
An energy-saving measure in Pakistan backfired, leaving millions across the country without power.
The government has begun restoring power and launched an inquiry into the outage, which began around 7am local time.
Officials said it started when electricity was turned off during low usage hours overnight to conserve fuel across the country, leaving technicians unable to reboot the system all at once after daybreak.
Shoppers visit a market, where some shopkeepers are using generators for electricity.
The mausoleum of Mohammad Ali Jinnah in Karachi during the power breakdown

Mr Dastgir insisted the outage was not a major crisis and said backup generators kicked in to help key businesses and institutions such as hospitals, military and government facilities.
"We are hoping that the supply of electricity will be fully restored tonight," he said.
It was the second major electricity grid failure in three months, on top of the blackouts the country's nearly 220 million people experience almost daily.
Analysts and officials have blamed Pakistan's power problems on its ageing electricity network, which desperately needs an upgrade the government says it cannot afford.
The International Monetary Fund has bailed out Pakistan five times in the past two decades, but the latest funding is on pause due to differences with the government over a programme review that should have been completed in November.
While Pakistan has enough installed power capacity to meet demand, it lacks resources to run its oil-and-gas-powered plants.