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Facts
for Travellers
Visas:
Visas are required by nationals from most European and English-speaking
countries. A Pakistan visa allows you to enter the country up to
six months from the date you get it, and stay up to three months
from the date you enter. However, if you arrive in Pakistan as a
tourist without a visa you will receive a 30-day landing permit,
which can be changed into a three month entry visa at a regional
passport offfice in Pakistan.
Health risks: dengue fever, hepatitis A, malaria and, in
rural areas, Japanese encephalitis.
Time: GMT/UTC plus five hours
Electricity: 220V, 50 Hz
Weights & measures: metric
Tourism: 424,000 visitors
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Money
& Costs
Currency:
Pakistani rupee
- Budget
meal: US$2-3
- Moderate
restaurant meal: US$3-8
- Top-end
restaurant meal: US$8-10
-
Budget room: US$4-10
- Moderate
hotel: US$10-20
- Top-end
hotel: US$20 and upwards
By
staying in hostels or dorms and eating like a local you can get
by on as little as US$10-15 a day. If, however, you were looking
for a moderate touch of luxury you could spend as much as $30-40
a day which could get you accommodation that included a satellite
T.V., a desk, a balcony, and a spotlessly clean bathroom. As in
any place you can spend as much as you like to live in the lap of
luxury and stay in swanky hotels. It's worth noting that rooms and
food are cheaper in the north than in the south.
Both
travellers' cheques and cash are easy to change throughout the country,
but commissions on cheques can be high. Apart from top-end hotels,
most places won't accept credit cards as payment although you can
often use them for cash advances at western banks. Facilities for
validation seem better for Visa then Mastercard. Occasionally a
tattered note will be firmly refused as legal tender, and often
in the smaller towns the appearance of a 1000 or 500 rupee note
will cause consternation and an inability to provide change, so
make sure you get some smaller notes when buying your rupees.
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Baksheesh
isn't so much a bribe as a way of life in Pakistan. It can apply
to any situation and is capable of opening all sorts of doors, both
literal and metaphorical. Anything from a signature on a document
to fixing a leaking tap can be acquired through the magic of baksheesh.
Most top-end hotels will automatically add a 5-10% service charge
to your bill, so any extra tipping is entirely up to you. Taxi drivers
routinely expect 10% of the fare, and railway porters charge an
officially-set Rs 7. The only time that a gratuity might not be
welcome is in the rural areas where it runs counter to Islamic obligation
to be hospitable.
If
baksheesh is a way of life, bargaining is a matter of style, particularly
in the many Pakistani bazaars. Unlike the western hesitancy for
bargaining, shopkeepers in Pakistani love to bargain as long as
it's done with style and panache. Bargaining usually begins with
an invitation to step inside for a cup of tea followed by a little
bit of small talk, a casually expressed interest by yourself in
a particular item, a way-too-high price mentioned by the seller,
a way-too-low counter offer by yourself and eventually, after much
comic rolling of eyes, a handshake and mutual satisfaction for both
parties. Bargaining should always be accompanied by smiles, good
humour and an ability not to get fixated on driving the price into
the ground.
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Culture
The
pleasures of Pakistan are old: Buddhist monuments, Hindu temples,
Islamic palaces, tombs and pleasure grounds, and widely spaced Anglo-Mogul
Gothic mansions - some in a state of dereliction which makes their
grandeur even more emphatic. Scuplture is dominated by Graeco-Buddhist
friezes, and crafts by ceramics, jewellery, silk goods and engraved
woodwork and metalwork.
Even
Pakistan's flotillas of vintage Bedford buses and trucks, mirror-buffed
and chrome-sequinned, are dazzling works of art. Traditional dances
are lusty and vigorous; music is either classical, folk or devotional;
and the most patronised literature is a mix of the scholastic and
poetic. Cricket is Pakistan's greatest sports obsession and national
players are afforded hero status - unless, of course, they proselytise
young and wealthy English women, then marry them.
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Nearly
all Pakistanis are Muslim and Islam is the state religion. Reminders
of their devotion are many: the muezzin's call to prayer from the
mosques; men sprawled in prayer in fields, shops and airports; and
veiled women in the streets. Christians are the largest minority,
followed by Hindus and Parsees, descendants of Persian Zoroastrians.
Note that dress codes are strictly enforced - to avoid offence invest
in a shalwar qamiz - a long, loose, non-revealing garment worn by
both men and women.
Pakistani
food is similar to that of northern India, with a dollop of Middle
Eastern influence thrown in for good measure. This means menus peppered
with baked and deep-fried breads (roti, chapattis, puri, halwa and
nan), meat curries, lentil mush (dhal), spicy spinach, cabbage,
peas and rice. Street snacks - samosas and tikkas (spiced and barbecued
beef, mutton or chicken) - are delicious, while a range of desserts
will satisfy any sweet tooth. The most common sweet is barfi (it
pays to overlook the name), which is made of dried milk solids and
comes in a variety of flavours. Though Pakistan is officially 'dry',
it does brew its own beer and spirits which can be bought (as well
as imported alcohol) from specially designated bars and top-end
hotels.
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Events
Nationwide
celebrations include Ramadan, a month of sunrise-to-sunset fasting
which changes dates every year (as the Islamic calendar differs
from the Gregorian one); Eid-ul-Fitr, two to three days of feasting
and goodwill that marks the end of Ramadan; Eid-ul-Azha, when animals
are slaughtered and the meat shared between relatives and the needy;
and Eid-Milad-un-Nabi, which celebrates Mohammad's birthday.
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Climate
Pakistan
has three seasons: cool (October through February); hot (March through
June); and wet (July through September). There are, however, big
regional variations. In the south, the cool season brings dry days
and cool nights, while the northern mountains get drizzle and plummeting
night-time temperatures. The hot season means suffocatingly hot
and humid conditions in the south but pleasant temperatures northwards.
During the wet season, the tail end of the monsoon dumps steady
rain mostly in the narrow belt of the Punjab from Lahore to Islamabad.
But further north, the high mountains block all but the most determined
clouds, which means relatively little rain falls there (budding
trekkers please take note).
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When
to Go
The
best time for travelling to Pakistan depends on which part of the
country you intend to visit. Generally speaking, the southern parts
of Pakistan including Sind, Baluchistan, Punjab and southern North-West
Frontier Province (NWFP) are best visited in the cooler months between
November and April. After that it gets uncomfortably hot.
The
northern areas like Azad Jammu Kashmir, and northern NWFP are best
seen during May to October before the area becomes snowbound. The
weather may be a little stormy during this time, but the mountain
districts are usually still accessible. Try and avoid Pakistan during
Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting which usually occurs sometime
during the months of December to early January. This is because
a fasting Mulsim is a cranky Muslim, and you may find yourself involuntarily
joining in the fast because activity is kept to a minimum and food
is hard to find during daylight hours.
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