Master Ayub's outdoor school offers hope to Islamabad's poor
In the corner of a pristine park in an upmarket district of Islamabad, an open-air classroom run by an ageing rescue-worker offers a beacon of hope to the city's poorest.
For the past 30 years, Master Muhammad Ayub, whose day job includes defusing bombs and putting out fires, has cycled from his office to the makeshift school to teach children from surrounding slums for free.
There are no walls, no roof and no chairs ─ and students dutifully rise to move en masse as the sun makes its way across the sky ─ it is their only source of lighting so they must follow it.
In a country where education is underfunded and 24 million children remain out of school, grey-haired Ayub, 58, is hailed as a hero for providing his charges with hope for a better future.