Karachi turns to technology to fix traffic woes as commuters protest heavy fines

Commuters make their way through a traffic jam in a commercial area in Karachi on June 16, 2020. (AFP/File)
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Updated 14 November 2025
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Karachi turns to technology to fix traffic woes as commuters protest heavy fines

  • Karachi launches automated “faceless” e-ticketing system amid decades-old congestion, poor road quality, surge in vehicles
  • Over 51,000 digital fines issued in two weeks, sparking public anger over penalties as high as $90 for heavy vehicles

KARACHI: Karachi’s traffic police have begun rolling out a citywide “faceless” electronic ticketing system, replacing traditional roadside fines with automated citations issued through surveillance cameras, a major shift in a city long plagued by chronic congestion, weak enforcement and crumbling roads.

The new system, launched on Oct. 27 with 1,076 surveillance cameras, is part of the larger “Karachi Safe City” program. Authorities say it will reduce corruption, improve compliance, and eventually cover the entire metropolis, one of the world’s largest megacities with an estimated 6.5 million registered vehicles.

Karachi’s road network has struggled to keep pace with explosive population growth. The World Bank’s Karachi Mobility Project notes that the city’s arterial roads were designed decades ago for far fewer vehicles. Congestion, informal traffic patterns, weak lane discipline and deteriorating surfaces mean average commuter speeds have steadily declined. A 2016 study by the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) found that Karachi’s road infrastructure was “severely challenged” due to limited capacity and poor maintenance, issues that continue to fuel accidents and gridlock today. 

Against this backdrop of strained infrastructure, authorities say technology is the only way to enforce traffic rules at scale.

Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Kashif Nadeem said officers had stopped issuing physical tickets as the automated system began operations.

“We call it a faceless e-ticketing system,” Nadeem told Arab News. “It was begun with 1076 cameras. From Oct. 27 till date, around 51,000 e-tickets have been generated in this dashboard.”

Most violations, he said, involve failure to wear seat belts or motorcycle helmets, the use of mobile phones while driving, signal jumping and carrying excess passengers. Heavy transport vehicles are fined using onboard GPS trackers.

The system is expanding rapidly:

“Started from one thousand seventy-six cameras, it will go to twelve thousand cameras… On a daily basis, two to three major intersections are being refreshed — zebra crossings are being made more prominent,” he said.

PUBLIC FRUSTRATION

Despite official optimism, many commuters say Karachi’s road network is too broken for automated enforcement to feel fair.

“E-challan is correct, but it is better that roads be improved,” said driver Muhammad Ateeq. “Roads are very bad… Fix the roads, do e-challan, no problem, because people will follow the law.”

Another motorist, Lal Bux, complained that fines were excessive:

“It is wrong, challan is wrong, it is too much. Directly such a big challan… I have become fifty or sixty years old, where are (new roads)? The same roads that were made forty years ago, those same roads are still there.”

Low-income drivers say the penalties are financially devastating.

“This Rs5,000 ($18) or Rs10,000 ($36) for us it is like death, because we are poor,” said Hajji Muhammad Arshad, who earns about Rs20,000–25,000 ($72–90) a month. “How can we pay Rs10,000 ($36)?”

POSSIBLE ADJUSTS

Police say the system is backed by recent amendments to the Motor Vehicle Ordinance, which sharply increased fines across all categories.

“This has been done under legislation; lawmaking has been done, and it can only be reduced under legislation,” Nadeem said. 

He listed the fines as Rs5,000 ($18) for motorcycles, Rs10,000 ($36) for cars, Rs15,000 ($54) for light commercial vehicles, and Rs25,000 ($90) for heavy vehicles.

The Sindh government is now considering reducing penalties for first-time or minor violations following political pressure and widespread public complaints. However, officials say the automated system will remain in place.

Some road users, especially younger ones, also support the reform, saying compliance is ultimately a matter of safety.

“There is no question of objection, if you follow the rules, it will be beneficial for you,” said student biker Muhammad Umar. “If the side mirror is installed, if the helmet is worn… If you follow the signals there will be no fine.”

Still others argue that without repairing Karachi’s long-neglected roads, enforcement alone cannot change behavior.

“If you fix the roads, law compliance will also be better,” said Ateeq, accelerating as the light turned green. “If you don’t, law compliance will worsen.”


’Ugly’ England aim to spin their way to World Cup semis ahead of Pakistan clash 

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’Ugly’ England aim to spin their way to World Cup semis ahead of Pakistan clash 

  • England stuttered with the bat, finishing at 146-9 in their Super Eight clash against Sri Lanka last week
  •  A win over Pakistan today will be enough to see the 2010 and 2022 T20 World Cup champions into semis

SRI LANKA: England are yet to catch fire at the T20 World Cup, but they won’t mind one bit if another “ugly” win secures Harry Brook’s side a semifinal berth with a game to spare.

England bowled out Sri Lanka for 95 on Sunday to open their Super Eights campaign with a 51-run win.

With the Pakistan-New Zealand clash on Saturday being washed out, a win against Pakistan on Tuesday at the same stadium will be enough to see the 2010 and 2022 T20 World Cup champions into the last four.

England again stuttered with the bat and were restricted to 146-9 by Sri Lanka on Sunday.

“We know that we can play a lot better,” all-rounder Liam Dawson told reporters after the win, in comments only made public on Monday.

“But at the end of the day in tournament cricket, you just need to get the win, however ugly.”

England’s bowlers came to the rescue for the third time in the tournament, after also defending below-par totals against Nepal and Italy.

“The fight we’ve shown with the ball shows that this team is in a very good place,” said Dawson.

Pakistan possess a dangerous spin attack, featuring a unique weapon in Usman Tariq and his pronounced pause before he releases the ball.

But Dawson said England would fight fire with fire with their own potent slow-bowling arsenal.

England captain Brook also has speedster Jofra Archer, the hit-the-deck-hard Jamie Overton and left-arm swing bowler Sam Curran as the seam options.

England’s flexibility enabled Will Jacks to open the bowling with his off-spin on Sunday and destroy Sri Lanka’s top order.

He returned figures of 3-22 in tandem with Archer, who removed both opening batsmen, to leave Sri Lanka in tatters at 34-5 at the end of the six-over power play.

England’s variety offers Brook endless options, said Dawson who bowls left-arm spin, as does Jacob Bethell.

“We’re all very different types of spinners. Jacksy gets very good over-spin, very good bounce.

“Dilly (wrist spinner Adil Rashid) has all these variations and me, I’m probably more of a defensive spinner and that’s my role. I’m just trying to be consistent for the captain.

“Adil can use all of his tricks and he comes on to get wickets and get us back in games or put us ahead in games.

“Obviously, Jacks, he’s been brilliant. He’s exploited conditions here very well.

“And I think the way Brookie captained today was phenomenal, how he used us all differently.”

But Dawson cautioned that the wicket on Tuesday night could play very differently to the tacky slow track they encountered on Sunday, which had sweated under covers after days of rain in Kandy.

“Obviously, a different challenge on Tuesday at a night game. It could be a better wicket. We’ll have to wait and see what happens.”