The Pak Banker

Courts & the poor

- Arif Hasan

The judgement of the Supreme Court permitting the demolition of houses along the Gujjar and Orangi nullahs has reinforced the opinion of a number of civil society organisati­ons that Karachi's planning and policy decisions are governed by a strong anti-poor bias including by the judicial system.

For one, it is almost impossible for low-income communitie­s to access the justice system and were it not for a few public-spirited lawyers, they would probably remain unrepresen­ted. Even when they raise funds to hire lawyers, they are treated with indifferen­ce and with hostility and suspicion by the court staff. They are asked to attend hearings which are often reschedule­d without notice. Petitioner­s also complain that they are often not allowed to enter the court to participat­e in the proceeding­s.

The Supreme Court has also ordered the demolition of leased houses along the nullahs because it thinks that these leases are fake. One is at pains to understand how it knows this without an investigat­ion. It is also pertinent to ask here if it would also order the demolition of leased houses in middle-income or elite settlement­s without investigat­ing their leased status.

There are also different criteria for judgements related to the poor and those related to the rich. For example, Bahria Town was fined Rs460 billion, and the land that it illegally occupied was regularise­d at a fraction of its market value. Nobody associated with this enormous land scam has been arrested or charged. Members of the police force and civil administra­tion that coerced landowners to surrender their lands to Bahria Town and against whom FIRs for murder have been registered, are free for the last many years and proceeding­s against them do not take place.

Justice eludes those whose homes have been demolished. Prime Minister Imran Khan's Bani Gala res idence was regularise­d at Rs6.66 per squ are yard and so were the Hyatt Regency violations of the Islamabad Master Plan. Mean while, demands of katchi abadi residents for the regularisa­tion of their homes in informal settlement­s have been consistent­ly denied.

The demolition­s along the Karachi nullahs are not purely based on technical issues but are also political in nature. The number of demolition­s that were supposed to take place along the Manzoor Colony nullah were 1,205. However, they have been reduced to 56 because the nine-metre roads that were to be built on either side of them are no longer being built. This change, according to the local population, has taken place because the local MPA is from the PPP and he had the ear of the provincial government.

The demolition­s along the Gujjar and Ora ngi nullahs are in PTI constituen­cies and the residents claim that the PTI have not intervened on their behalf. The reason why the num ber of houses to be demolished is so high on these nullahs is because nine-metre roads are being built on either side of them. First of all, these roads are illegal because they do not form part of any larger plan for the area. The Supreme Court has ordered the demolition of settlement­s but has not ordered to stop building of illegal roads. Residents claim, with considerab­le logic, that they are being built bec ause the Gujjar nullah links the Northern By pass to the Lyari Expressway and this makes land on either side of it prime property that the developers are anxious to grab. Mean while, so far no demolition has taken place, or even officially identified, of illegal constructi­on by elite and government encroachme­nts on the natural drainage system of the city.

The Supreme Court has also not commented on the inadequacy of the compensati­on being provided to the victims which is Rs15,000 per month as rent for two years. This cannot provide them with a home and after two years of living in insecurity and misery, they will probably find a home along some other nullah thus adding to homelessne­ss in Karachi.

However, the Sup reme Court has directed the Sindh government to take appropriat­e steps to rehabilita­te the aff ected population. But the time per iod for this or its nature has not been defined. In the case of the Circular Railway demolition­s in 2018, the Supreme Court had also directed the administra­tion to provide alternativ­e accommodat­ion to the affectees within a year. However, three years have elapsed and no such action has been taken, nor has the Supreme Court demanded compliance for its orders.

The PTI government wishes to provide housing to the homeless but it is making more people homeless. It also stresses the importance of education but over 30,000 students will not be able to attend school anymore as a result of the Gujjar and

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