LAHORE: Meher Khalil earned fame and success after saving Sri Lanka’s cricket team from a deadly 2009 attack in Pakistan, but the bus driver calls the incident “tragic” and says it is best forgotten.

The 43-year-old was to be one of the guests of honour at Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium on Friday, where Pakistan were scheduled to play Zimbabwe in their first home international since the notorious incident.

Meher was driving the team’s bus when it was attacked by rocket launcher and machine gun-wielding terrorists in an assault that left eight people dead and seven players injured.

The attack brought an end to international cricket in Pakistan, until Zimbabwe agreed to visit for a short series in Lahore which will be held under unprecedented security.

Meher was feted after he held his nerve to drive the team to safety, and with reward money from Sri Lanka’s government and donations from well-wishers, he started his own bus company.

Six years on, Meher says that he wishes he could drive the Zimbabwe team to the stadium for the first T20 International on Friday.

But he admits that his recollection of the events of March 3, 2009, still fills him with dread.

It took him a moment, he says in an interview, to realise what was happening.

“Initially, I thought that they were Lahorites and were celebrating with the firecrackers,” he remembers. “But when two people came towards me and started firing at me then I realised that it was some other kind of work.”

Momentarily stupefied, he was shaken into action when the players began shouting “Go! Go!”

“Those words were like a 440-volt current jolting through my body. I gathered myself and then hit the throttle. “There were 10 to 12 people who attacked them as they were coming from the team hotel, he says.

“Thank God I kept my confidence and dashed them [the players] safely to the stadium.”

Meher said once the players were rescued and taken to a safe airbase for their return home, they wanted him to come along to Sri Lanka with them.

“But I told them that I am a family man and excused myself at that time. Then a month later their president invited me and I went there,” he stated.

“When I reached the airport I realised that I am not the driver Meher Khalil who has come here but I am a VVIP. When I used to go out to the market for shopping, people would call me ‘hero’.

“Besides the praise and an expenses-paid holiday, the Sri Lankan government rewarded him with a cash prize of $21,000.

Together with private donations, he began his own company and now owns three buses which carry passengers along the Lahore to Islamabad motorway -- an impressive feat for a man who once earned Rs35,000 ($350) a month.

On Friday, instead of driving Zimbabwe’s bus, he was to take his place at the stadium as a spectator.

“When the name Liberty Chowk comes up, even the mention of it raises my hair,” he said, referring to the roundabout just outside the stadium where the attack took place.

“That was a tragic incident and it’s better if we don’t remember it.”

Published in Dawn, May 23rd, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Opinion

Editorial

Under siege
Updated 03 May, 2024

Under siege

Whether through direct censorship, withholding advertising, harassment or violence, the press in Pakistan navigates a hazardous terrain.
Meddlesome ways
03 May, 2024

Meddlesome ways

AFTER this week’s proceedings in the so-called ‘meddling case’, it appears that the majority of judges...
Mass transit mess
03 May, 2024

Mass transit mess

THAT Karachi — one of the world’s largest megacities — does not have a mass transit system worth the name is ...
Punishing evaders
02 May, 2024

Punishing evaders

THE FBR’s decision to block mobile phone connections of more than half a million individuals who did not file...
Engaging Riyadh
Updated 02 May, 2024

Engaging Riyadh

It must be stressed that to pull in maximum foreign investment, a climate of domestic political stability is crucial.
Freedom to question
02 May, 2024

Freedom to question

WITH frequently suspended freedoms, increasing violence and few to speak out for the oppressed, it is unlikely that...