Reporter’s notebook: After the blast
I am on my way to Sehwan, for the first time. Usually, people go to the shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar every Thursday and during the annual urs but somehow I have missed the occasions. What draws me to Sehwan this time is that just a week before the blast — on Thursday, February 16 — my friends were there at the very same area, inside the mausoleum, where the suicide bomber caused devastation, taking away at least 88 lives and maiming more than 150. My friends know the shrine musicians. No clear information is forthcoming about them and others, so we decide to leave Karachi, get first-hand information ourselves and take it from there.
And so here I am, away from Karachi’s mayhem in Sehwan. With its low-height structures and sparse populace, the city is a world away from the rest of urban Pakistan.
It is early evening. Our first stopover is the Taluka hospital. The hospital was much maligned on television channels for its incapability to handle the blast victims and the absence of ambulances. The criticism was particularly harsh since Sehwan is the constituency of the current chief minister of Sindh. Entering the arched entrance of the renamed taluka hospital, Sayed Abdullah Shah Institute of Medical Science Sehwan (SAIMSS), I am surprised to see the large premises. I had imagined a small healthcare facility.
Some of the media characterisations during the Sehwan terrorist attack may have been exaggerations
On the right is a double-storeyed building looking swanky with people seated on a bench outside the glass-covered door. On the left is the OPD block and further down, the gynaecology-obstetrics block. At the far end of the precincts are the trauma centre and the medical director’s office. The otherwise quiet premise is punctuated by the chugging of a concrete mixer, labourers pushing wheelbarrows into a narrow lane next to the main building. It later transpires that an underground tank and a ramp to the first floor was being constructed.
The atmosphere is surreal. Just a few days ago this place was filled with dead bodies, severed limbs and the cries of the injured. But now, standing in the middle of the spacious waiting area, roaming around the quiet corridors, it is as if it never occurred.
Then this reverie is broken. Outside the trauma centre, several bloodstained tatty mattresses are left to dry off on a patch of grass — a reminder of the unprecedented suicide attack in Sehwan.