Pakistan's prayers answered as cable car survivors given 'second life'

Youngsters who were trapped in a broken cable car, receive first aid following their rescue, in Battagram district of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on August 22, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 23 August 2023
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Pakistan's prayers answered as cable car survivors given 'second life'

  • Army commandos performed a miraculous rescue, winching two to safety with a helicopter, and bringing six down on a zip line
  • In northern Pakistan, cable cars and rickety rope bridges are the fastest way to move across villages and over ravines and valleys

PESHAWAR, Pakistan: When Pakistani villager Gul Faraz rang his family to raise the alarm that a cable had snapped and he and seven schoolchildren were trapped in a cable car swaying in the wind high above a rocky ravine, he doubted he would ever see home again.

"It is an unforgettable day," Faraz said on Wednesday, a day after army commandos performed a miraculous rescue, winching two to safety with a helicopter, and bringing the rest down on a zip line when it became too dark to fly safely in the gusting winds.

"I can't tell you what we experienced yesterday when one cable of the cable car suddenly snapped and we were stranded in the air," said Faraz, who at 20 years old was the only adult aboard, and the only person with a mobile phone.

He called his family first, and then television channel Geo News, whose coverage quickly drew the attention of the world's media to the drama unfolding in the remote mountains of northwestern Pakistan.

It is a part of the world where cable cars and rickety rope bridges are the fastest way to move from a village on one hillside to its nearest neighbour across ravines and valleys.

The owner and the operator of the cable car have since been arrested, police said on Wednesday, though the allegations against them were not clear.

The schoolchildren, aged between 10 and 16, had been coming down from their homes in Jhangri to a school in Battangi, comprising two villages in the Allai valley, when the calamity struck at around 7 a.m. local time.

The journey by cable car usually takes just a matter of minutes, whereas travelling along the rough mountain roads and tracks takes hours.

It would be 16 hours before the high-risk rescue operation brought everyone safely off the flimsy car as it dangled 183 metres (600 feet) above the ground, the military said, lowering the height estimated by officials earlier but making it no less deadly.

There were fears the remaining cable could give way any time, and cries of "God is Great" arose from people gathered around to see the children brought down on harnesses by soldiers on a zip line.

"At some point, I had lost hope that we would safely return home," Faraz told Reuters by telephone from his home, where his family was receiving visitors from villages across the region, all offering thanks for their survival.

Having dreaded the worst, Pakistan exulted with relief and pride over the daring rescue.

"Our first priority was to secure the children," caretaker Prime Minister Anwar ul Haq Kakar said, describing the feat as "near impossible".

"It was heartening to see the whole nation praying and standing united ... in the hour of need," Kakar told a news conference in the southern city of Karachi.

Those prayers were answered for Faraz and the children.

"We got a second life," he said.


In Karachi, a café where Ramadan means feeding anyone who arrives hungry

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In Karachi, a café where Ramadan means feeding anyone who arrives hungry

  • Karachi’s Cafe Mehmood has offered free meals to the needy for nearly four decades
  • Restaurant owners say paying customers and charity diners receive the same quality food

KARACHI: As the call to Maghrib prayer echoes through Karachi’s Sindhi Muslim Housing Society, long rows of people seated along a busy roadside begin to break their fast. Plates of fruit, samosas and glasses of the rose-flavored drink Rooh Afza move down the line as men, women and children share the evening meal after a long day of fasting in the city’s humid heat.

The gathering is a familiar Ramadan scene outside Cafe Mehmood, a modest restaurant in Pakistan’s largest city that has quietly sustained one of Karachi’s longest-running traditions of feeding the hungry.

Operating since the 1980s, the eatery is well known not only for its food but for a daily dastarkhwan, a communal meal spread laid out for anyone who arrives hungry. Donations collected from visitors and well-wishers help fund the initiative, allowing the restaurant to provide meals throughout the year to people who cannot afford to pay.

The tradition reflects a wider culture of charitable food distribution in Pakistan, particularly during Ramadan, when mosques, community groups and businesses organize iftar meals for fasting Muslims. In Karachi, a sprawling city of more than 20 million people, such initiatives often fill gaps in a fragile social safety net.

“Around 12,000 people come to this dastarkhwan daily and derive benefit from it,” said Imran Khan, the eldest son of one of the restaurant’s founders.

Pakistan, a country of more than 240 million people, has struggled with rising living costs in recent years following economic turmoil marked by inflation, currency depreciation and higher energy prices. For many families dependent on daily wages or informal employment, free community meals can provide an essential lifeline.

Cafe Mehmood’s story began in 1985, when three brothers opened the restaurant and named it after one of them, Mehmood. The charitable meals started modestly when the founders began serving food to a handful of people sitting on the footpath outside the restaurant.

Over time, word spread and more people began arriving. Donations from visitors and well-wishers helped expand the effort into a large-scale operation feeding thousands each day.

Communal meal spreads are common across Karachi, particularly during Ramadan, but the scale and schedule of the dastarkhwan outside Cafe Mehmood sets it apart.

“There are no specific [meal] timings,” Khan said. “It starts at seven in the morning and runs until 12 at midnight. During that period if anyone comes empty stomach, they are fed well.”

During Ramadan, however, the restaurant focuses its efforts on iftar and the meals that continue until the pre-dawn suhoor.

The service runs throughout the year, pausing only on three days annually: Eid Al-Fitr and the first two days of Eid Al-Adha. 

According to Khan, the restaurant prepares iftar for around 2,000 to 2,500 people each day, followed by dinner for roughly the same number.

To manage the demand, Cafe Mehmood operates a separate kitchen dedicated to preparing food for the charity meals. Inside the restaurant, customers who pay for their meals sit at tables, while outside, those who cannot afford to pay are served at long communal spreads laid out on the street.

Yet the owners say the difference is only in where the food is served, not in its quality.

“We make sure there is no compromise on quality while the taste, hygiene and service is similar to what we offer to our customers,” said Ismail Saeed, one of the founders’ grandsons who joined the family business five years ago.

Today, the restaurant and its charitable kitchen are run by the next generation: six members of the founding families and their nine sons.

Saeed said he had long wanted to take part in continuing the tradition.

“It has been a part of our genes since the beginning to help the needy, not just in terms of food but otherwise as well,” he said.

“We were provided with a platform through which we could do it, so I was always very keen about it.”

The charity meals are sustained through a combination of restaurant contributions and public donations. Visitors frequently stop by to give cash, while others transfer money online after learning about the initiative.

For those who cannot attend the communal meal spreads in person, the restaurant also distributes food parcels, particularly to women and people registered as deserving beneficiaries.

A typical meal served through the charity program includes chicken or beef gravy with two flatbreads, costing around Rs110 (about $0.39) per serving.

Despite its popularity, Cafe Mehmood historically avoided promoting its charitable work. For the family that runs the joint, the goal has remained simple: that no one who comes to their door leaves hungry.

“It was also the need of the hour,” Saeed said.