Arab News

Pakistanis protest increasing blackouts during Ramadan

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KARACHI/PESHAWAR: Protesters in Pakistan’s largest city set tires ablaze on Tuesday after power cuts disrupted a traditiona­l predawn meal during Ramadan, police said, a day after two protesters in another city were shot dead.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif came to power four years ago promising to end scheduled blackouts — known as “load shedding” — that have plagued daily life for years, hobbling the economy and deterring foreign investment.

Higher power generation has helped ease load shedding in many areas in recent months, but technical breakdowns in the past week have boosted the frequency and length of blackouts, sparking anger during the blistering late summer months.

Protests erupted on Tuesday in the southern port city of Karachi after electricit­y was cut during the pre-dawn feast Muslims hold before they begin fasting from daybreak to sunset.

Some protesters tried to attack and set fire to an office of the city’s main power provider, K-Electric, said police officer Khadim Ali.

A transmissi­on line had tripped due to high humidity, K-Electric said on social network Twitter, adding that the load shedding would persist for two to three weeks more. It is now back to eight to 10 hours a day in some parts of Karachi.

Murad Ali Shah, chief minister of the southeaste­rn province of Sindh and a member of the opposition Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), blamed Sharif’s government.

“This is the atrocity the federal government is doing with us,” Shah told reporters in Karachi, the provincial capital.

Sharif called an emergency meeting of a Cabinet energy panel on Tuesday to discuss the power outages.

In a statement, the prime minister’s office said the meeting focused on “urgent measures” to reduce power cuts during Ramadan, which coincides this year with summer temperatur­es forecast in some regions at around 40 degrees Celsius.

On Monday, two demonstrat­ors were killed in another protest against electricit­y shortages in the northweste­rn province of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a, reportedly when police fired to disperse crowds.

One of those killed was shot by police and later died in hospital in the Malakand district, said Humayun Khan, the provincial representa­tive of the PPP.

Both deaths were being investigat­ed, said Zafa Ali Shah, the district’s deputy commission­er.

 ??  ?? An employee repairs an electricit­y transforme­r at a workshop in Peshawar. (Reuters)
An employee repairs an electricit­y transforme­r at a workshop in Peshawar. (Reuters)

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