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KARACHI- World Bank to fund Yellow Line Bus Rapid Transit

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KARACHI-World Bank to fund Yellow Line Bus Rapid Transit
By Our Correspondent
Published: October 4, 2017
34SHARES
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Institution agrees to provide support for integrated BRT system in Karachi. PHOTO: ADB

KARACHI: After agreements with the Japan International Corporation Agency (JICA) and a Chinese company regarding the integrated bus rapid transit (BRT) system in the city failed to materialise, the World Bank (WB) has agreed to provide financial and technical support for the construction of the Yellow Line BRT in Karachi and the establishment of an integrated BRT system.

This decision was made during a meeting between Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah and a World Bank delegation led by Country Director Patchamuthu Illangovan at CM House on Tuesday.

The project’s aim is to connect the six BRT lines. However, it had hit a snag as the government could not arrange necessary funding.

The WB delegation comprised Operations Manager Melinda Good, Lead Country Economist Enrique Blanco Armas, Senior Transport Specialist Said Dahdah, Senior Economist Muhammad Waheed and Operation Manager Amena Raja. The CM was assisted by Planning and Development Minister Mir Hazar Khan Bijarani, Planning and Development Board Chairperson Mohammad Waseem, Principal Secretary to the CM Sohail Rajput, Finance Secretary Hassan Naqvi, Health Secretary Dr Fazlullah Pechuho, Education Secretary Aziz Uqaili, Special Irrigation Secretary Junaid Memon, Agriculture Secretary Sajid Jamal Abro, Livestock and Fisheries Secretary Mukhtiar Soomro, Energy Secretary Agha Wasif and Planning and Development Secretary Shireen Narejo.

The meeting reviewed the overall $1.55 billion portfolio of the 12 WB-funded projects. These are the $76.4 million Sindh Agricultural Growth Project, an irrigation project of $187 million, the $21 million Skill Development Project, $400 million Second Sindh Education Sector project, a $50 million project for reforms in public sector management, $36.24 million project for enhanced nutrition for mothers and children, $100 million Sindh Resilience Project, $86 million Karachi Neighbourhood Improvement Project, $286.24 million Sindh Water Sector Improvement Project, $61.62 million Sindh Enhancing Response to Reduce Stunting Project and $188 million Sindh Barrage Improvement Project.

The CM was briefed by the WB senior transport specialist on the integrated system that would connect different BRT lines in the city. Dahdah informed Shah that there was a dire need to develop a system which would also enable an effective ticketing system.

The meeting also discussed the Yellow Line BRT. The WB country head said the organisation is willing to finance theYellow Line BRT if the provincial government develops the road infrastructure from Dawood Chowrangi in Korangi to the Malir Expressway.

The chief minister directed the Planning and Development Board chairperson to prepare necessary documentation and submit it to the WB for approval.

The 26.5-kilometre-long road was earlier supposed to be built with the financial assistance of JICA and, later, a Chinese company. The government aimed to initiate the project from MA Jinnah Road to Landhi at an estimated cost of Rs14.4 billion. Around 100 new buses were to run on the route but the project was at a standstill after the Chinese company, which had even signed a memorandum of understanding with the government to build it under public private partnership, delayed the scheme as it could not arrange funds.


The CM also asked the WB for its technical support to regulate traffic issues in Karachi. “This megalopolis city has traffic jams and traffic management issues,” Shah said, adding that the government was desperate to solve traffic issues. “We have a traffic engineering bureau at the Karachi Development Authority but it also needs to be revived,” the CM said.

Official sources privy to the development told The Express Tribune that the meeting discussed issues related to the possible integration of BRT lines at Numaish Chowrangi.

“Integration of all BRT lines at Numaish can create problems, so we need the WB’s technical support to resolve this matter,” Shah said. The WB representatives assured the CM that they would provide all possible technical support for the project.

Regarding the resolution of traffic issues in Karachi, Illangovan committed that his transport specialists would be with the Sindh government whenever it needed them. On this, the CM directed Waseem to make arrangements for the WB experts to meet officials of the transport and traffic engineering department. “I want you to sit with the experts and develop a proper signal system, traffic management and infrastructure development,” Shah said.

The special irrigation secretary informed the meeting that the Sindh government has initiated the Sindh Barrages Improvement Project under which the Guddu Barrage would be rehabilitated with the assistance of the WB at a cost of Rs20.24 billion. Of this the WB would share Rs18.27 billion while the remaining Rs1.97 billion would be contributed by the Sindh government. Work on the project had been delayed due to legal issues but has now been restarted.

It was also decided in the meeting that the WB will help revamp the city’s sewerage system. “We want to restructure the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board [KWSB], so we need your help,” the CM requested Illangovan. Shah added that the revamp of the sewerage system has already been approved as a WB-assisted project.

“The KWSB is over-staffed. Their water supply, distribution and bulk systems are weak and defective,” the CM said, asking the WB to provide technical support to resolve the issues. The WB country chief said the organisation was interested in the project.


It was also decided during the meeting to conduct a property survey of Karachi. The last survey was done in 2001. Official sources in the Sindh government said the WB has already initiated a property survey in Sukkur, which is the third largest city in Sindh, and now the government has proposed the WB start the same in Karachi as well. “After the WB reviews this proposal, the survey will be conducted in Karachi,” said an official.


Read more: Bus Rapid Transit , Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah , KWSB
 
Karachi will perpetually stay about the same level as shytholes in Utter Pradesh and Bihar.
 
KARACHI-World Bank to fund Yellow Line Bus Rapid Transit
By Our Correspondent
Published: October 4, 2017
34SHARES
SHARE TWEET EMAIL
1522181-adb-1507096321-157-640x480.jpg

Institution agrees to provide support for integrated BRT system in Karachi. PHOTO: ADB

KARACHI: After agreements with the Japan International Corporation Agency (JICA) and a Chinese company regarding the integrated bus rapid transit (BRT) system in the city failed to materialise, the World Bank (WB) has agreed to provide financial and technical support for the construction of the Yellow Line BRT in Karachi and the establishment of an integrated BRT system.

This decision was made during a meeting between Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah and a World Bank delegation led by Country Director Patchamuthu Illangovan at CM House on Tuesday.

The project’s aim is to connect the six BRT lines. However, it had hit a snag as the government could not arrange necessary funding.

The WB delegation comprised Operations Manager Melinda Good, Lead Country Economist Enrique Blanco Armas, Senior Transport Specialist Said Dahdah, Senior Economist Muhammad Waheed and Operation Manager Amena Raja. The CM was assisted by Planning and Development Minister Mir Hazar Khan Bijarani, Planning and Development Board Chairperson Mohammad Waseem, Principal Secretary to the CM Sohail Rajput, Finance Secretary Hassan Naqvi, Health Secretary Dr Fazlullah Pechuho, Education Secretary Aziz Uqaili, Special Irrigation Secretary Junaid Memon, Agriculture Secretary Sajid Jamal Abro, Livestock and Fisheries Secretary Mukhtiar Soomro, Energy Secretary Agha Wasif and Planning and Development Secretary Shireen Narejo.

The meeting reviewed the overall $1.55 billion portfolio of the 12 WB-funded projects. These are the $76.4 million Sindh Agricultural Growth Project, an irrigation project of $187 million, the $21 million Skill Development Project, $400 million Second Sindh Education Sector project, a $50 million project for reforms in public sector management, $36.24 million project for enhanced nutrition for mothers and children, $100 million Sindh Resilience Project, $86 million Karachi Neighbourhood Improvement Project, $286.24 million Sindh Water Sector Improvement Project, $61.62 million Sindh Enhancing Response to Reduce Stunting Project and $188 million Sindh Barrage Improvement Project.

The CM was briefed by the WB senior transport specialist on the integrated system that would connect different BRT lines in the city. Dahdah informed Shah that there was a dire need to develop a system which would also enable an effective ticketing system.

The meeting also discussed the Yellow Line BRT. The WB country head said the organisation is willing to finance theYellow Line BRT if the provincial government develops the road infrastructure from Dawood Chowrangi in Korangi to the Malir Expressway.

The chief minister directed the Planning and Development Board chairperson to prepare necessary documentation and submit it to the WB for approval.

The 26.5-kilometre-long road was earlier supposed to be built with the financial assistance of JICA and, later, a Chinese company. The government aimed to initiate the project from MA Jinnah Road to Landhi at an estimated cost of Rs14.4 billion. Around 100 new buses were to run on the route but the project was at a standstill after the Chinese company, which had even signed a memorandum of understanding with the government to build it under public private partnership, delayed the scheme as it could not arrange funds.


The CM also asked the WB for its technical support to regulate traffic issues in Karachi. “This megalopolis city has traffic jams and traffic management issues,” Shah said, adding that the government was desperate to solve traffic issues. “We have a traffic engineering bureau at the Karachi Development Authority but it also needs to be revived,” the CM said.

Official sources privy to the development told The Express Tribune that the meeting discussed issues related to the possible integration of BRT lines at Numaish Chowrangi.

“Integration of all BRT lines at Numaish can create problems, so we need the WB’s technical support to resolve this matter,” Shah said. The WB representatives assured the CM that they would provide all possible technical support for the project.

Regarding the resolution of traffic issues in Karachi, Illangovan committed that his transport specialists would be with the Sindh government whenever it needed them. On this, the CM directed Waseem to make arrangements for the WB experts to meet officials of the transport and traffic engineering department. “I want you to sit with the experts and develop a proper signal system, traffic management and infrastructure development,” Shah said.

The special irrigation secretary informed the meeting that the Sindh government has initiated the Sindh Barrages Improvement Project under which the Guddu Barrage would be rehabilitated with the assistance of the WB at a cost of Rs20.24 billion. Of this the WB would share Rs18.27 billion while the remaining Rs1.97 billion would be contributed by the Sindh government. Work on the project had been delayed due to legal issues but has now been restarted.

It was also decided in the meeting that the WB will help revamp the city’s sewerage system. “We want to restructure the Karachi Water and Sewerage Board [KWSB], so we need your help,” the CM requested Illangovan. Shah added that the revamp of the sewerage system has already been approved as a WB-assisted project.

“The KWSB is over-staffed. Their water supply, distribution and bulk systems are weak and defective,” the CM said, asking the WB to provide technical support to resolve the issues. The WB country chief said the organisation was interested in the project.


It was also decided during the meeting to conduct a property survey of Karachi. The last survey was done in 2001. Official sources in the Sindh government said the WB has already initiated a property survey in Sukkur, which is the third largest city in Sindh, and now the government has proposed the WB start the same in Karachi as well. “After the WB reviews this proposal, the survey will be conducted in Karachi,” said an official.


Read more: Bus Rapid Transit , Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah , KWSB

Oh, Karachi. Don't worry it will be another Liyari express way. Karachi will never get its share. Karachi is only for tax receiving and nothing else.
 
Oh, Karachi. Don't worry it will be another Liyari express way. Karachi will never get its share. Karachi is only for tax receiving and nothing else.

Well, PPP and MQM eat the share of not just Karachi but also of interior Sindh, such corrupt people that they devour the budget of the second largest province without a single burp.


It wasnt always like that...

It was a beautiful city in the 90s.

Correction, before the 90s, the 90s was when shit happened.
 
Correction, before the 90s, the 90s was when shit happened.

We did see a minor resurgence during Mush-Mustafa Kamal era. Heck some of the roads and bridges built during the Kamal era are still doing fine, but those built after him during PPP era break year after year.
 
The situation will not improve as long as "Bhutto zinda hai". As far as the funding from WB is concerned, that is not gonna materialize due to not-so-friendly relations with the purse master of WB at the moment.

Oh, Karachi. Don't worry it will be another Liyari express way. Karachi will never get its share. Karachi is only for tax receiving and nothing else.
and whose fault is that?
 
The situation will not improve as long as "Bhutto zinda hai". As far as the funding from WB is concerned, that is not gonna materialize due to not-so-friendly relations with the purse master of WB at the moment.


and whose fault is that?
You tell us, whose fault is this?. elected peoples don't have any power, so fault is this?. It is the fault of people who uses power for their own benefits and they uses us a slave or ATM machine for them. Now my question is how give them power to do that? that is their fault
 
You tell us, whose fault is this?. elected peoples don't have any power, so fault is this?. It is the fault of people who uses power for their own benefits and they uses us a slave or ATM machine for them. Now my question is how give them power to do that? that is their fault
was Karachi any better when the elected people had all the power? The MQM ran Karachi unopposed under Gen. Mushy and the city suffered its worst riots on October 12, 2008. Or do you remember the time when one call from London would have brought the city to a halt? The people you guys entrusted in running this city have been the worst scum on the face of this earth, so whose fault is it really?
 
Good more corruption.

Nobody needs this.

If shizz continue to hit the ceiling in Karachi. The people there would have to buy 4wd to navigate through the garbage.
 
was Karachi any better when the elected people had all the power? The MQM ran Karachi unopposed under Gen. Mushy and the city suffered its worst riots on October 12, 2008. Or do you remember the time when one call from London would have brought the city to a halt? The people you guys entrusted in running this city have been the worst scum on the face of this earth, so whose fault is it really?

I wasn't there then. But my understanding is that between 2000 and 2006, Karachi did have some major improvements. Crap started happening not just in Karachi but all over Pakistan after 2006-especially the Lawyers Movement, terrorism, and Lal Masjid. And with Mush gone in 2008, the free hand given to MQM was taken away.

PS. I now hate PPP--I had supported them from about 1986 till 2010/11. MQM, minus Altaf, has some potential.
 
I wasn't there then. But my understanding is that between 2000 and 2006, Karachi did have some major improvements. Crap started happening not just in Karachi but all over Pakistan after 2006-especially the Lawyers Movement, terrorism, and Lal Masjid. And with Mush gone in 2008, the free hand given to MQM was taken away.

PS. I now hate PPP--I had supported them from about 1986 till 2010/11. MQM, minus Altaf, has some potential.
I was not there the as well but people on the ground have a bit of mixed feelings for this era. while it is true that a lot of projects were undertaken by the successive city governments, the nexus between crime and political parties was also strengthened manifold during this time. Gen. Mushy essentially gave the MQM free hand to whatever they please in Karachi which created a host of problems that we had to cleanup during the rangers operation in Karachi. After 2007, the whole country was in a sh!t storm and to make matter worse the economy took a sever nose down with the global financial crisis of 2008. And who is to blame for all this, the guy at the top...Gen. Mushy.

Frankly speaking I was never inclined towards PPP. Voted for IK the first time and what a poor choice he turned out to be.
 
I wasn't there then. But my understanding is that between 2000 and 2006, Karachi did have some major improvements. Crap started happening not just in Karachi but all over Pakistan after 2006-especially the Lawyers Movement, terrorism, and Lal Masjid. And with Mush gone in 2008, the free hand given to MQM was taken away.

PS. I now hate PPP--I had supported them from about 1986 till 2010/11. MQM, minus Altaf, has some potential.

Yes there were. JI and MQM, both did good work in this regard. Numerous parks, schools, hospitals were built and green bus system was also started in JI's time as well as K3 water supply project. MQM continued all of that and brought the concept of signal free corridors and improved the drainage and sewage system to an extent that water used to drain quite quickly even after heavy rains.

All roads were regularly built and maintained, CCTV cameras were installed on the corridors, all the kachra that now pollutes Karachi was being picked up and collected almost daily.
 

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