New public convenience project aims to make Pakistani metropolis cleaner, more inclusive

A health official helps a girl wash her hands at the entrance of the National Cricket Stadium in Karachi on March 12, 2020. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 November 2020
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New public convenience project aims to make Pakistani metropolis cleaner, more inclusive

  • About 40 percent of Pakistan’s population of roughly 210 million lacks decent toilets
  • Project focuses especially on women, disabled citizens and transgender people

KARACHI: As Pakistan struggles with equal access to sanitation, a new project aims to make the city of Karachi cleaner, healthier and more inclusive by building the country’s first privately managed public toilets out of old shipping containers.
“Women, disabled citizens and transgender people are our special focus,” said Salman Sufi, head of the Salman Sufi Foundation (SSF), the social welfare group behind the Saaf Bath project in the capital of Sindh province, in south Pakistan.
The first toilet was set up in September near a bus station in the bustling Lea Market. Each block is divided into two sections — one for men, one for women — with sit-down toilets, wash basins, soap, toilet paper and electric hand dryers.
According to the international charity WaterAid, about 40 percent of Pakistan’s population of roughly 210 million lacks decent toilets.
Along with accessibility, another sanitation problem the Saaf Bath project hopes to tackle is the common practice of defecating in the open. WaterAid notes that more than 11 percent of Pakistanis go to the toilet in the street.
Health experts link open defecation to public health issues, such as diarrhea, as it increases the spread of parasites due to water contamination.
Costing 2 million Pakistani rupees ($12,700) each to build, the toilet blocks are well-lit and ventilated with exhaust fans, and have ramps for wheelchair access and baby-changing stations, noted Shahzeb Naeem, director of operations at SSF.
Mohammad Hanif, who works in a cargo office in Lea Market, said the area desperately needed somewhere clean for people to relieve themselves.
“I had little choice but to use the stinky and perpetually wet public toilet a little further away from here,” he said. “This one is like using a five-star facility.”
A previous effort launched about two decades ago, when the Citizens-Police Liaison Committee (CPLC), an independent group originally formed to tackle crime in the city, decided to build 1,000 public toilets, explained Shaukat Suleman, deputy chief at the CPLC.
Now, a tight government budget means the committee has managed to build 35 toilets for a city of more than 14 million people, Suleman noted.
Only 23 of those toilets are still working, he added, and all suffer from a variety of electricity, water and sewage problems.
Raakhi Matan, a housemaid in Karachi, said she and her three children refuse to use the old public toilets.
“If we are out in the park, and they feel the need to go, they insist we return home,” she said, adding that women, in particular, need “a private place in a public space” as they cannot just “squat anywhere like men do.”
Following the installation of the toilets in Lea Market and Jheel Park — which were donated by consumer goods group Reckitt Benckiser — as well as one in Lahore, the SSF plans to build 50 toilets around Karachi by next year, said Naeem, the director of operations.
Irshad Sodhar, deputy commissioner of the city’s southern district, has welcomed the initiative.
“All that the SSF needed was space and help identifying the areas where the facilities were most needed,” he said.
Still, it may take more than shiny new toilets to curb the habit of open defecation. On any given day in Lea Market, men can be seen defecating near the garbage dump right next to the recently installed SSF toilet.
“It is difficult to change this behavior,” Sodhar said.


Curfew extended in Gilgit-Baltistan, probe ordered after deadly Khamenei protests

Updated 03 March 2026
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Curfew extended in Gilgit-Baltistan, probe ordered after deadly Khamenei protests

  • At least 15 people were killed in clashes with law enforcement agencies over the weekend in Gilgit-Baltistan
  • Government also announces a de-weaponization campaign, crackdown on hate speech and cybercrime in region

ISLAMABAD: The government in Pakistan’s Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) region on Tuesday extended a curfew in Gilgit district and ordered a judicial probe into violent protests over the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes last week, an official said.

At least 15 people were killed in clashes with law enforcement agencies over the weekend in GB, where protesters torched and vandalized several buildings, including United Nations regional offices, an army-run school, software technology park and a local charity building.

The violence prompted regional authorities to impose curfew in Gilgit and Skardu districts on March 2-4 as officials urged people to stay indoors and cooperate with law enforcers, amid widespread anger in Pakistan, particularly among members of the Shiite minority, over Khamenei’s killing.

On Tuesday, the GB government convened to review the situation and announced the extension of curfew in Gilgit among a number of security measures as well as ordered the establishment of a judicial commission to investigate the weekend violence in the region.

“The government has made it clear that the law will strictly take its course against elements involved in vandalism at government institutions, private properties and incidents of vandalism in Gilgit and Skardu and no kind of mischief will be tolerated,” Shabbir Mir, a GB government spokesperson, said in a statement.

“In view of the security situation, curfew will remain in force in Gilgit, while the decision to extend the curfew in Skardu will be taken keeping the ground realities and the changing situation in view.”

The statement did not specify how long the curfew will remain in place in Gilgit.

Besides the formation of the judicial commission to investigate the violent clashes, the government also decided to launch a large-scale de-weaponization campaign in the entire Gilgit district, for which relevant institutions have been directed to immediately complete all necessary arrangements, according to Mir.

In addition, a crackdown has been ordered on hate speech, spread of fake news and cybercrime.

“The aim of these decisions is to ensure the rule of law, protect the lives and property of citizens and crack down on miscreants,” he said. “Approval has also been given to immediately survey the affected infrastructure and start their restoration work on priority basis.”

Demonstrators in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi also stormed the US Consulate on Sunday, smashing windows and attempting to burn the building. Police responded with batons, tear gas, and gunfire, leaving 10 people dead and more than 50 injured.

Pakistani authorities have since beefed up security at US diplomatic missions across the country, including around the US consulate building in Peshawar, to avoid any further violence.