Three girls in uniform appearing from a recently regenerated alley were trotting towards a bus stand with their heads covered with veils. These university going, lower middle class girls had not only surpassed impediments of anti-progressive traditions, of remaining homebound and marrying early, but also by seeking education had refused a time-honored role, secondary to that of men's. Moreover, their persistence with veils depicted resoluteness to preserve their cultural identity.
Towards the right of bazaar, policemen were handcuffing mechanics who had employed minors, since Child labour has promoted human smuggling, kept children of less privileged away from schools and led to children being viewed as producers rather than as consumers. This social epidemic has also reinforced the already high rate of natural increase.
Simultaneously, a large contingent of young men was assembling in front of Karachi press club to peacefully protest against the assassination of minorities in lower Punjab. By rejecting prevailing religious fanaticism and propagating religious tolerance, they were delineating a high degree of political awareness as well as willpower to liberate politics from strangle of a few dominant families.
Half a kilometer further away, barbed wires and barricades were being razed to the ground in front of schools marking an end to the regime of terror that, for a decade, had tortured the impressionable minds, seeking enlightment, with adverse psychological effects.
Finally, near the shoreline, high school students were engrossed in a beach clean-up drive. These environmentally alarmed students knew that conserving environment is imperative for achieving sustainable development and is also a duty