Pakistanis turn to humor as power grid breakdown plunges country into darkness

Special Pakistanis turn to humor as power grid breakdown plunges country into darkness
A collage showing tweets on a massive power blackout that hit whole Pakistan on Saturday.
Short Url
Updated 10 January 2021
Follow

Pakistanis turn to humor as power grid breakdown plunges country into darkness

Pakistanis turn to humor as power grid breakdown plunges country into darkness
  • A technical fault on the transmission system plunged much of the country into darkness on Saturday night 
  • Many Pakistanis were also finding amusement in the sheer amount of dark humor taking place online

RAWALPINDI: As a massive power blackout hit whole Pakistan on Saturday, Twitterati lit up the dark night with even darker humor.

Since the outage was reportedly caused by a transmission line trip, not an attack, coup, or apocalypse, the country’s ruling party urged Pakistanis not to worry, with a peace sign emoji.

But some Twitter users took the blackout as an opportunity to make a jab or two at the government, saying that the country was being restarted in a similar way that we all hope a quick “reset” might repair our computers or gaming consoles.

Twitter user @Mahobili guessed that Prime Minister Imran Khan must have asked his advisers to turn the country “off and on” to fix things.

Lawyer Salaar Khan tweeted out a photo of baffled-looking Khan, with a caption that perhaps Pakistan’s leader had forgotten to pay the country’s electricity bill.

A meme format popular on Twitter, with a screengrab from the US television show Glee was posted by Twitter user @Commiedi: “Electricity providers tonight: I am going to create a country that is so dark.”

Similarly, Twitter user @Jahanzaibb_ used the popular Spiderman meme with Pakistanis asking one another if they had light at home.

A classic throwback was to the tendency of some of Pakistan’s religious right to blame any negative event on women’s clothing. Twitter user @Freakonomist5 wrote: “Go head daughters of the nation, wear jeans more.”

Another user @ArhumL92 responded that religious leader Maulana Tariq Jamil, known for finding the fault in jeans would have to blame leggings.

Twitter user @Hassan_Javid jested that this was the moment Pakistan’s “candle mafia,” was waiting for, a tongue in cheek remark on Pakistan’s government and media’s tendency to label anything a mafia.

Another popular joke was that a possible coup was taking place.

Photographer Rizwan Pehelwan cracked a joke that any 90’s Bollywood fan would love, by inserting the word “coup,” into “Choli Ke Peeche,” a classic song from the film “Khalnayak.”

Many Pakistanis were also finding amusement in the sheer amount of humor taking place online.

Twitter user @Kha_nobya tweeted out a meme format of the Titanic sinking and Pakistanis taking the role of the band that played as it went down.

And lastly, Twitter user @Guilty4fries nailed an all-encompassing joke for the evening, dubbing all that went on online “dark humor.”