KARACHI, Dec 30: The reading room in Saddar Town’s Jahangir Park has, over the years, gone from bad to worse. Once a favourite haunt for hordes of middle-class people desirous of reading newspapers, magazines and books, the reading room has been reduced to a shadow of its former self.

The reading room used to have all the major broadsheet dailies as well as evening newspapers, which were invariably stacked in properly marked shelves. But now it gets only seven evening newspapers which the visitors consult while seated in rundown chairs and sofas.

Most of the furniture pieces are in such bad shape that they can no longer be pressed into service and have been set aside. The tables are dirty and the lighting inside is very poor.

All kinds of people while away their hours sitting outside the reading room. At any given time one can easily detect several drug addicts and jobless people outside the room.

As a result, the number of people visiting the only reading room in Saddar Town has been declining steadily.

Opinion

Editorial

The vanquished
Updated 02 Mar, 2025

The vanquished

A system of justice that is publicly perceived to be skewed cannot deliver judgements that the public will accept unquestioningly as objective and just.
Cricket overhaul
02 Mar, 2025

Cricket overhaul

PAKISTAN’S team management has pleaded for time and patience. Cricket head coach Aaqib Javed took responsibility...
Local representation?
02 Mar, 2025

Local representation?

THE disdain that major political parties harbour towards local governments is no secret. No party in power wants to...
Exceptional Assembly
Updated 01 Mar, 2025

Exceptional Assembly

Both the govt and the NA remained completely unbothered by public perceptions in their first year.
Haqqania bombing
Updated 01 Mar, 2025

Haqqania bombing

If the seminary attack is indeed traced to IS, it would signal a fresh security challenge in KP.
Blood and drugs
01 Mar, 2025

Blood and drugs

FREQUENT news stories about bone-chilling murders show that the face of crime is changing — there is a marked rise...