KARACHI: In a first, hundreds of residents of the Defense Housing Authority (DHA) neighborhood in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi staged a major sit-in outside the head office of the Cantonment Board Clifton (CBC), after torrential rains caused floods to inundate houses and shops in one of the city’s most upscale areas.
The CBC is a civic body which works under the military land department and administers the upmarket areas of Defense and Clifton.
In the sprawling Pakistani metropolis of Karachi, the backbone of the nation’s economy, management of infrastructure and services has been hamstrung by disputes between different levels of government for decades.
A protest group was formed on Sunday night, with hundreds of residents demonstrating on Monday, among them women and children, who called for a “Petition against DHA & CBC.” Inside and outside the CBC offices, enraged protesters held up placards and shouted “Go CBC Go” slogans against the board, demanding the resignation of the CBC CEO and DHA administrator, improvement in the sewerage system and audit of flood relief and development taxes.
Footage from the protest also showed citizens attempting to storm the CBC office before being stopped by police officials.
Karachi has a network of 550 stormwater drains which zig-zag through the city and flow out into the Arabian Sea, but many are obstructed by illegal construction, waste and sludge.
Saqib, a resident of DHA’s Phase-6 area, who only wanted to be identified by his first name, said he had never in the last two decades seen streets flooded the way they had been in the past few days, mostly because of choked drains.
“My basement still has water,” the resident said. “I am now getting black and stinky water and mosquitoes [are flying] all over inside the house,” he added, saying the area had had no power since Thursday.
“We have gathered here because our houses are submerged by water but we have no water and gas,” a woman protester who declined to be named told Arab News.
Muhammad Salman, a resident of DHA Phase-5, said he paid Rs50,000 monthly tax and Rs30,000 to a private water company to get drinking water at his residence.
“The present management of the board cannot be held responsible because this is the outcome of the neglect of three decades,” Salman said.
“You will have to resolve the problem of Karachi to fix the issue of DHA,” Salman added. “Apathy toward Karachi can be seen everywhere. This is the condition of the highest tax paying neighborhood.”
In a first, elites protest outside office of military-run civic body in Pakistan’s Karachi
https://arab.news/wcn6t
In a first, elites protest outside office of military-run civic body in Pakistan’s Karachi
- Karachi was plunged into chaos all of last week with power cuts, streets under water and cellphone outages caused by heavy rains
- The suffering of Karachi saw no end on Monday as parts of the city remained waterlogged and without power
Pakistan demands ‘equitable’ climate finance for vulnerable states at UN forum
- Pakistan repeatedly suffers from deadly climate disasters, including floods this year that killed over 1,000 people during monsoon
- Pakistan minister stresses role of international cooperation, private sector engagement for environmental sustainability
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Minister for Climate Change Dr. Musadik Malik on Saturday called for an “equitable, accessible” climate finance for vulnerable nations, saying that climate action must be treated as a shared global responsibility.
Malik was speaking at a high-level conference titled: “The Bottom Line: Why Tackling Environmental Degradation Is Critical to the Future of the Global Financial System” held on the sidelines of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA) in Nairobi.
Pakistan has suffered repeated climate-inducted disasters frequently over the years. Devastating floods this year claimed over 1,000 lives in the country during the monsoon season. Super floods in 2022 cost the country an estimated $30 billion in damages.
“Federal Minister for Climate Change and Environmental Coordination Dr. Musadik Malik has stressed that environmental degradation poses systemic risks to the global financial system and called for more accessible and equitable climate finance for vulnerable countries,” state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported.
Participants highlighted the importance of policy coherence, effective regulatory frameworks and whole-of-government approaches to create enabling conditions for sustainable finance.
Pakistan has been pushing for easy access and terms of financing for developing countries that suffer from climate change effects over the past few years at global events such as the Conference of the Parties (COP) and World Economic Forum.
Dr. Malik noted that countries contributing least to global emissions were among those facing the “most severe” impacts of climate change.
Pakistan contributes less than 1 percent to the total greenhouse gas emissions.
“The minister underscored the role of international cooperation and responsible private sector engagement in ensuring that financial stability and environmental sustainability reinforce each other,” the APP report said.
The summit brought together global leaders, policymakers, financial regulators and experts to discuss how governments are steering private finance toward pathways that strengthen economic and financial stability.
Discussions also focused on mobilizing private capital for high-impact sectors and integrating environmental risks into financial decision-making processes.










