Saturday, November 29, 2008

No panic in Hyderabad

Despite the terrible goings on in Mumbai this week, I decided to stay with plans to go to Hyderabad for the UN Internet Governance Forum in any case. I confess to thinking the Mumbai attacks were so well organized they would have either consumed all the resources of whatever group organized them, or have been launched by some sect so well resourced and powerful they would be able to move quickly in other cities to create a broader sense of panic and disorder. It's too early to claim I was right, but it's looking like I might have been...

A colleague and I decided that, rather than suffer a weekend locked down in the hotel, we'd better test the waters, however timidly, and go see whatever there is in Hyderabad. It is not a very attractive town. The fairly lengthy Qutb Shahi
dynasty produced the impressive Golconda fort, a huge palace, and a series of royal tombs, along with an array of large mosques. They can all be visited easily in a day. The government has developed a sensible pricing scheme for visiting historic sites, charging Indians 5 rupees (about 1.5¢) to visit and foreigners 100. But that is the start. Friendly-seeming locals then rush unwary visitors, and start to explain in vast detail what was before us. It eventually became evident that these folk have a complex (and expensive) rate card they've neglected to tell you about that might include items such as the following:
- 700 rupees per person for the "basic tour" ($17.50 ea)
- 400 rupees pp to have a cloth removed from a carved black marble sarcophagus ($10 ea)
- 500 rupees pp to have someone clap their hands to demonstrate an echo ($12.50 ea), etc.

Knowing none of this in advance, a tour can very easily become a major expense. Fortunately, we figured out the game early on: at the point we were asked to pay for having had the cloth whipped from the sarcophagus, so then denied all further services. No doubt I've missed many vital historical facts, but count on wikipedia to fill me in when necessary.

One of the highlights of the day was climbing to the top of the Charminar -- a four towered monument used at various times as a mosque, headquarters of a French expeditionary force, and the source of Madame Blavatsky's philosophical speculations. The thing is surrounded by a bustling market, and offers a fantastic vantage point from which t watch the chaos that is traffic in Hyderabad.

The good news is that all is calm and getting calmer now that the Mumbai sieges are over, or seems to be calm to 2 old white guys out touring the town. Of course, you might reasonably ask whether we'd even notice anything out of the ordinary without any real sense of what is ordinary in the first place...

I'm hoping my camera will rejoin me soon, following its vacation in Kenya, so I can post some photos later in the week.

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