Public transport and the women of Karachi
KARACHI: The other day, I, after a long, long time, decided to use public transport. There were multiple reasons for it, one of which was to observe how difficult or easy, in these times of confidence-damaging inflation, people of low-income groups are finding this particular mode of transportation.
It turned out to be an enriching socioeconomic experience. Karachiites who live on the sociological fringes of the city are a terribly, terribly resilient lot, and yes, that includes the womenfolk.
My route began from DHA Phase V with Gulistan-i-Jauhar as the final destination. I hopped onto a minibus from Saba Avenue at around 11am. There were a handful of passengers. The conductor, who hung from the door a la Shah Rukh Khan in the climax of the film Dilwale Dulhanya Lejaynge was blasé about the goings-on because it was Sunday morning. There was sweet lethargy in the air. When the bus turned left to enter Khayaban-i-Shahbaz, he came to me and asked where I wanted to go. I replied, Qayyumabad. He said Rs25. This left me bewildered. “Isn’t Qayyumabad a couple of miles from here?” I inquired sheepishly. His response was: mehngai (inflation).
I coughed up the amount and started to peruse the vehicle. It was a rickety, creaky structure and its engine made sounds as if the giant from Jack and the Beanstalk had tummy issues. I wondered: with so much fuss about noise pollution, how passengers could put up with such sputtering and stuttering, especially when they’re coming from or going to work. Don’t they need a cosy mode of travel? The seats barely had legroom and could be a perfect punishment for a criminal who is a touch more than five feet nine inches tall with a bit of fat around their stomach. Apart from that, the bus was an eyesore.