty crew, anonymous behind sunglasses and sunblock, roasted in the afternoon heat. The translator took the file and flicked through the pages. He stopped at the odd paragraph and produced a sound which passes for laughter in certain quarters that was in between a falsetto in the Great Awakening in the US South and a Wildebeest caught by a crocodile crossing a river on the Serengeti. I never saw the translator again. And nor for that matter did Mr Saigol or anybody else in PIA. Not even the ministry of information that had recommended the chap.
In those days, customs officers were primarily concerned with the smuggling of gold, precious stones and drugs — and not weapons. These days, for obvious reasons, things have now gotten much worse and many citizens of the Islamic republic travelling to foreign destinations are invariably singled out at foreign immigration or customs counters and interrogated as if they were criminals. The feedback that I have received, however, is rather mixed and suggests that the airport cross-examination is to a large extent a cultural thing and does not have racial undertones. It has a lot to do with class and appearance and manners. Many Pakistani senior citizens travelling abroad stated they received courteous treatment at airports in the United States, Britain, Sri Lanka and in the Asean countries. One can only hope things will improve.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 2nd, 2014.
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