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Karachi
Pakistan's
commercial canter and largest city is a sprawling place of bazaars,
hi-tech electronic shops,
scurf-infested older buildings and modish new hotels. Its sights
are spread far and wide, so a taxi or rickshaw is necessary to travel
between them. A good place to start is the Quaid-i-Azam Mausoleum,
a monument to Pakistan's founder Mohammed Ali Jinnah, which can
be charitably described as distinctive. More impressive is the remarkable
white-marbled Defence Housing Society Mosque. The single dome, claimed
to be the largest of its kind in the world, will make your gum cleave
to the roof of your mouth.
Other sights include the Holy Trinity Cathedral and St. Andrew's
Church (both good examples of Anglo-Indian architecture), the city's
zoo, and the Zoroastrian Towers of Silence, hills where the dead
are traditionally exposed to vultures. South of the city is Clifton,
a former British hangout and now an exclusive coastal corner for
the local wealthy, the popular but rather drab Clifton Beach, and
Manora Island, a less-crowded beach resort.
Saddar,
the city centre, is the main shopping area with thriving markets
selling carpets, fur coats, leather jackets, snakeskin purses, silk
scarves and the country's biggest range of handicrafts. It also
has a number of food stalls and cheap restaurants and the majority
of budget hotels. Nightlife in Karachi is an oxymoron.
If travel outside of Karachi is possible, then the archaeological
site of Moenjodaro - once a city of an Indus Valley civilization
- and the Chaukundi tombs are well worth a visit.
Being the commercial and unofficial capital of Pakistan, flights
in and out of Karachi are numerous but it's worth checking the ETA
of your flight.
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