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Lahore Should Be Developed Like Delhi: Pak Minister

Your a funny man see the pics of orangi town n compare dharvi .. its looks much better than even ur towns.. now dnt make me laugh.. this thread isnt about ur inferiority complexes.

Orangi was decorated as largest slum in Asia.

Transport of Karachi
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Transport of Delhi
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Transport of Mumbai
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It is insane to compare under developed cities of pakistan with Indian metropolitan. both are in different league altogether. Pakistani cities doesn't even have proper electricity supply, comparing them with Indian cities is not fair.
 
do you dare tell me that how many slums dogs are there in Delhi?
is that less than 1% shining buildings feature of delhi ,but more than 50% durty slums not?
Just about the same number as the retarded and uneducated Chinese trolls in this forum. Go bark somewhere else.
 
do you dare tell me that how many slums dogs are there in Delhi?
is that less than 1% shining buildings feature of delhi ,but more than 50% durty slums not?

People live in those building unlike your ghost cities and world largest shopping mall abandoned.
 
Some places to Visit:

Historical: Red Fort, Kutub Minar, Lotus Temple

Night Clubs: Best pubs, lounges and nightclubs in Delhi NCR

Best places to eat: Gun Powder (South indian with beef) Hauz Khaz village and Al bake (original) New Friends Colony Shawarma


I am going to Delhi for the last One Day Match :yahoo:, all suggestions for entertainment from Delhites would be highly appreciated?

Cheers
 
People live in those building unlike your ghost cities and world largest shopping mall abandoned.
LOL the small city where 'world largest shopping mall' located has much more GDP than your capital Delhi and far less population.so you can imagine the infrastructure gap between the two,funny that you laugh at a city atleast 50 years better than yours.whats more funny is Delhi's housing price is times higher ,which means it's forever a dream for most of you guys to have a decent room.face it
 
LOL the small city where 'world largest shopping mall' located has much more GDP than your capital Delhi and far less population.so you can imagine the infrastructure gap between the two,funny that you laugh at a city atleast 50 years better than yours.whats more funny is Delhi's housing price is times higher ,which means it's forever a dream for most of you guys to have a decent room.face it

Then why you built those building when you don't have enough people to live there. :lol:
 
Your a funny man see the pics of orangi town n compare dharvi .. its looks much better than even ur towns.. now dnt make me laugh.. this thread isnt about ur inferiority complexes.

Yeah Orangi looks much better than any city in India!!Dude please..UN reports say that percentage of people living in slums are much higher in your country.

There is no need for me to feel any inferiority complex,especially about the context of this thread.And yes this thread is about the comment a Pakistani minister made when he was impressed by Delhis modern infrastructure-modern airports,metro rails,flyovers,interchanges and the like.
The minister said he is yet to visit such a developed city where one can find wide roads, spread out Metro network, flyovers and vast greenery,*

I guess that may have hurt superiority complex of some Pakistani members-according to them everythimg is better in Pakistan-they might even state that SUPARCO is better than ISRO.:omghaha:
 
@djsjs

Go bark some where else with your delusional 50% figure and 50 years ahead cr@p dude
 
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Then why you built those building when you don't have enough people to live there. :lol:
haha trolling can never cover your failure.
you can regard them as our slums,you know it's what we lack of.
btw can you give me the percentage of people living in Delhi slums directly?it's said over 50% several years ago,but how much now?
 
haha trolling can never cover your failure.
you can regard them as our slums,you know it's what we lack of.
btw can you give me the percentage of people living in Delhi slums directly?it's said over 50% several years ago,but how much now?

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@djsjs
Go bark some where else with your delusional 50% figure and 50 years ahead cr@p dude
if not 50% and more than 50 years,then how much?
i strongly hope Delhi is not so bad as i thought.
strongly hope you prove that im wrong.and i asked you 3 times the percentage,you don't dare tell us.is the fact even worse?
 
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haha trolling can never cover your failure.
you can regard them as our slums,you know it's what we lack of.
btw can you give me the percentage of people living in Delhi slums directly?it's said over 50% several years ago,but how much now?

Do you mean China don't have slums. :woot: I know China has better infrastructure but lot of them are built to meet the high GDP growth target and those infrastructure became useless after completion. I read some news about your HSR, except Beijing-Shanghai line, rest of HSR lines are making huge losses.
 
Updated: August 15, 2013 11:41 IST

The Hindu's Sri Lanka correspondent, Meera Srinivasan says Colombo is a city where even a stray piece of trash on the road will surprise you, a place where cleanliness is only enhanced by the greenery all around

"How come?" I wondered, when I recently spotted a used, disposable plastic cup, of a famous yogurt brand, lying on the pavement in my Colombo neighbourhood.

In the last four months that I have been here, I have seldom seen anything synthetic on the roads – no polythene bags being chauffeured around by the breeze, no food packets with rice spilling out, no disfigured mineral water bottles.

Occasionally, I would spot dry leaves popping up on the pavements. And invariably, I would also hear a sort of brushing sound – after a few weeks here, I could recognise the sound even from a distance – it was the conservancy worker’s large, fork-like bamboo broom toiling over the broad concrete pavement.

A middle-aged woman, wearing an orange t-shirt, like many conservancy workers here, would not spare even a single dry leaf. On several days I have seen her mid-morning, and on some days, in the afternoon.

Colombo, as some of my friends had told me earlier, is a city where even a stray piece of trash on the road will surprise you. Cleanliness is only enhanced by the greenery all around.

When my friend, a local journalist, countered my point of view saying, “Oh, that is only the heart of Colombo. It’s meant to be all posh, you know,” I thought that she perhaps knew better.

All the same, from my limited experience of travelling outside Colombo on a few assignments, I feel that the average city or town in Sri Lanka tends to be far cleaner than its Indian counterpart.

I can already hear some of the arguments against what I say – India is a far bigger country, we are grappling with a population of over a billion and conservancy is a greater challenge in such a context. I have no disagreement over any of these.

As someone who has been a Chennaiite all her life, it is interesting to see how this neighbour – just a 50-minute flight away – manages to be so clean.

When it comes to things like cleanliness, public transport or urban sanitation, you usually tend to turn to the West for benchmarks.

When you speak of the Chennai Metro, you are secretly hoping it would be like the London tube network one day. When you speak of doing road trips, one of your friends will tell you how he drove for 14 hours in the States with no sign of fatigue. Similarly, when it comes to how clean a city is, even if we have to consider examples closer to home, we point to a developed country like Singapore.

However, here is a city right next door, with very similar challenges as any other developing South Asian country, that takes its cleanliness very seriously. You may have a million differences with Sri Lanka – for patriotic, political or ideological reasons, but you have to give it to the conservancy agencies here and larger civic sense of citizens for maintaining the city this way.

Not very long ago, a 30-something sales professional I met here, told me that the army personnel – who defeated the LTTE – were heroes of the country. I am not sure I agree with him entirely.

But I do know one hero for sure - the middle-aged woman I spot every morning who, with her broom, coaxes every little leaf on the pavement to step away and make way for the pedestrian.

Clean and Colombo, a combo - The Hindu
 
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