THE news of a Quetta-bound passenger coach having fallen into a ravine in the mountainous range of Danasar on Zhob-Dera Ismail Khan Highway

between Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, killing at least 20 people, was, to say the least, heart-wrenching. Unfortunately, this is not the first such tragic incident.

While drivers are responsible for these accidents owing to their reckless driving, the government should be held equally responsible for looking the other way despite such tragedies. The road conditions remain as pathetic as they have been for a long time. They have only got worse.

All the government does every time a tragedy strikes is to show sympathies and offer condolences to the aggrieved families. That is considered good enough.

Had such accidents occurred in a developed country with the frequency at which they happen in Pakistan, they would have made front page headlines and the authorities concerned would have resigned from their positions. But, then, we are talking of the civilised world where human life has value and where humans are not treated as herds of cattle.

In Pakistan, the government comes into action only when people take to streets for their fundamental rights. Even then, promises are made to let the dust settle down and then everything gets hushed up and forgotten.

When will the government wake up from its deep slumber and start considering and treating people as human beings? Will it wake up at all?

Zafar Ullah Shah
Harnai

Published in Dawn, August 1st, 2022

Opinion

Editorial

Hardening lines
Updated 22 May, 2026

Hardening lines

Iranian suspicions about Pakistan’s close ties with Washington and Gulf states persist, while Pakistan remains uneasy over Tehran’s growing engagement with India.
Unliveable city
22 May, 2026

Unliveable city

IN Karachi, when it comes to water, it is every man and woman for themselves. A persistent shortage in available...
Glof alert
22 May, 2026

Glof alert

FOR many communities in northern Pakistan, the sound of heavy rain now carries a different meaning. It is no longer...
External woes
Updated 21 May, 2026

External woes

Relying indefinitely on remittances to offset structural economic weaknesses is not sustainable.
Political activity
21 May, 2026

Political activity

THE opposition is astir. There is talk of widespread protests this Friday over a list of dissatisfactions with the...
Seizing hope
21 May, 2026

Seizing hope

ISRAEL’S tyranny knows no bounds. After intercepting the Global Sumud Flotilla that set sail last week, disturbing...