I asked a Shiite in Peshawar if they still have problems with the Sunnis, and he said - "We don't kill each other anymore because now there is a dialog between us," but perhaps by a habit part of the dialogue is still conducted with bombs. As an outsider it seemed to me that there is at least a small civil war smouldering on a slow fire, but now I wonder if this is not just a normal way of life for Pakistanis. After another week I saw all the mausoleums in Multan and Lahore - perhaps the most beautiful city in the Indian subcontinent, and at the end I inevitably call to mind once again the mind-boggling beauty of Karakorum - where each (mountain) dream came true raised to the tenth power, so it seemed sinister and monstrous, as a symbol of this wild and beautiful country called Pakistan.
Today I arrived in Lahore – it’s almost on the Indian border, where I was 3 ago on my trip west of Indonesia. The border there is a daily ceremony for uniting the two countries (India and Pakistan), and the crowds are converging like crazed football fans, separated by a solid wire fences, shouting "Death to India" / "Death to Pakistan" ... and if they could they would pour the entire nuclear arsenal on the head of the opposer.
Crisis in Pakistan seems to be going deeper. In addition to the country facing bankruptcy and the rupee falling every day, there is electricity regime - 12 h in the cities and only 4-5 h in rural areas. So people get another chance to exercise their democratic right to protest which as usual is expressed chanting - Death to someone / something. Parties are strongly dynastic structures, often bearing the initials of the leaders in their names. Corruption and cronyism are in a scale that make our Bulgarian politics seem to suffer total lack of imagination. The rest is chaos, chaos, chaos...