Even
as TV cameras zoomed images of houses submerged in rainwater,
families huddled on charpoys to escape the flooding,
cars being pulled out of ditches, live wires fallen
on pavements, gutters overflowing and people wading
through knee-deep water, the nazim of Karachi maintained
that everything was under control.
Frankly
speaking, nothing was: 30 plus people had drowned or
died of electrocution, 70 per cent of Karachi was drowned
in darkness, in some instances for 72 hours, and some
areas were without water for days on end, due to the
electricity breakdowns.
Presenting
the most sorry spectacle was "the pride" of
Karachi, the recently opened Karachi underpass - literally
come to a sorry pass, as it overflowed with water, bringing
the Clifton traffic to a halt. Jokes were doing the
rounds of converting it into a public swimming pool,
or better still, a waterway, complete with gondolas
et al.
Accusations
flew back and forth between the nazim and the Karachi
Port Trust - the nazim blamed the KPT for overlooking
the structural defects in the underpass design, and
the KPT blamed the nazim for the clogged sewerage lines
which, in turn, were flooding the roads and the underpass.
Whoever comes out looking guilty at the end of the
day need not worry, for no heads will roll.
The
men in power treat corruption - and indulge in it -
as a way of life. Equally big, if not bigger scams have
come to light in the last year or so - the sugar and
cement shortages, the sale of the steel mill for a pittance
and, more recently, the stock exchange crash - all involving
some top guns of the country. And every single crook
has gotten away, scot-free. Unfortunately, the dust
on their misdemeanours settles fast, and a new scandal
or story breaks
The
latest story grabbing the headlines is the battle royale
for power between the MQM and the Sindh chief minister,
which is proving to be the bane of Karachi - a city
in a shambles, despite being the biggest contributor
to the country's tax pool. It's dying, bit by bit, day
by day, while those sitting in Islamabad work out the
permutations and combinations for the next Sindh government
in the coming 2007 elections.
Will
Sindh ever be allowed to decide who should rule Sindh?