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Sunday, November 02, 2008

Life in Colombo

Diary of a Vagabond

Colombo, Saturday 1 Nov. 2008:
Life in Colombo is slow, not fast like we used to have in Karachi. People tend to wake up early. Normally, I leave home for office at 8 AM, and at this time, except wine stores, all other shops are open. Similarly, it is hard to find any shop that is open after sun-set. Night life is literally not present here. Right now, it is 10:30 PM while I am writing this email and my apartment is on one of busiest roads of Colombo and I could hardly hear the noise of vehicles passing by. I am just thinking about the night life in Karachi, where on the weekend, some roads must have been choked with traffic by now.

People usually respect the time and most of them are on time. I have observed this in my office as well as with others whoever I dealt with. Late sittings are not common here. Load shedding is not a South Asian problem anymore. I asked my office colleagues regarding this and they literally could not understand what I am asking. Than I asked them about the power cuts and they said they used to have it in 90s but not now. Roads although by max in two or three lanes of width, but they are in good condition, and most of the time, I have found people obeying the traffic laws.

Colombo walls are free from all sort of khattati. May be, as there is no Amil baba or Sanyasi bawa present here. Surprisingly, I haven’t found any huge, ugly and life-threatening bill boards here. Bill boards do present here but they are small in size and do not pollute the look of the city. Cigarette and Alcohol marketing is banned here.

Although, inflation is quiet high here, but people still tend to make a smile. In fact, smile is the common gesture throughout Sri Lanka and it shows the friendly nature of them. Begging is not common. The only place you find beggars is the mosque J. Another surprising fact is that Sri Lanka is a country where you can proudly say that you are from Pakistan as they respect Pakistan. This is due to the reason that Pakistan had helped their Army a lot in their fight against the Tamil Tigers.

Rests of the problems are similar like Pakistan. Sri Lanka is also fighting hard to maintain its currency value and foreign exchange reserve. Just on the last trading day, its rupee value depreciated 1.5%. Oil costs are considerably high here and they haven’t brought it down. People blame the government for that whereas the government has their own reasons. By the way their annual budget is due next week.
Indian influence is visible on their media but not in their culture as they have preserved their language and their strong commitment with the Buddhist religion as nearly 69% of Sri Lankans are Buddhists out of which 95% Sinhalese are Buddhists. 95% of Muslims here speak Tamil.

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