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PPP ~ Development projects and modernisation of Sindh



USAID-funded education project kicks off

KARACHI: US Agency for International Development’s (USAID) mission director Gregory Gottlieb and Sindh minister for education Nisar Ahmed Khuhro broke ground at the Dumba Goth Government School in Gadap Town on Thursday.

The event kicked off the USAID-funded school construction in Karachi under its Sindh Basic Education Programme (SBEP).

“This ground-breaking represents only one part of the broader US commitment to expanding access to education for all Pakistanis, especially for girls,” said mission director Gottlieb. “Besides building schools, the US government offers many scholarship, exchange and teacher training programmes.”

The programmes, said Mr Gottlieb, were designed to increase opportunities for Pakistan’s younger generation and improve Pakistan’s economic and employment conditions.

“Education plays a pivotal role in shaping the lives of children and young adults,” said USAID provincial director Leon S. Waskin. “USAID’s educational programmes, such as SBEP, focus on improving the quality of teaching and learning as well as increasing equitable access to safe learning opportunities for children.”

Also present at the ground-breaking ceremony were USAID senior policy adviser and SBEP programme manager Dr Randy Hatfield, Sindh education secretary Fazlullah Pechuho and MPA Muhammad Sajid Jokhio as well as the Sindh Department of Education and Literacy officials and teachers, students and members of the local community.

The USAID is providing $155 million to fund the SBEP with the Sindh government offering $10 million as part of a cost-share arrangement. As part of the programme, the USAID helps the Sindh government construct 120 large schools, including those in flood-affected areas.

They are building schools in districts of Khairpur, Sukkur, Larkana, Qambar-Shahdadkot, Jacobabad, Kashmore and Dadu along with Kemari, Liyari, Orangi, Gaddap and Bin Qasim towns of Karachi. Construction is underway in Khairpur, Sukkur and Larkana.

The programme also works with communities to improve school management and increase girls’ enrollment while improving the reading skills of 750,000 children in targeted areas of the province.
 
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Civil defence training underway at schools

KARACHI: The Commissioner Karachi Youth Team is actively taking part in cleanliness, civil defence training and such other activities at educational institutions. This was briefed at a meeting presided over by Commissioner Shoaib Ahmed Siddiqui to review the activities of his youth team for the social development and for promoting peace in the city.

Commissioner Karachi Youth Team Coordinator Shazia Mirza briefed the meeting on their ongoing programmes at various schools and colleges to provide a better environment to students and create a civic sense among them.

The meeting also informed that the youth team is also working to initiate various programmes for the improvement of Karachi Zoological Garden, and will seek private sector’s cooperation for this purpose. The Karachi commissioner urged the youth to come forward and play their role in the socio-economic development and for creating civic sense among the public. He appreciated the dedication and hard work of the youth team.

Civil defence training underway at schools
 
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Clean and Green Karachi campaign continues

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Pakistan's first Dalit Senator gets rousing welcome in Thar, challenges Establishment & Saudi backed Arbabs

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SSWMB told to expedite work on solid waste management

KARACHI: Sindh Chief Secretary Muhammed Siddique Memon has directed Sindh Solid Waste Management Board (SSWMB) on Thursday to speed up activities and ensure timely completion of relevant assignments. He said this while addressing a briefing session of SSWMB at Sindh Secretariat. Managing Director SSWMB Roshan Sheikh also delivered a presentation. SSWMB, which was established under SSWMB Act 2013, has initiated work in the first phase for Karachi, Nawabshah and Hyderabad. Sheikh said it was a scientific integrated project that was linked to the generation of electricity, gas and other sorts of power, through scientific recycling. The sanitary engineered landfill site would also be established to eradicated the issue of health and environment affected by the garbage pollution. “SSWMB will also work on hospital hazardous waste and industrial hazardous waste in Karachi for which study has been started,” he said. The MD SSWMB said the project would start functioning in Karachi in October-November, while September in Nawabshah. The study for Nawabshah has been completed in record time and Hyderabad based study was being undertaken.

SSWMB told to expedite work on solid waste management
 
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Agri-economy: World Bank approves $187m for irrigation system

The World Bank has approved a loan of $187 million for the improvement of community water infrastructure and installation of an efficient irrigation system in Sindh.

This is aimed at enhancing agriculture productivity that is adversely affected by high water losses.

The $187-million or Rs19-billion loan will supplement the provincial government’s efforts, which is also spending Rs5.6 billion or $55 million from its own resources. The total cost of the six-year Sindh Irrigated Agricultural Productivity Enhancement Project has been estimated at $242.2 million.

The project will help improve irrigation water management at tertiary and field levels, according to a handout issued by the World Bank’s country office. The project will also support efficient management of scarce water resources and is designed to augment adaptation under different climate change scenarios, it said.

Despite extensive irrigation infrastructure, widespread use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides and availability of hybrid seeds in the market, agriculture productivity is low in Pakistan, especially in Sindh. The bank’s estimates suggest that half of the irrigation water delivered through community water course networks is lost. The main causes of these losses are said to be seepage, spillage and side leakage from the water course banks.

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The provincial government would spend $120.2 million on improvement of community water infrastructure. An amount of $65.8 million would be spent on installation of a high-efficiency irrigation system and another $24.4 million has been set aside for introducing new agriculture practices like laser-guided levelling.

However, $31.7 million or 17% of the World Bank loan has been earmarked for project monitoring, management, evaluation and conducting studies, which seems a high figure. Major beneficiaries of such allocations are the consultants. Pakistan will return the loan in 25 years.

Agriculture contributes significantly to Sindh’s gross domestic product and provides employment to about 70% of the province’s population.

About 15% of loan proceeds will be utilised for water sanitation and flood protection. Pakistan’s reliance on a single river basin system makes its water economy vulnerable in light of climate change, according to the World Bank.

It added the impact of global climate change, including changes in glacial melting, temperature and precipitation patterns, leads to variations in river flows and increases the instances of floods.

“Flood irrigation is commonly adopted by most farmers in Pakistan and one-fourth of irrigation water is lost during its field application,” said Rachid Benmessaoud, the World Bank Country Director for Pakistan.

He said the project will help farmers in making every drop of water count towards improved yield.

The bank said the project will benefit the poorest of the rural society. Direct beneficiaries will be small farmers, having up to 13 acres of land, and medium-sized farmers, possessing 13 to 50 acres. They are engaged in irrigated agriculture.

Around 198,000 farm households are cultivating land in the command areas of water courses, which will be improved under the project.

About 2,600 farm households will be supported by the project in high-efficiency irrigation. In addition to this, a large population would benefit indirectly from the project, such as landless farm labourers in agricultural operations and temporary and permanent labourers engaged in construction and manufacturing sectors, said the bank.

It added as a consequence of increased crop production, agricultural employment is expected to rise by about 16%.
 
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Sindh govt to fund Red Line

KARACHI: The Sindh government has planned financing The Red Line — a route of the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system — from its own resources.

Speaking at a workshop organised by the ADB on the bus rapid transit on Friday, Sindh Transport Secretary Tauha Ahmed Farooqui said The Red Line would be made operational by the end of next year or early 2017.

He was of the opinion that the BRT was much more affordable than the circular railway, subway or metro.

He said the government had already submitted a bill in the assembly to establish the Sindh Mass Transit Authority.

He expressed the hope that it would be passed within the next few months after which various mass transit projects would be quickly implemented.

Responding to Dawn queries, ADB Urban Development Specialist (Transport) for Central and West Asia David Margonsztern said the bank had earlier planned to bring in over $105 million to set up The Red Line (a 26-kilometre-long route from Safoora Goth to Tower via University Road and M.A. Jinnah Road).

A 20-member team of the bank comprising staffers and consultants had been working on the project for around a year and a half. But after spending around $1 million on the project, the team was now relocating to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa where it would work on a BRT project in Peshawar.

Mr Farooqui told Dawn that the ADB would have completed the project by around 2020, but the government would implement it as the transport issue was very serious and had to be solved on a priority basis. The project would be operational within 18 months, he added.

Earlier, former journalist and mayor of Bogota (Colombia) Enrique Penalosa, who is now associated with the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy, said the BRT was the only solution to solve Karachi’s transport issue.

With a better BRT system, he said, there would be fewer cars on roads and fewer traffic jams as people would be able to travel through public transport and reach their destinations easily and quickly.

Mr Penalosa said a developed city was not where more people had cars but where a greater number of rich people used public transport. Also, civilized cities had more public spaces such as parks where both rich and poor could enjoy, he added.

He suggested to the authorities concerned that one of the BRT routes could be planned on the unused Karachi Circular Railway, but the entire network should be planned together and integrated instead of planning a single route.

ITDP’s Yoga Adiwinarto, who has been managing a technical assistance programme to improve the trans-Jakarta BRT, said that around 1,600 buses were required for the entire BRT network in Karachi.

About the work done on various BRT projects in Karachi, the secretary said that a Chinese company was working on the 26-km-long Yellow Line from Korangi to Saddar, while The Orange, Blue and Green Lines were in different stages of planning.

He agreed with the president of the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy — an NGO seeking to improve urban life quality by advancing sustainable transportation in cities across the world — that the integration of all BRT routes was necessary.

The secretary said assistance from any institution, including the ADB, would be appreciated in this regard.

Referring to the KCR revival, he said that demands of the donor, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), including tax exemptions for KCR equipment etc, had been met. Yet the JICA had not issued a letter. Some time back the JICA again contacted the government after a Chinese company showed interest in the project, he said. The JICA was then asked to give a time frame that it had not given so far, added the transport secretary.

But banks / financial institutions were not ready to provide funding to the transporters, he said, adding that a mechanism would have to be developed to convince them.

About The Red Line project, Mr Adiwinarto said parking, encroachment and street vendors, particularly on M.A. Jinnah Road, would have to be removed, relocated and better managed to make way for the BRT buses.

Social activist Arif Hasan expressed concern over the beautiful heritage buildings along M.A. Jinnah Roads and street vendors that would be affected by the BRT infrastructure. Besides, he said that due to project’s high cost, BRT ticket would also be expensive, between Rs70 and Rs90 per trip, for general public.

Responding to it, Mr Penalosa said that BRT infrastructure would be at grade (on ground) so it would not affect the heritage buildings and less traffic on roads would reduce pollution and improve the area.

Regarding vendors, the former Bogota mayor referred to the BRT experience in his town when he was in office and said they would have to be removed / relocated and compensated as roads and pavements were public spaces and nobody, rich or poor, could be allowed to encroach upon them.

Roland de’Souza of Shehri raised the issue why the Sindh government was taking over city government responsibilities such as local transport.

The transport secretary, however, said it was fine as long as someone fulfilled the responsibility.

Mohammad Ather of the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation, Malik Zaheer-ul-Islam and others also spoke.
 
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