Consumers face tough Ramadan as weekly inflation hits all-time high of 46.65 percent in Pakistan

Muslim devotees buy Iftar food at a market before breaking their fast on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan, in Lahore on March 23, 2023. (AFP/FILE)
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Updated 26 March 2023
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Consumers face tough Ramadan as weekly inflation hits all-time high of 46.65 percent in Pakistan

  • Prices of most essential commodities have more than doubled since last year amid currency depreciation, global price hike
  • Financial expert say food-price inflation is ‘crushing’ Pakistan’s low-income citizens who now spend more to feed their families

KARACHI: The Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) announced on Friday weekly inflation reached 46.65 percent on an annual basis during the ongoing week, indicating an unprecedented price hike experienced by low- and middle-income consumers across the country during the holy month of Ramadan.

According to official statistics, the price of onions on an annual basis has increased by 228.28 percent while people have to spend 120.66 percent more to buy wheat flour. The price of tea has also gone up by 94.60 percent, bananas by 89.84 percent, rice by 81.51 percent, and potatoes by 57.21 percent.

The PBS statistics reveal that a 20-kilogram bag of flour, one of the most commonly consumed commodities, has witnessed an increase in price from Rs1,817 to Rs2,586. The flour bag was available for Rs1,172 last year in March.

According to analysts, inflation has escalated further due to a number of factors, including rising demand for food items in Ramadan and depreciation of Pakistan’s national currency.

“This is the highest ever weekly surge in inflation measured by the sensitive price index,” Samiullah Tariq, research director at the Pakistan-Kuwait Investment Company, told Arab News. “Ramadan demand, currency depreciation, and commodities price hike in the international market are key factors that have contributed to historically high inflation.”

Pakistani consumers complain they have been spending bigger chunks of their income on food items in recent months.

“I spend more than half of my salary on food to feed my family,” Muhammad Zeeshan, a private office worker, said. “All my income vanishes before the end of the month once I pay my house rent and utility bills, etc.”

Inflation measured by the Consumer Price Index more than doubled since March last year when it was recorded at 12.7 percent and reached 31.5 percent last month. The high inflation has particularly bothered the salaried class which depends on a fixed income.

“Inflation is a key indicator of the state of a country’s economy,” Dr. Khaqan Najeeb, former adviser to the finance ministry, told Arab News on Friday. “Pakistan’s economy is suffering from the harmful effects of inflationary pressure which is negatively impacting the economic lives of citizens and businesses alike.”

“Rising prices have hit households globally,” he continued. “However, they have a more pronounced impact on Pakistan since the country is heavily dependent on imports like petroleum products, edible oil, machinery, food, vehicles, mobiles, and industrial raw materials.”




Muslim devotees buy dates at a market before breaking their fast on the first day of the holy month of Ramadan, in Lahore on March 23, 2023. (AFP/File)

Najeeb said Pakistan’s low-income groups were primarily impacted by spiraling food inflation.

“Food-price inflation is crushing Pakistan’s low-income citizens who spend more than half of their incomes to feed their families,” he said. “Low agricultural productivity and the problem of regulated energy prices are two key domestic drivers of inflation in our economy.”

Some people complain about a lack of administrative will to control the prices of food items and other products, pointing out that consumers also suffer when profiteers charge higher rates.

However, the administration of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province says it has taken steps to deal with the issue by promulgating an ordinance that empowers officials from various government departments to check market prices.

“With the enforcement of the ordinance, the relevant department has been empowered to take action against profiteers,” Abdul Rasheed Channa, spokesperson for the province’s chief minister, told Arab News.

“The relevant departments will ensure that goods are being sold at the official rates,” he added. “The teams will raid markets, and the results will be visible in the next couple of days.”

As per a Sindh government notification released on Friday, officials from different departments will inspect the food quality, impose monetary fines, and shut down the businesses of offenders.


Karachi shopping plaza blaze leaves rescuers struggling to recover and identify the dead

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Karachi shopping plaza blaze leaves rescuers struggling to recover and identify the dead

  • Extreme heat, structural collapse have turned Gul Plaza rescue into prolonged recovery and forensic operation
  • Burned and fragmented remains mean DNA testing may take weeks, prolonging uncertainty for grieving families

KARACHI/ISLAMABAD: The fire that last weekend tore through Gul Plaza, a crowded shopping complex in Karachi’s busy Saddar business district, did not only kill people. It destroyed the ability to account for them.

Days after the blaze erupted late Saturday, rescue officials say extreme heat, structural collapse and lingering smoke have transformed what initially began as a rescue mission into a slow and traumatic recovery operation, one in which even determining how many people died has become a challenge.

Close to 60 deaths have been officially confirmed so far, while authorities say dozens of people remain missing, with little hope of finding survivors. Recovery teams say the conditions inside the building, home to over 1,200 shops, were so extreme that many victims were burned beyond recognition, complicating identification and prolonging the anguish of families waiting outside the site.

Globally, fires in enclosed commercial buildings often present some of the most complex rescue scenarios, particularly when flames burn unchecked for hours, as they did in this case when it took nearly three days to control the inferno. High temperatures can cause floors to collapse, weaken load-bearing columns and trap heat and toxic gases long after the fire is extinguished. But in Karachi, officials and rescuers say these universal challenges are compounded by dense construction, limited access points and weak enforcement of fire safety standards.

One senior official described the situation as a “massive humanitarian crisis,” warning that the condition of the remains and the manner in which debris would need to be removed could significantly delay, or in some cases prevent, families from ever recovering their loved ones.

“The reality of the recovery process is harrowing. Bodies are being extracted from the rubble using excavators, which has further mutilated the already charred remains,” the official, who declined to be named, told Arab News.

“In some instances, remains counted as a single body weigh only about 3 kg and have included mismatched limbs, such as three legs. It is clear that untrained rescue officials have created a chaotic situation that will complicate the entire identification process.”

Karachi authorities rejected the allegation that rescue teams lacked training, saying heavy machinery was unavoidable given the scale of collapse.

Responding to the criticism, a spokesman for the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation said:

“This is very unfair and incorrect that staff is not trained, staff is trained and able to separate remains from debris. Without heavy machinery, you can’t remove this material.”

According to the spokesman, 89 people were initially reported missing while mobile phone data suggested around 40 people were still inside the building whose two floors had yet to be fully cleared due to safety concerns.

On Wednesday evening, DIG South Syed Asad Raza told Arab News another 30 bodies had been pulled out of one shop, bringing the death toll close to 60. Officials had previously confirmed 28 deaths.

Rescue officials say the intensity of the fire itself explains both the high death toll and the difficulty of recovery.

“This was a third-degree fire which was so intense that it reached the rooftop,” Raja Rustam, senior director of municipal services at the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation, told Arab News.

Rustam said the blaze burned hot enough to melt steel reinforcement bars inside the building.

“In such conditions, how could anyone have survived inside,” he said, gesturing toward the ruins, where families of missing persons have been sitting day and night since the fire was brought under control.

PROLONGED UNCERTAINTY

Medical and rescue workers say the same heat that made survival unlikely has made identification exceptionally difficult.

“Fire melts the human body,” said Muhammad Ameen, in-charge of the Edhi Rescue Service, one of Pakistan’s largest volunteer emergency organizations.

“When debris such as cement blocks or mortar collapses onto it, bodies break apart. As a result, during recovery, a hand may belong to one person and a foot to another.”

He said survival inside the building would have required nothing short of divine intervention.

“If it is a miracle of God, someone’s life can be saved, but the fire has destroyed the walls,” he said.

Even after flames were extinguished, Ameen said, temperatures and structural instability inside the plaza remained so dangerous that rescue workers could only enter for short periods.

“It is the most challenging fire,” he said.

Indeed, Karachi has repeatedly witnessed deadly blazes in markets and commercial buildings, often linked to poor wiring, illegal construction and lax enforcement of safety regulations.

Now the focus is firmly on recovery rather than rescue, officials said. 

Abdus Sattar Hakro, an additional deputy commissioner of Karachi, said the death toll continued to rise as debris was cleared.

“We have identified 28 deceased persons and 86 missing persons,” he said, adding that the operation involved excavators, bucket loaders, fire brigade vehicles, spotlights and lighting towers to allow round-the-clock work.

Mohammad Ashraf, operations chief of the Urban Search and Rescue team, said search crews had cleared the second and third floors of the building, but the ground and first floors remained largely inaccessible.

“There is a situation on the first and ground floor which has some debris that is making the place inaccessible,” Ashraf said.

He added that panic among traders attempting to retrieve cash and belongings had further complicated the operation.

“People are restlessly trying to get their belongings and cash back,” he said.

Outside the cordoned-off site, families of the missing and shopkeepers continued to gather behind barricades, at times chanting slogans and confronting officials. On one occasion, protesters briefly breached security barriers and argued with municipal staff.

Meanwhile, forensic identification is now the final and most painful phase of the tragedy. Officials warn that because many remains are badly burned and fragmented, confirming identities may take weeks, prolonging the uncertainty for families already devastated by loss.

Karachi police surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed said 48 DNA samples had been collected from families of the missing and were being processed at Sindh’s forensic laboratory.

“Human remains received will be sorted today [Wednesday],” she told Arab News, “and we will continue to process dead bodies as they are received.”