SPECTACLE: ARROWS THROUGH THE HEART
Not wanting to be late and miss anything, I had rushed the seven- and six-year-olds back from school. A day earlier, we’d managed to beg off from a special class that the seven-year-old had to attend on the day of the show, she helpfully explaining to her teacher that she had to go see the show because “my father is very excited.” Both of them were excited themselves, though they didn’t really know what to expect. The elder tween was too cool for such shows, so had refused to accompany us. For my part, I just thought it would make for a good change to get them away from the TV and other screens that form the bedrock of kids’ activities these days.
A quick change at home and we were out on Seaview in the blazing sun. We chose a relatively less populated part of the beach stretch, far away from where the VIP tents had been set up and where cars were already piling up. They’re jets after all, I reasoned, they wouldn’t be contained in one small area of the shoreline.
And then we waited.
The British Red Arrows aerobatic team put on quite a show at Karachi’s Seaview beach and saved a parental bonding exercise
What we were waiting for was the iconic Red Arrows squadron of the British Royal Air Force (RAF), who had promised the first of its kind aerobatic air show in Karachi (they’d apparently done a similar show in Islamabad 20 years ago). The Red Arrows are among the premier aerobatic teams in the world, renowned for their precision flying. Joining the RAF’s Hawks would be Pakistan’s own JF-17 Thunder fighter jets, developed jointly with the Chinese and increasingly the mainstay of Pakistan’s Air Force.