Living in
Karachi today, is nothing short of a nightmare. What
was once a liveable, dynamic port city is now falling
apart. Civic amenities are non-existent. Rundown roads,
potholes, overflowing gutters, mounds of refuse, ugly
highrises, electricity breakdowns, water shortages and
unruly traffic characterise Pakistan's economic lifeline.
And one is not talking of its backwaters, but the elite
Clifton area.
Adding to the city's woes is the Clifton underpass project
that is expected to ease the flow of traffic, but which
is currently causing major chaos. Even as it is being
constructed, doubts are being expressed about the soundness
of its layout . The major stakeholders are professing
to have had little input in the approved design, and
let on that it may be altered in order to remove the
flaws. Meanwhile, the Clifton area, with footpaths and
service lanes turned into mounds of dirt, looks like
a battle-zone as other utilities like PTCL, Sui Gas
and cable companies have also joined the digging frenzy.
They have been asked to locate and realign their networks
in order to steer clear of the underpass.
And
that is proving to be a herculean task because, believe
it or not, this city apparently does not have a master
plan to show which service goes where. Where are all
those architects and town planners who go on free junkets
to Washington DC, ostensibly for World Bank courses
on town planning and development? What is their input
in a city which contributes around 60 per cent by way
of taxes to the country's exchequer?
Karachi
is expanding every which way - six schools in one lane
in a residential area with no parking lots, four mosques
within a radius of one mile, half a dozen shopping malls
within walking distance of each other and more in the
pipeline.Only recently two hospitals in Clifton have
been sold off at a whopping price, and at least in one
instance the hospital is being pulled down to make way
for a shopping plaza.
And what are the city fathers doing?
Here's
what: an ex-army officer heading a civic agency, wanting
his term extended by another two years, was told by
Karachi's extortionist administrators that he'd have
to cough up a crore rupees monthly.
"Where
from?" he wanted to know.
"Okay all the illegal high rises at a price,"
he was told.
Need one say more!