What's new

Karachi businesses breathe sigh of relief as boots step in

Bratva

PDF THINK TANK: ANALYST
Joined
Jun 8, 2010
Messages
13,832
Reaction score
67
Country
Pakistan
Location
Qatar
By Saad Hasan

Published: October 23, 2015

KARACHI: A few years ago, the owner of a midsize oil depot was kidnapped from Korangi Industrial Estate. After being driven around for hours, he was taken to a desolated building on the outskirts of Karachi.

Kidnappers contacted the family and demanded Rs50 million in ransom. Lengthy and painful negotiations ensued before the family managed to pay Rs6 million to secure his release.

‘Kidnapped’ for marriage: Missing Baloch girls found in Sukkur

But the businessman returned shaken. He had been kept with a few other hostages. One of them had a hand cut off and another hostage was chained to a wall, left there to die from the wounds he sustained in the lower body. Even a tough, street-smart oil trader could not shake off that sight.

It was another message to manufacturers and traders to comply or face possible death. There was no choice, but to comply. At first, compliance was reluctantly paying small amounts and then agreeing to monthly payments in extortions.

This just was not the work of a large gang or politically-backed activists. They were gangs of four to five men who operated out of areas in Korangi, Liaquatabad, New Karachi, Malir, Lyari, rural Sindh and Balochistan. From a wealthy factory owner who travelled in a Lexus in Site Industrial Estate to an equally rich trader from Jodia Bazaar on his CD-70 motorcycle – no one was spared.

Traders, industrialists see drop in extortion cases

“Everyone washed their hands in this Ganga,” is how Nihal Akhtar, the secretary general of the 4,000-plus-member Korangi Association of Trade and Industry (Kati), puts it.

The revolt

In recent months, billboards thanking the military and Sindh Rangers for curbing crime have sprung up ubiquitously along roads.

But many of the boards have been put up by traders’ associations in a sign of defiance and warning to criminals. They have chosen a side and they want everyone to see it.

Rangers arrest 16 MQM men over extortion charges

Younus Bashir was the chairman of Site Association of Industry (SAI) in 2013 when kidnappings for ransom in Karachi hit a peak of 182 cases.

“You have no idea how bad it was for us. They weren’t even threatening in any discreet way, they would just come inside the factory,” he said.

What many people don’t know is that in the months prior to the security operation in late 2013, businessmen had started to mount pressure on the government to take action.

‘Extorted’ donations: Karachi’s multi-million dollar charity business

“We were voicing our concern on every forum … we were meeting security officials almost on a daily basis,” said Bashir, who now heads the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI).

Frequently harassed by would-be extortionists from unknown mobile numbers, the businessmen in Karachi specifically called for maintaining a database of SIM owners.

“Believe it or not but PTA’s (Pakistan Telecommunication Authority) action against unregistered SIMs was due to us.”

Oil and gas companies complain of being forced to pay extortion

Fingers crossed

It has almost been a year since a member of Kati was kidnapped, says its chairman Zahid Saeed.

“It’s a relief. Many of us had stopped investing capital in Karachi including myself,” he said, referring to a new unit of his pharmaceutical company which has been built in Lahore.

“You might think that big businessmen are not bothered with law and order. But my brother, my father and I – we all have gone through holdups. That’s how bad the situation was.”

‘Several more girls still in influential people’s custody’

But, notwithstanding the benefits, there appears to be a political fallout of the operation as Karachi’s biggest political party claims to be bearing the brunt of the boots.

“Whatever the Sindh Rangers are doing is having a positive impact on us – trade and business. They must be doing something right.”

KCCI’s Bashir also says that no major incident has come to his knowledge in the past 12 months except “for one or two short-term kidnapping where they drive you around to take money out of ATMs.”

Yet, he has a reason to worry. “Many of the criminals have gone underground. It’s a matter of time before they resurface. We need stringent laws, especially with a strong witness protection system. People are still too scared to give testimonies.”

Published in The Express Tribune, October 23rd, 2015.

Like Business on Facebook, follow @TribuneBiz on Twitter to stay informed and join in the conversation.
 
.
The Rangers operation is only a temporary fix. These terrorists will rise again, whats the permanent fix other than jailing a few?

What really needs to be done is hanging them from light poles and trees, in front of Political Party 'offices' and letting the bodies rot for a few weeks. But that probably will not be done as far as the Supreme Courts go they are more interested in hearing and deciding on cases that involve their own children, while the cases of national importance are left to hang long and dry.

Hang a few Political, Landowners, 'Industrial elites' along with some from the government bureaucracy and Pakistan's corruption problem will be solved over night.
 
.
The Rangers operation is only a temporary fix. These terrorists will rise again, whats the permanent fix other than jailing a few?

What really needs to be done is hanging them from light poles and trees, in front of Political Party 'offices' and letting the bodies rot for a few weeks. But that probably will not be done as far as the Supreme Courts go they are more interested in hearing and deciding on cases that involve their own children, while the cases of national importance are left to hang long and dry.

Hang a few Political, Landowners, 'Industrial elites' along with some from the government bureaucracy and Pakistan's corruption problem will be solved over night.


Use this approch and see another Militant Political party arising from the ashes of these hangings.
 
.
A person using the derogatory word "boot" for his own life savior is nothing but a "di*k" himself
 
.
Use this approch and see another Militant Political party arising from the ashes of these hangings.
there are over 25000 die hard criminals caught during this operation. less than 50 have so far been indicted. once this operation ends, rangers will sieze to play the role it is playing and these 25000 bastards will again roam free. What then? I agree this operation has relieved the security situation of Karachi, but for how long is the real question
 
.
the only solution for this mess is shoot to kill, no lengthy case, no time wasting, thats what ssg did in early nineties with the hardcore decoits innrural sindh. these bastards only understand one language and that is called bullet.
 
.
Use this approch and see another Militant Political party arising from the ashes of these hangings.

Take a stand against those who use violence to achieve a political or economic aim, they'll start shitting bricks and think twice. Why did corruption start taking a hold in Pakistan? Because there was the open crack that became an entire wall the house is now missing.


post-51553-joker-its-about-sending-a-mess-LGsx.gif



They're all useless packages of flesh anyways.
 
.
The permenant solution is to disband MQM which backs all such criminals..even though the criminals are not part of MQM..they pay jugga tax to MQM local politburo in exchange of free hand for crime...
 
.
@Patriots @KURUMAYA --- how about it? if not for rangers the karachi that produces 60% revenue would've gone down to 6% at the rate industries were shifting to punjab.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom