Why Quetta's sole library is unable to accommodate its 4000 patrons
Quetta's lone library is crowded with students reading books ranging from philosophy to democracy. Arrive early and the students and avid readers get yellow wooden desks. The latecomers have to settle for a place on the floor.
“The government could at least provide chairs so that students don’t have to study on the floor,” requests Musa Babul son of a farmer from Turbat.
As an FSc student, Babul has come to Quetta to further his education. “We cannot study properly because of overcrowding,” he claims.
Poor quality of education, lack of basic facilities and law and order situations compel students to leave their hometowns and come to Quetta for their schooling. “It was because of education, that I migrated from Turbat to Quetta,” Babul relays, grasping a book on medicine.
Students like Babul try and remain focused, at times avoiding eye contact with one another, as the hallways and desks become increasingly congested owing to a lack of space and a steady increase in patrons at the Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah library.
Intellectual heritage
Located on the busy Jinnah road, in the heart of Quetta, the library attracts students from across the province. Engraved on the outer walls are portraits of Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Jinnah, Allama Muhammad Iqbal, Baloch ideologue Gul Khan Naseer and renowned poet Atta Shad.
Jinnah road itself has served to be the center of Baloch and Pakhtun intellectuals, authors, politicians and bureaucrats.