THE NAVY LARK UP THE KHYBER
Nik Morton
Our dilapidated bus trundled
along at five in the morning. Sleep stubbornly clung to my eyes. We were
leaving our ship HMS Zulu behind, alongside at Karachi. The ship was only in
for the weekend. Eight of us were fortunate enough to be invited up-country by
the Diplomatic Corps.
A
few fears were voiced over the wisdom of our heading for the airport. This
concern had grown from the alarming incidents reported in the press. It was
Friday, June 20, 1969 – not long after the cricket uprisings. And airport
shootings were still going on. Jokes seemed to dispel our fears. I didn’t fancy
getting shot when only ten days away from my twenty-first birthday.
We
passed new houses, mansions compared with others, many old shacks still in
evidence, and the roads and pathways were quite primitive. Everywhere had the
flavour of a newly colonised place, barring the odd twentieth century intrusion
of advertisement hoardings. Oxen and rickety old carts rumbled past, men and
youths pedalled bicycles with bare feet. Out of another world, office blocks
gleamed glassy-eyed.
The
pervasive aroma, compounded of sickly-sweet spices and body effluent, hovered
even that early in the day; but I soon became inured to it.
Arrived
at the airport, we were pleased to see no machine-gun posts and no mobsters. It
seemed like a normal medium-sized air terminal.
For
the short time in the lounge, we supped over-sweet coffee. A cleaner swept the
linoleum floor with a brush made of leaves, depositing more leaves than
collecting dust. A monstrous woman entered, her sari half-concealing an airport
uniform adorned with badges or medals: I had doubts as to her flying abilities.
One of the pilots sauntered in with an unmistakable bottle of brandy in his hip
pocket: I hoped he wasn’t flying high with us onboard. And lastly, an ashtray
that was simply that – a massive brass circular tray full of ash with a couple
of fag ends dotted about its black-speckled grey surface.
Then
the tannoy system broadcast, “Flight 300Y” with an exquisite oriental accent.
“That’s
us!”
It
was my first time in an airplane. The experience of boarding was new, to be
captured, but also disappointing in a way. I’d always fancied flying in a
smaller craft than this. It was a Trident 1-E, capable of seating eighty-six.
The PIA air stewardess wore the airline’s modern semi-traditional uniform. She
dutifully issued everyone with the inevitable boiled sweet and ensured all
passengers were comfortable. One anomaly was the life jacket under my seat: the
only water this plane was likely to cross was the Indus.
Then,
at 7.20am, the jets heated up and went through their reverberating paces, rose
to a roar then a banshee wail. The great bulk strained at its leash, the rear
of the aircraft seemed to tug on acceleration and we were suddenly speeding
down the runway.
One
second, earth hammered beneath us and the next, it was dropping away at an
incredible dizzying rate. Hedges shrank into snakes of grass; trees became
miniscule bushes, houses collapsed into matchboxes. Everywhere I looked –
yellow muddy brown waste with odd interspersions of un-English green.
The
slight queasiness in my stomach was more through anticipation than with
climbing into the clouds. It was transient, anyway, and I was pleased that at
least I wasn’t airsick.
It
was our first real glimpse of Pakistan. Most of us knew of its relatively
recent history. An Islamic Republic and self-governing member of the
Commonwealth since August 5, 1947, it was created from those parts of the
Indian sub-continent that had a predominantly Moslem population. “Both East and
West Pakistan each constitute a province under a governor,” intoned the
airhostess throatily. (However, from July 1, 1970 this single province of West
Pakistan was dismembered into the four provinces that it originally comprised:
Sind, Baluchistan, Punjab and North West Frontier Province.)
Apparently
the name “Pakistan” was invented in 1933 by Rahmat Ali for the northwestern
Moslem areas and was taken from Punjab, Afghan (North West Frontier
Province), Kashmir and Baluchistan.
Karachi
squats and overflows on the north of the Indus delta, and stands shyly on a
backwater opening south on the east-west stretch of coastline that marks a
sharp change in the shoreline’s direction between Cape Monze and the delta. To
the west it is screened from the sea by the rocky point at Manora, cemented to
the mainland by a sandspit. The Manora headland provides the city with a
natural barrier as protection from monsoon storms. Toward the land – desert.
And to the north, a hilly thirsty landscape, the limestone spurs of the Kirthar
Range breaking down southwards into sandy wastes. Now we were passing over
these monotonous expanses of recent alluvium riddled by creeks. To the seaward,
we were told, lay mangrove swamps; the land below seemed largely incapable of
supporting life.
Wraithlike,
only the air-conditioning humming in our ears, the Trident penetrated the
cloud-layer and settled at 25,000 feet.
A
mild lurch or two, signifying turbulence, was our first indication that we were
passing over high land. The Sulaiman Hills – known as Takht-I-Suliman, or
Solomon’s Throne. The legend of the mountains began when Solomon visited
Hindostan to marry Balkis. As they were returning through the air, on a throne supported
by genii, the bride implored the bridegroom to let her look back for a few
moments on her beloved land. Solomon directed the genii to scoop out a hollow
for the throne on the summit of the mountain. The hollow is a cavity some
thirty feet square, cut out of the solid rock at the southern extremity of the
mountain, and is now a place of pilgrimage for both Hindus and Mohammedans. The
shrine is about two miles south of the highest peak. The whole mountain
culminates in two points, both over 11,000 feet high.
We
crossed over the Thal desert, for the most part absolutely without vegetation.
Also the salt flats of the Indus. Hereabouts, an irrigation project progressed,
to colonise the desert.
The
whole area is frequented by hurricane, diseases are numerous and commonplace,
the population is far too large, and inevitably famines kill millions.
The
plane’s landing at Chaklala airport was as unimpressive as its take-off – a
compliment to the pilot, I guess. We hardly felt a thing, only the sudden thud,
slight screech and then constant rumble as we coasted along the runway, vivid
hedges leaping by. My first flight was over.
On
leaving the plane, most of us were instantly repelled: the air was unbelievably
hot, stifling. It was almost like walking into a solid wall of musty scorching
dry heat. And the sun was high, even though only 8.45am. To add to the
morning’s brilliance, the white runway glared, reflecting light and heat. I was
glad I’d brought my trilby hat.
We
were met at the barrier by one of our hosts, Bernie, accompanied by an official
native DS driver. Bernie was deeply tanned, thinning on top. His eyes sparkled
and his big teeth shone white: very friendly, sardonically humorous. We loaded
up and were driven off in a mini-bus.
The
heat was unbearable, the car seats sticky; with no reasonable shade in the
vehicle. Dust from the roads didn’t help, either. We headed for the town centre
of Rawalpindi and ultimately Islamabad.
Passing
through Rawalpindi – or Pindi as the colonials called it – a more picaresque
aspect of Pakistan life-in-the-street confronted us. The poverty, the urchins,
the dilapidation were there. But the colours seemed more gay, the air partly
fresher, and the people more mobile. Turning one corner, I was surprised and
amused to observe a general store and chemist advertising its drugs and
elixirs, capable of healing ten score of diseases and afflictions, from the
common cold up to and, amazingly just falling short of, death.
The
bonnet veered up and we motored up a concrete ramp, towards a steadily climbing
row of houses. Islamabad New Site – an unromantic name for the place. And at
first glance the buildings appeared quite unsightly. Vaguely reminiscent of
children’s building blocks, all painted white and browned and mellowed in the
oven. Spindly trees tried in vain to either break up or improve the wide
concrete pavements. The houses were mostly obscured from the road by large
walls where a few plants hung forlornly. The mountain range facing the New Site
and rising back of and beyond the near lowlands turned out to be the Hindu
Kush.
Somewhat
awkwardly, we trouped in to the house Bernie indicated. We had no idea what to
expect and I for one entered with some trepidation.
Inside,
it was simple luxury. Fitted carpets, new spotless blonde wood furniture,
variable air-conditioning, every facility and, most pleasantly, a lived-in
atmosphere.
Introductions
were soon made. Apart from the presence of Bernie, those already there to meet
us were women. Their intentions were quickly made clear. We were to be “farmed”
out to those present. Everything was informal and even jocular. The
sour-tasting tea and chinwag cleared the air and the ice had cracked if not
completely broken for most of us.
Without
any preamble whatsoever, I was “claimed” by Mrs Mary Guest.
“Surely,
though, you’re the host?” I said.
“Very
droll.” She smiled. Her blue eyes shone, cheeks mottled red and healthy.
***
This is the first excerpt from a piece published in Under the Queen's Colours (Voices from the Forces 1952-2012) by Penny Legg (2012) - kindle version here.
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