Yes. If your home is in Hingol!
Assuming I've got your question correctly, people at the same latitudes see the same sky, stars, planets, comets and nebulae regardless of where they live (i.e, their longitude). In easier words, when day arrived here in Pakistan and night in Mexico, the people in Northern Mexico saw the sky similar to what we saw in Hingol because the latitude is almost equal.
Do they look differently rather more clearly via a telescope? How much clear?
Stars still look pin-points but much much brighter. Planets, clusters, galaxies and nebulae look much different. How much? Don't take my word for it; come sometime and have a look for yourself. Caution: Don't expect to see Hubble quality pictures. Those are exposures lasting many hours. Our eyes refresh the image after 1/10 sec. To get an idea what that means, try taking a picture of the stars with a camera set to a 1/10 sec exposure.
The city pollution distracts our line of sight?
Stray light scatters (reflects) off dust, haze and moisture in the air, all of which are always present in varying amounts. This brightens the background sky (makes it brownish instead of black) and effectively camouflages faint stars, nebulae and galaxies. The planets and the Moon, however, are not affected by light pollution because they are bright.
Which telescope was it?
A Schmidt-Cassegrain (a type of catadioptric telescope) with a primary mirror diameter of 10". Brand: Meade. Model: LX200R.