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‘Coloniser to Colonised’: Photojournalist Danial Shah recounts his journey backpacking from London to Quetta

‘Coloniser to Colonised’: Photojournalist Danial Shah recounts his journey backpacking from London to Quetta

Documenting his travels on Instagram, Shah found that backpacking isn't as easy when you don't have a very strong passport or socioeconomic privilege.
Updated 07 Sep, 2024

There is a route in Quetta famously called “London Road” because it takes travellers to London via Iran. As the trend of backpacking to Pakistan picks up once again, albeit more towards the northern side of the country, the sight of foreigners going about their business in the bazaars of Quetta is becoming more commonplace. This was not an anomaly before 9/11 — in fact, people like photojournalist Danial Shah grew up getting inspired by the backpackers traversing their city.

In an attempt to recreate that inspiration now that he has access to visas, Shah, who is pursuing his doctorate from the University of Antwerp in Belgium, decided to embark on the journey back home by road to understand the crossing of various borders.

Sharing his route from London to Quetta at an art space called Aahan Kada in Islamabad’s E-11 on Friday evening, Shah spoke about backpacking using mainly public transport and staying at hostels. He cautioned that travelling is not as easy as it is portrayed by those with stronger passports as well as socioeconomic privilege.

“This began a few years ago when I was doing a story for Herald, where I was required to travel via the left bank of the Indus Highway to understand and record the life of people living there,” he explained. “After that we decided to do a story on the migrant/refugee trail, which is basically a route taken by many who wish to enter Europe. But Covid struck so we were unable to follow up on that, and ever since I have been hoping to do something similar. I called this ‘From Coloniser to Colonised’ and hence decided to go through London and not Belgium,” he shared.

Documenting his journey on Instagram, Shah began his travel in the first week of July and reached Pakistan in the first week of September. He arrived in the UK from Belgium and then headed on to France, Italy, Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Albania, Greece, Turkey, Iran and then finally Pakistan.

“I have a Residence Permit from Belgium which allows me to stay out of the country for a total of two months so I only had that time to travel home, and I had to account for any delays owing to my passport or unforeseen circumstances.

“Mobility is very easy in Europe — you can travel to three countries in a matter of hours or days on trains because of how porous the borders are and the passports they carry. In our case, we need to be prepared for anything and everything so bank statements, travel history, degrees, police statements — one needs to have it all or be sent [back] without a visa, which sends your time, effort and money down the drain,” he said.

Shah narrated that given that he had a Belgian residence permit, travelling through the EU was convenient and no one checked his passport or demanded any documentation. However, once he crossed Croatia to enter Serbia, he faced the dreaded interrogation room.

“I was picked out from many others on the bus and taken to the interrogation room. I had all the required legal documents but till they were verified, I was strip-searched and my backpack was also thoroughly checked as if they were waiting to find something,” he recounted.

He faced similar situations while exiting Albania, which Shah has marked on his map as border humiliation in red. Given that Greece is also part of the EU, one would expect that it would be fairly easy to get to Turkey from there, but it was not.

Shah was on the island of Samos from where you can literally see Turkey across the water. “Those who have the privilege can travel to Turkey for lunch and return to Greece because the journey is about just 45 minutes. I went to the same tour company to board the ride and was told that I would have to fly instead because ‘some’ nationalities (Pakistanis and Egyptians) were barred. I persisted calmly, and was finally given the ticket.

“A Greek friend of mine felt angered at the treatment meted out to me and I told him how anger was also a great privilege at these points, because if I dared to show any frustration or anger, chances were I would be put behind bars just because of where I came from,” he shared.

The photojournalist added that the island hosts refugee camps where refugees are allowed to leave the camp once a week. “At the cafe where I could see other people enjoying their drinks and food, a Greek woman who worked there told me I was the first non-refugee Pakistani she had met.”

Once he reached Turkey, the process was smooth again and after spending a few days in the country, he headed to Iran where he spent 17 days exploring 11 cities before reaching the Pakistan-Iran border.

“In Isfahan, I had a wonderful time and I realised that women felt at ease, so much so that when I asked for directions at a restaurant, the women who owned the place offered to drop me and also show me around. This was all well past midnight and families were out having a merry time,” he shared.

Instead of only presenting a rosy picture of his travels, Shah was quite upfront about how while some people he met were fascinating and many places were laden with history, but that fascination or fun could easily be marred by the trauma and distress caused by border control.

Shah aims to do the journey again, perhaps by car if he is able to secure a licence, or by bicycle — he has been inspired by Instagram travel vloggers Kamran On Bike and Abrar Hasan, as well as Shahram Khosravi, the writer of ‘Illegal’ Traveller.

Comments

Taj Ahmad Sep 07, 2024 03:26pm
Good luck but it’s not as easy and safe, better travel to Pakistan by air and enjoy safe and sound.
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Dr. Salaria, Aamir Ahmad Sep 07, 2024 05:53pm
Next time, cut off Serbia, Albania and all those places you were badly treated based on the color and nomenclature of your passport. Remember, North or South, East or West, home is the best.
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Agha Asad Raza Sep 07, 2024 07:29pm
Thanks for an interesting report. I did this journey 3 times. First in 1967 and then twice more. I never took a visa from Pakistan. All my visas(where needed) are from abroad. Like UK visa from Tehran, Bulgaria from Turkiye etc. I carried just two T shirts and sometimes a pullover. Except for a camera and shaving kit nothing more. Slept in YMCA,s Caravansaris, bench, shop, bus, train once even on a tractor drawn trolley. Hitch hiked in Europe. My route was Afghanistan, Iran, Turkiye, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Albania, Italy, Switzerland, France, UK. Sometimes I wandered off to Austria or West Germany. Best
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musti sheikh Sep 07, 2024 08:03pm
My hats off to you for what you went through to entertain and explained to us the double standard applied as a tourist at different border crossings. Excellent job in presenting your work to the audience.
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RM Sep 07, 2024 08:44pm
Now that is out of the box thinking: travel by air. No one thought about it before. Thanks for the suggestions.
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Shaukat Sep 07, 2024 09:24pm
Why put yourself in danger and feel humiliated while traveling? Spend a little more and travel by Air, the time you will save is worth your money. There is nothing significant to see besides 1 or 2 countries.
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Polaris Sep 07, 2024 09:47pm
Travel was not easy, as he wrote ---- “I was picked out from many others on the bus and taken to the interrogation room. I had all the required legal documents but till they were verified, I was strip-searched and my backpack was also thoroughly checked as if they were waiting to find something,” he recounted.
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Rizwan Ali Sep 07, 2024 10:14pm
Those Balkan countries are not just hostile towards Pakistanis they don't like each other too. So when a person from one Balkan country travels to another, the border police also give them a tough time just like him.
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Laila Sep 08, 2024 03:20pm
Many fail to understand travel by air and land are vastly different. Nobody plans to go through discrimination. It happened to him. 1) Eastern Europe is quite racist even though some of the countries are muslim or have Muslims. A Bosnian however looks European. 2) Pakistani passport isn't strong. There is a clip on YouTube with Saba Qamar talking about that too. Pakistanis stand out. Unfortunately. Europeans and other foreigners can travel easy by rail, water and backpack. Pakistanis not so much. There are travel vlogs on Youtube etc showing discrimination even in Muslim countries like the Gulf against Pakistanis. In some countries they make seperate paseenger queues for Pakistanis and others passengers. Even the migrants camps in Greece/Italy a few years back, when middle eastern people under the guise of being refugees were illegally flooding Europe (majority were not Syrians), Pakistanis were held separately and deported. Same with Africans. Discrimination, racism, colorism and segregation exist. Even today. But you also have to live. At least he travelled and experienced life. Maybe of us haven't and won't. I would love to backpack but as a female I can't even do this in Pakistan.
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Amjad Ali Awan Sep 09, 2024 12:48pm
Would love to travel this route.
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