Travelling by public transport in Rawalpindi is not a memorable experience in any season, but in summers it becomes unforgettable for all the wrong reasons.
To add to the misery of commuters, there are no shelters for passengers at several bus stops across the city, even in the sweltering summer heat during which the maximum temperature at times surges over 47 Celsius.
“We suffer every day as we spend at least 20 to 30 minutes waiting for public transport in the summer sun. There are no buildings nearby we can walk towards for shade while we wait,” said Qamar Hussain, a resident of Dhoke Lalyal. “Commuters can be seen standing in the shade provided by a lone signboard on Airport Link Road.”
I see students suffering in the heat to catch buses said Yasmeen Taqi, a schoolteacher. The situation is unbearable for senior citizens and women she added.
We need to have more bus shelters as more and more people are using public transport and summer is in full swing she stated. “City managers should address this issue urgently.”
I have to wait for 10 to 20 minutes in the sun for public transport and have to change two vans to reach my destination. You can imagine my misery, said Nazia Batool, an employee at a private college.
“A few bus stops sans shelters can be seen along the Islamabad Expressway, said Zafar Ali Shah, a resident of Shaheen Town.
Everybody has been feeling the heat, however, things become frustrating when one is forced to wait indefinitely for public transport, he stated.
“I board the van at Mangraal bus stop for Islamabad and back. I have to stand in the scorching heat every day. There is no alternative as taxis are unaffordable,” said Munir Khokhar, a resident of Sanghar Town.
Zameer Hussain, another commuter said, “In some areas at least you have something that you can identify as a shelter, but the problem is much worse elsewhere and commuters wilt.” We are braving the heat and feel the need for shelter. These days it is so hot that people fall unconscious, he added.
“I have seen many bus stops like the one at Koral Chowk in poor condition with no walls on the side to keep the intrusive sun out, said Muhammad Hussain, who commutes by public transport.
Even the seats are broken and litter is strewn everywhere, he stated. “There is no bus shelter from Defence Chowk up to the district courts, and even all the way to the airport.”
Mazhar Ali, a commuter at the Pindora Chongi bus stop, described his predicament in the following words, “It is perhaps our destiny to be forever deprived of shade.”
Considering the Airport Link Road has key bus stops like Dhoke Muhammad Khan, Dhoke Hafiz, Shah Khalid Colony, Fazal Town, Faisal Town, Gulzar-e-Quaid, for Islamabad-bound public transport, the lack of bus shelters is inexcusable, he added.
Mrs. Hamdani, an employee at a private company said, “There is no shelter anywhere near the Katarian bus stop at IJ Principal Road and I have to wait at a shop some metres away. Wen my flying coach arrives, I run to catch it.”
Published in The Express Tribune, June 21st, 2014.
COMMENTS (11)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
There is another aspect of the story of shelter-less bus stops. They are placed one after the other without specifically indicating which route number wagon goes where. Coming everyday; I may know. But when outsiders to the area come in, they are clueless with no info on where different wagons/buses head.
Why don't the authorities provide bus stop shelters in a planned manner. On the day of Mr. Qadri's expected arrival city residents had to suffer in the sizzling heat of the day and had to get home on foot burning in the sun. Additional heat of dirty politics joined hands with the dragon of summer to irk people.
There is absolutely no planning or policy when it comes to the number of bus-stop shelters to be built at a particular point like Airport Link Road where public transport drivers stop according to their whims and fancies. In fact, there are no shelters at all in most of the so-called bus-stops. There cannot be a worse hardship, a commuter can face while waiting for a public transport for a long time.
We have no protection whatsoever from heat. Not to talk of the shelter-less stops in the city where children, women and elderly people have to stand as there is no arrangement for passengers to sit, we are more worried about the heated-up prices of commodities in the month of Ramazan. This heat may make us more vulnerable than the summer heat.
An efficient public transport system in the city means proper stops that could at least offer passengers the opportunity to sit and wait for public transport. Go around the city and observe, you’ll not find even a single a proper bus stop.
There are no bus shelters and commuters are put to severe hardship. I am surprised why the concerned authorities pay no attention to this public discomfort. Over the past 20 years I have seen weaker initiatives to provide sheltered bus stops in the city.
City authorities have got their priorities wrong, as several bus shelters are set up with an eye on advertisement revenue rather than passengers’ convenience.
The city authorities are fond of testing people's stamina in the sizzling summer heat every year by not providing bus stops with proper shelters. The situation may become tougher in the coming Ramadan month with already low body fluids to withstand the unbearable direct sun for more than a few minutes.