Karachi’s Cry for Safety

Author: Zamur Hafeez

As the sun gracefully rises over the sprawling skyline of Pakistan’s largest city, Karachi, a dark shadow ominously looms beneath the surface, exposing a metropolis grappling with the alarming surge of various crimes. Crime, an age-old adversary to societies worldwide, has entrenched itself in Karachi, where the rapidly escalating crime ratio has stripped citizens of their freedom, transforming safety into an imminent threat. The Global Organized Crime Index 2023 paints a grim picture, with Pakistan’s crime rate reaching 3.98, and Karachi leading cities with a staggering crime index of 56.1.

Karachi’s notoriety extends beyond violent crimes and car thefts, encompassing a spectrum that includes robbery, kidnapping, child abduction, suicide, and rape. These distressing statistics have witnessed a significant uptick, fostering an atmosphere of pervasive fear and insecurity among the city’s residents. The confluence of inadequate law enforcement, soaring inflation, widespread unemployment, and a large impoverished population has driven many individuals toward a life of crime as a desperate means of survival.

A comprehensive World Bank report underscores the correlation between economic crises and crime rates, revealing that Karachi’s economic downturn has pushed people facing unemployment and financial struggles towards criminal activities. The exclusion of economic disparities and lax weapon control measures further compounds the issue, creating fertile ground for criminal activities to flourish.

A comprehensive World Bank report underscores the correlation between economic crises and crime rates, revealing that Karachi’s economic downturn has pushed people facing unemployment and financial struggles towards criminal activities.

The presence of illegal arms and the unholy alliance between sophisticated criminal gangs and political parties exacerbate the crime situation. The involvement of political members in criminal activities, such as a DSP participating in a Karachi house robbery and sectarian political parties engaging in serious violent crimes, highlights the pressing need for political will to address these systemic issues.

Over 16,000 crimes, including 232 kidnappings and 155 extortion cases, unfolded in Karachi last year. These crimes disproportionately affect the city’s youth, women, and children, becoming victims either of their valuable belongings or their lives. Despite contributing approximately 42% to Pakistan’s total GDP, Karachi’s criminal activities have sent shockwaves through the economy, leading to business closures, straining the justice system, perpetuating a cycle of violence, and causing political instability.

Karachi, as one of the world’s largest cities, cannot afford to perpetuate a hazardous security situation. Temporary solutions have proven ineffective, as criminals often resurface once the situation normalizes. The Sindh government’s pledge to initiate the “Safe City Project” is a commendable step, but it must be part of a broader, sustained effort to tackle the root causes of crime, encompassing economic disparities, robust law enforcement, and the severing of ties between criminal elements and political figures.

Karachi’s battle against rising crime rates demands a comprehensive and nuanced approach, addressing economic disparities, fortifying law enforcement, and dismantling the nefarious connections between criminal elements and political entities. The city’s potential for growth and prosperity can only be realized when its citizens feel secure and free from the shadows of crime that currently looms over this dynamic metropolis.

The writer is a freelance columnist.

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