Quaid’s mausoleum may soon be replaced
by high-rises, and we’re not doing anything about it
By Shakir Lakhani Published: July 21, 2017
They decided to demolish
the mausoleum and use the land to make many high rise residential and
commercial buildings on it.
I suppose it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the present Sindh government, like its predecessors, is also
selling whatever open
land is left in Karachi to interested developers.
I’m referring to the most recent scandal, the selling
of 30 acres of land meant for the Horticultural Society to
the builders’ mafia at a price which is about 1% of its actual value. I wonder
if they have ever thought of the fact that one day, all the open
spaces in Karachi will be gobbled
up and replaced with shopping malls and commercial plazas, and they will
have nothing left to sell.
So if a man is struck on the head today in an accident, goes
into a coma and wakes up about 30 years later (in 2050), what will he see when
he drives
around the city?
The first thing he will note is that all the parks
have disappeared, the National Stadium has been replaced with 10 very tall
residential buildings, and the Safari Park and the zoo no longer exist. But he
is shocked when he sees that the Quaid-e-Azam’s mausoleum has vanished and has been
replaced by 30 high
rise shopping malls.
“What’s this?” he asks his
grandson, “Where is Jinnah’s tomb? It used to be here.”
“No, it was always in Thatta,”
says the young man.
“It was right here!” The old man
insists.
The grandson whips out his smart phone and Googles ‘Jinnah’s
tomb’ and shows him the result. The old man sees that it’s the same
structure that used to be in Karachi, but Google clearly states that it
is in
Thatta. His eyes are full of tears and he is determined to get to the
bottom of the mystery.
Over the next few days, he
starts looking for those he used to know before his accident, his juniors and
assistants who had been working in the Sindh secretariat before his accident.
He bumps into one of them who retired 20 years back and is there to collect his
monthly pension. The man is surprised to see him.
Over a
cup of tea, he agrees to reveal everything he knows but begs the old
man not to say anything about it to anyone, as it is a crime to even talk about
it.
“It happened about 25 years ago, when the rulers began running
out of money as there was no
land available to sell to builders in order to construct
more buildings. So they decided to demolish the mausoleum and use the land
to make
many high rise residential and commercial buildings on it. They got
the mazaar (mausoleum)
declared a dangerous building and got it demolished. It
took only three days for the structure to crumble and another three days for
the rubble to be shifted to Thatta. I remember they used a thousand trucks to
do it.”
“But what about the media and the social
society activists?” the old man asks. “Surely they would have objected?”
“Oh, they were told another
mausoleum would be built in its place, so they were pacified. They knew that it
had taken 25 years to build the original structure, so they came to terms
with the idea that it would take many years for the new structure to come up.
In the meantime, the rulers got an identical monument constructed in Thatta.
Then, they went on to state that this was the original Quaid’s mazaar in school textbooks. It reminded me
of the time when they printed that the Quaid’s birthplace was in Jhirruck, near
Thatta in some other textbook.”
“But what about those who lived in other cities?” the old man
asks. “What about the government in Islamabad?
Surely they would have known what was going on.”
“Everyone has a price. Of those 30 buildings, one was given to
the rulers in Islamabad, another to those in Karachi, hundreds of shops and
apartments were gifted to government
employees, media
persons and all those who asked awkward questions. Soon it was
made a crime for anyone to talk about the scandal and a
whole new generation has grown up believing that the great leader’s last
resting place is in Thatta.”
So how should I end?
Seeing how shameless and unscrupulous Karachi’s
rulers are, I am sure the aforementioned narrative is entirely
possible that the Quaid’s mausoleum will be pulled down one day and all the
land will be sold to the
builders’ mafia in order to construct more buildings.
Shakir Lakhani
Engineer, former visiting lecturer at NED Engineering College,
industrialist, associated with petroleum/chemical industries for many years.
Loves writing, and (in the opinion of most of those who know him), mentally
unbalanced. He tweets @shakirlakhani (twitter.com/shakirlakhani)
http://blogs.tribune.com.pk/story/52105/quaids-mausoleum-may-soon-be-replaced-by-high-rises-and-were-not-doing-anything-about-it/
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