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Pakistan | Roads, Motorways & Highway Infrastructure.

don't forget our nice motoray and highway police help to nation anytime anywhere




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you know what it took?

good training, good equipment and decent salaries for the police....that's it!!


these guys will NEVER accept bribe
 
posted already some time back


WITNESS: Failed state? Try Pakistan's M2 motorway | Reuters

By Alistair Scrutton

(Reuters) - If you want a slice of peace and stability in a country with a reputation for violence and chaos, try Pakistan's M2 motorway.

At times foreign reporters need to a give a nation a rest from their instinctive cynicism. I feel like that with Pakistan each time I whizz along the M2 between Islamabad and Lahore, the only motorway I know that inspires me to write.

Now, if the M2 conjures images of bland, spotless tarmac interspersed with gas stations and fast food outlets, you would be right. But this is South Asia, land of potholes, reckless driving and the occasional invasion of livestock.

And this is Pakistan, for many a "failed state." Here, blandness can inspire almost heady optimism.

Built in the 1990s at a cost of around $1 billion, the 228-mile (367-km) motorway -- which continues to Peshawar as the M1 -- is like a six-lane highway to paradise in a country that usually makes headlines for suicide bombers, army offensives and political mayhem.

Indeed, for sheer spotlessness, efficiency and emptiness there is nothing like the M2 in the rest of South Asia.

It puts paid to what's on offer in Pakistan's traditional foe and emerging economic giant India, where village culture stubbornly refuses to cede to even the most modern motorways, making them battlegrounds of rickshaws, lorries and cows.

There are many things in Pakistan that don't get into the news. Daily life, for one. Pakistani hospitality to strangers, foreigners like myself included, is another. The M2 is another sign that all is not what it appears in Pakistan, that much lies hidden behind the bad news.

On a recent M2 trip, my driver whizzed along but kept his speedometer firmly placed on the speed limit. Here in this South Asian Alice's Wonderland, the special highway police are considered incorruptible. The motorway is so empty one wonders if it really cuts through one of the region's most populated regions.

"130, OK, but 131 is a fine," said the driver, Noshad Khan. "The police have cameras," he added, almost proudly. His hand waved around in the car, clenched in the form of a gun.

On one of my first trips to Pakistan. I arrived at the border having just negotiated a one-lane country road in India with cows, rickshaws and donkey-driven carts.

I toted my luggage over to the Pakistan side, and within a short time my Pakistani taxi purred along the tarmac. The driver proudly showed off his English and played U.S. rock on FM radio. The announcer even had an American accent. Pakistan, for a moment, receded, and my M2 trip began.

Built in the 1990s by then prime minister Nawaz Sharif, it was part of his dream of a motorway that would unite Pakistan with Afghanistan and central Asia.

For supporters it shows the potential of Pakistan. Its detractors say it was a waste of money, a white elephant that was a grandiose plaything for Sharif.

But while his dreams for the motorway foundered along with many of Pakistan, somehow the Islamabad-Lahore stretch has survived assassinations, coups and bombs.

A relatively expensive toll means it is a motorway for the privileged. Poorer Pakistanis use the older trunk road nearby tracing an ancient route that once ran thousands of miles to eastern India. The road is shorter, busier and takes nearly an hour longer.

On my latest trip, I passed the lonely occasional worker in an orange suit sweeping the edge of the motorway in a seemingly Sisyphean task.

A fence keeps out the donkeys and horse-driven carts. Service centres are almost indistinguishable from any service station in the West, aside perhaps from the spotless mosques.

The real Pakistan can be seen from the car window, but in the distance. Colorful painted lorries still ply those roads. Dirt poor villagers toil in brick factories, farmers on donkey carts go about their business.

Of course, four hours of mundane travel is quite enough. Arriving in Lahore, the road suddenly turns into South Asia once again. Dust seeps through the open car window, endless honks sound, beggars knock on car windows. The driver begins again his daily, dangerous battle for road supremacy.

As Pakistan unveils itself in all its vibrancy, it is exciting to be back. But you can't help feel a tinge of regret at having experienced, briefly, a lost dream.

"Motorway good - but Pakistan," Noshad said at the last petrol station before we entered Lahore. "Terrorism, Rawalpindi," he added, referring to the latest militant attack on a mosque in the garrison town which killed dozens.

(Editing by Jerry Norton)
 

im a huge fan of heavy bikes and i ride regularly myself....

but i dont like to see these kinds of things like wheelie and all on the motorway; only because it took YEARS for authorities to finally allow motorcycles to travel on it (before it was strictly banned)


but if they keep doing these things its possible the ban can be re-instated.


this is a road to enjoy, using good road discipline...they should save these things on a closed road or track; though because the road is so good and wide it may be tempting to rip loose on the accelerator
 
i think maybe this is YOU! :D

mujhy nhi rukwaty main saieen ka mehman hota hoon na :lol:

im a huge fan of heavy bikes and i ride regularly myself....

but i dont like to see these kinds of things like wheelie and all on the motorway; only because it took YEARS for authorities to finally allow motorcycles to travel on it (before it was strictly banned)


but if they keep doing these things its possible the ban can be re-instated.


this is a road to enjoy, using good road discipline...they should save these things on a closed road or track; though because the road is so good and wide it may be tempting to rip loose on the accelerator


ONLY Any one have min. 600cc - above ride easily with full documents + under limits + with proper gear (jacket and helmet) can drive
 
Hey guys, how does a fine work in pak? In US, when you get a fine (ticket), you either pay it online, or in person or you fight the ticket in court. If you dont pay the ticket at all, you get in serious trouble as the police has your license number and other record. How does it work in pakistan, considering the fact that many people drive without a license.
 
Any one have min. 600cc - above ride easily with full documents + under limits + with proper gear (jacket and helmet) can drive [/B][/COLOR]

it wasnt always that way....until only a few years ago NO bikes were allowed PERIOD, regardless of circumstances...

i'd love to take my Ninja 636 on the M2. It was built for it.


Hey guys, how does a fine work in pak? In US, when you get a fine (ticket), you either pay it online, or in person or you fight the ticket in court. If you dont pay the ticket at all, you get in serious trouble as the police has your license number and other record. How does it work in pakistan, considering the fact that many people drive without a license.

you cannot drive in Pakistan without a license....people do it, but when they get caught the vehicle is challaned. But circumstances can be different, depending on where you are and who the officer is (whether he's doing his job or whether he's a twit)

as for fines -- i think they give u a citation which you pay at the toll plaza but im not sure....luckily i never been pulled over on it :D
 
Hey guys, how does a fine work in pak? In US, when you get a fine (ticket), you either pay it online, or in person or you fight the ticket in court. If you dont pay the ticket at all, you get in serious trouble as the police has your license number and other record. How does it work in pakistan, considering the fact that many people drive without a license.

your documents will be taken till you paid fine and come back otherwise you have to go jail .
 

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