Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

I’m not against all this as long as people work for it & make through honest work, but our military people hardly deserve this.

By Mark Magnier, Los Angeles Times
October 6, 2011, 3:36 p.m.
Reporting from Rawalpindi, Pakistan— The houses and manicured lawns slope up the artificial hill edged by unbroken sidewalks and white picket fences, as children play and residents exchange pleasantries.

This sprawling subdivision called Bahria Town — “Come home to exclusivity,” it boasts — operates its own garbage trucks, schools, firehouse, mosques, water supply and rapid-response force — a kind of functioning state within a nonfunctioning one. And all supplied without the bribes you’d pay on the outside, residents say.

“I like living here,” said Abdul Rashid, a sixtysomething retired government worker. “It’s like you’re in a little protected country — tidy, utilities work, the family can relax. If there’s any problem, you just ring up security.”

The jarring presence of a middle- and upper-class retreat in this increasingly violent nation has been paved, in part, by the involvement of the country’s powerful military. Benefiting from laws put in place during British Empire days to reward friendly armies and militias with land grants, the military now controls about 12% of Pakistani state land, by some accounts. And its privileged position allows it to partner with and otherwise route valuable tracts to favored developers.

Bahria Town and its partner, the military-run developer Defense Housing Authority, occupy twice as much land as Rawalpindi, the garrison city 30 minutes from the capital, Islamabad.

In the posh Safari Villas subdivision, past Sunset Avenue and College Road, Mohammad Javed, 69, surveys his pocket garden before heading into his three-bedroom corner house with a beige sofa ensemble and Samsung flat-screen TV. Houses in the neighborhood run from $25,000 to $60,000, well out of reach of most Pakistanis.

Bahria Town has been a hit not only with moneyed Pakistanis but also with returnees. Javed, who owned a gas station in Canada before retiring, hopes to replicate his North American lifestyle. Bahria’s protective walls bring security, he said, although he still won’t let his grown children visit lest something bad happen beyond its confines. “We meet in Thailand or Canada,” he said.

Although it’s difficult to blame Pakistanis for retreating behind private walls as suicide bombings, political killings and political unrest intensify, some view the trend with concern. They fear the projects widen the rich-poor gap and damage the environment.

This growing tangle of developments destroys farmland, fuels traffic nightmares and undermines community life, said architect Jamshaid Khan, who designs houses for Bahria Town and its partner. Sprawling Bahria Town has no cricket or soccer fields or even libraries because there’s no immediate profit in it, he said.

“I volunteered to design libraries for free, even donate books,” he said in his office, packed with blueprints. “But they didn’t want them.”

These communities also highlight economic disparities.

“It’s unfair,” Mohammad Ameen, 30, a tailor living outside the Bahria Town gate, said as he adjusted a tape measure around his neck. “Rich Pakistanis live the good life and we suffer. It’s a state within a state. And the energy used by these palaces only worsens shortages for the rest of us.”

Rawalpindi’s forest department, among others, recently accused Bahria Town of encroachment. Other complainants who file lawsuits say the group’s strong connections with the police, courts and local politicians make justice elusive. The company did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

This week, Bahria Town General Manager Saeed Akhtar, a retired colonel, was detained by anticorruption investigators along with site supervisor Muhammad Iqbal over allegations that the developer bought 175 acres using forged documents. The firm’s lawyer, Malik Waheed Anjum, was quoted by the Express Tribune newspaper as saying Bahria Town was the victim of revenue officials who forged ownership documents.

Malik Riaz, the force behind Bahria Town, started in the 1980s as a small-time contractor. As competitors targeted the rich, he built for the emerging middle class, becoming one of Pakistan’s richest developers.

Critics say Riaz’s Bahria Town empire has been fueled by close ties to the military. Ayesha Siddiqa, author of “Military Inc: Inside Pakistan Military Economy,” alleges that those links have allowed him to acquire land, in some cases returning a percentage to senior officers as developed plots.

“Even the good ones, with a reputation for not being too corrupt, walk away with two or three pieces of real estate,” she said. “It’s a mutual benefit.”

Official figures show the military controls 11.6 million acres, or 12%, of Pakistani state land, Siddiqa said, with half of that directly controlled by retired or serving military officers in a nation with more than 20 million landless peasants.

“No one besides the military has such access,” she said. Bahria Town advertised on a recent Sunday for retired major generals and lieutenant generals to fill positions at the company, Siddiqa said: “These are his keys” to greater access.

But for resident and food industry entrepreneur Shaheryar Eqbal, these are minor issues relative to what Bahria Town delivers.

“The government should take these communities as a model and replicate them,” he said. “The army already has a joint venture with Bahria Town. Things work. Pakistan must get through this terrorism phase, but this could really be the future.”

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

How is this any different than gated communities in the US? Seriously these days Americans will write any bull**** to malign Pakistan.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

The whole Pakistan is slave of This King of Pakistan.
Ask some one about Bahria Town phase 9

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Bahria town - Awami villas is much cheaper and more affordable - they also enjoy the comforts of security there ... I think this article is a bit slanted ... sometimes a state within a state is needed ...

Here are other examples:

The Vatican (But this is real state)

The Amish in the US

....

In fact ghettos are like inverse of such towns ... People aught to protect their neighbourhoods first and then expand outwards.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Because it is the people of Pakistan paying to keep the corrupt Generals in such luxury.

In the US, private citizens earn money, and pay for it themselves.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Yeah you have to be an idiot to think only military people live in Bahria town. A lot of civilians live there include people working in multi-national banks, the UN etc. Yes some military people live there but it is a private venture. Its been going on for 10 years now.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Bahria Town actually have nothing to do with the Navy... it is private venture...owned by private people, managed by private people

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Collecting billions of rupees from public with no audit.. Normally when you collect money from public you have regulators doing due diligence of the operations.

Mind you I am not criticizing the Bahria town management.. I am criticizing the government. Public has been robbed in the past by many scams who advertised to give exorbitant profits to people, and government failed to audit/regulate them. In this case also there is regulatory body who makes an audit of these funds collected by the people to protect them from a possible fraud..!!!

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

No body but to Regulations and regulators to blame here,

Me ( who is no body and knows no body) can start a scam today and easily get away with it, all i need is an audit firm, a civil lawyer and Tax lawyer...

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

when you take public money, the government has a monitoring body to regulate the financial affairs of that company to protect people. Banks take deposits from the people and are constantly monitored by State Bank of Pakistan which is the regulatory body for the banks. In this sector we don't have a regulatory body from the government to look in to the financial matters of the company. What I know of Bahria Town, even Mr. Malik Riaz does not know the actual financial affairs of the company as there is no concept of formalized accounting in the company.The company is merely running on cash flow basis. It may or may not turn in to a big financial disaster for the public..

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

^ You have got it right, be ready for the financial disaster,

The Company management is being run on Cash flows, they do have some real-estate assets but that are not generating any Cash.

I was on project to fix same kind of company who went pear-shaped two years back in Middle-East, the company owner had same problem as Malik Riaz have... Not Enough Cash Reserves.

But i think with the kind of connections he have, he could easily generate cash rendering his services, one example can be Aashiyana Housing scheme and If Malik Riaz is any wise he would be looking into markets out side Pakistan to build same kind of (cheap houses) there and get great benefit out of it.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Yep bulldoze the damn place and kill all those elite living there. What kind of retarded mentality is this ? Instead of learning from a working model and replicate it people have beef against it .
It reminds me of this classic joke.
A guy was being shown hell there were hell holes with hottest fire burning in them all over . the angels were guarding them if anyone wanted to climb out and run away the angels will whip them back in.
One hell hole did not have any guard but nobody was able to climb and run away so this guy asks the angel what is the deal with this one why are there no guards on this one.
He says this one is for Pakistani folks there is no need for guarding it , if one tries to climb out . others drag him back in. :smack: , :bummer:

We have a plot there,bought it as it was cheaper than islamabad and uncles had too. Uncles moved out bt we r planning to build. Why not live in baharia town or defence if u can afford. It is safe and secure and u pay for it, gov doesnt provide to those who live in or out of these gated communities. Not everyone who lives there are elite,rich or have haram money. Its a better option live for those wo can afford.

I live in aus, its probably the most safe and secure country in the world, there's a gated community close to where I live. Wats wrong with it.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

You have to be an idiot not to read the OP’s post.

Someone who responds to something he doesn’t even read -genius! :cb:

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Does the american establishment provide those gated communities with land and resources to expand?

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

This will be an unbelievable story of organized crime.
One day some one will come out like Mirza to tell you all.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

but question remains why latimes is so much interested in a township , is it so important ? it makes sense if local papers write about it. is there largescale violations of town planning and building byelaws? have urban planning regulations been overruled ? in my opinion l.a. times is targeting somebody.

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

Oi I have a property in Bahria Town... :ASA:

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

So is Bahria town a fraud :eek:

Re: Bahria Town: Pakistan gated community sparks controversy

No its not a fraud… at least it better not be… :aj: