The issue of the revival of the Karachi Circular Railway has now been taken up by Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, who has ordered the formation of a task force comprising officials of the Pakistan Railways, Karachi city and the Sindh governments for the purpose.
The KCR was suspended in December 1999 and since then there has been a public clamour for its revival to be met with repetitive official promises to do so. President Musharraf has twice ordered the restoration of the urban train service but Pakistan Railways, the Sindh government and Karachi city government have been passing the buck amongst themselves.
In 2001 the Sindh government estimated the system's revival to cost Rs1.5 billion. Then came the city government, which in turn took up the cause and promised the train's revival.
Last but not least, Pakistan Railways, which had washed its hands of the system but would not part with its assets, was prevailed upon by the president to re-enter the fray last August.
Meanwhile, a plethora of feasibility and track-realignment reports were commissioned, some of them at great expense to the exchequer, from foreign technicians, and have been gathering dust in the city government's record rooms. The revival of the KCR has become something of a cliche to be banded about for effect's sake.
In the midst of all this, the absence of the funds needed to get the system back on track has emerged as the main stumbling block in the KCR's revival. Neither the city nor the provincial government has the required budgets.
Now that the PR has been brought around to re-owning the KCR, it is the federal government's responsibility to make the needed money available to it for the purpose. Few cities the size of Karachi anywhere in the world compare with this mega-city's acute transport problems.
The revival of the KCR and its integration with the city's road transport system through a reliable feeder bus service can relieve some of the stress that has been the lot of Karachi commuters for too long.
Crisis in Lebanon
President Emil Lahoud's appointment of Mr Omar Karameh as Lebanon's new prime minister comes at a time when the country is under pressure from the US on its ties with Syria. Like the president himself, Mr Karameh is staunchly pro-Syrian.
Before nominating Mr Karameh as prime minister, President Lahoud held informal polling to seek MPs' approval. But a large number of MPs boycotted the polling. However, Mr Karameh still enjoys the support of 71 of the parliament's 128 members.
The opposition to Mr Karameh's nomination came mostly from MPs who, like the outgoing prime minister Rafik Hariri, disapprove of the president's close ties with Syria. They have also been incensed by the three-year extension in term given to him by parliament without an election.
Mr Harari's resignation, the appointment of Mr Karameh as prime minister, and the extension in the presidential term mean that Lebanon would be able to maintain its traditionally close ties with Syria.
In 1982, Israel invaded Lebanon, killed thousands of civilians and retreated after getting bogged down in guerilla war. But it remained in the illegal occupation of a strip of south Lebanon for 22 years. It continues to threaten both Lebanon and Syria.
The presence of the 14,000 Syrian troops in Lebanon is thus viewed positively by most Lebanese. However, this is anathema to Israel and hence to the US. Last month, at America's bidding, the UN Security Council passed a resolution asking Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon.
The US also asked Beirut to have a new government. The one proposed by President Lahoud was pro-Syria, thus making Mr Hariri resign. The new prime minister now hopes to form a government of national unity.
Among the problems he faces are inflation because of the rising oil prices, trade union agitation, power shortages and a debt of $33 billion. His appointment in any case is a stop-gap arrangement, for parliamentary elections are due in May next. Mr Karameh thus has just about six months in which to achieve results if he is to win a full term as prime minister.