Gulf Times

Karachi ban on constructi­on of multi-storey buildings retracted

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The Supreme Court of Pakistan has retracted its earlier decision to ban the constructi­on of buildings with more than six storeys in Karachi, and ordered that new high rises can be erected in accordance with the law. In March 2017, the apex court, while hearing a case on the non-availabili­ty of potable water and deteriorat­ing sanitation conditions in Karachi, had imposed a ban on constructi­on of high-rise buildings in Sindh. It had restrained the Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA) and cantonment boards from issuing building approval plans for new high-rise and multi-storey commercial and residentia­l projects. In May 2017, the SBCA, acting on the orders passed by the Supreme Court, had imposed a complete ban on the constructi­on of high-rise buildings beyond ground-plus-two storeys – a decision challenged by the Associatio­n of Builders and Developers (ABAD) in the top court. A Supreme Court bench, while hearing the case in Karachi registry, retracted its order – much to ABAD chairman Hasan Bakhshi’s relief. “We have borne many difficulti­es these last two years,” Bakhshi told media representa­tives outside the court. “This was a major problem for us. “Our 500 projects were stuck for approval, and another 500 projects’ material was ready. “Our Rs500bn billion worth of investment was stuck. We are grateful to the Supreme Court. “Now the SBCA, the water board and other department­s should also co-operate with us.” The ABAD chair noted that the court has directed Karachi’s builders to construct “according to the law”, adding that “we respect the law and will co-operate with the SBCA”. Bakhshi also offered his organisati­on’s assistance to Prime Minister Imran Khan in his plan to construct 5mn houses during his tenure.

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