ISLAMABAD- Small parks built inside the residential sectors provide the people an opportunity to take a mouthful of fresh air out of the suffocating environment of their small, congested homes. Similarly, grounds and play lands situated closely to the residential quarters keep the children away from immoral activities, as they remain enjoying healthy activities nearby their homes. But despite the tall claims of the Capital Development Authority (CDA) of developing the Federal Capital on modern lines, there are sectors, where still no such facilities are available and the youths are compelled either to play in streets or involve in what kind of activities their little minds suggest to them. Sectors of the 'G' series, especially G-6 and G-7, are the most deprived areas of the Capital, where the provision of modern civic facilities are still denied the same way as were ignored in the original master plan of the city. Despite adding more to the parks and playgrounds in the area, the civic agency has devoured up the existing ones in the name of development. Once there were a number of parks and playgrounds along the road running in between G-6 and G-7, which now have become a memory of past after the construction of 7th Avenue. "Boys used to play there," said a man sitting by a 10-marlas incidental open space in G-6, where scores of children were playing a strange game with an air filled ball and rough sticks, as probably the place was not suitable for a modern days game. "Now they have been involved in immoral activities like smoking and drinking and gambling," he narrated in a single breath all that could be the negative impacts of the unavailability of sporting facilities in the cities. He added that the regularly increasing crime graph in the city was surely an outcome of the said deprivation. TheNation further observed during the visit to the two sectors that a number of small parks were built there, but were bitterly ignored in terms of maintenance. One of the said parks was situated by the bank of a deep seasonal nullah. The retention wall along the bank of the nullah was disappeared, which was offering a serious threat to the small kids riding the swings in the park. Another park in G-7, which does not deserve to be called a perk if the two swings were removed from it. The perk was in a very dilapidated condition. The rainwater pooled in wildly grown grasses, occupying nearly 70 per cent of the area, had changed the park into a marshland, which didn't allowed even entry into it. "CDA has focused all its attention on big sectors of the city," complained a resident of the area. "As if we are not human beings," he added. "Whole of the civic body rushes towards the posh sector, but no one is there to bother a little for us," he continued.