Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR
Daily Times Monitor

KARACHI: City Nazim Mustafa Kamal considers ethnic Pushtun a “threat” to Karachi and believes that they are plotting to take over the city. These opinions came to light in an interview with National Public Radio’s Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep who is in Karachi for their ‘Urban Frontier’ series. Daily Times reproduces the story, ‘Karachi’s Growth Fuels Demand for Illegal Housing’:

Karachi is one of the world’s most populous cities and getting more crowded all the time. New neighborhoods are being built as quickly as people can pour the concrete.

Near the farthest reaches of the Pakistani city, a cement mixer hums and spins in a dusty lot. A workman drops some of the concrete into a wheelbarrow. He then dumps that load into a metal frame and pulls down a handle. A steel mold stamps out eight concrete blocks for one more Karachi home.

Many of these neighborhoods are built illegally on vacant land. Millions of people find homes this way. They generate an entire off-the-books economy.

A few houses are under construction on this barren patch of desert. An Urdu-language banner advertises a model home for the equivalent of $5,000. A look inside one of the houses reveals a two-bedroom home with a tile-floor washroom.

Before long, hundreds of houses likely will squeeze onto this dusty parcel of land in the desert. They’re built of a few simple materials, most of which can be purchased from a single dealer nearby.

You could think of it as a sort of extralegal Home Depot. What it’s called locally is a “thalla,” and the boss is called the “thallawalla.”

The boss of this thalla is named Wahab Khan, and he was dropping off a truckload of concrete blocks from his store.

Khan is a newcomer to Karachi. He hails from northern Pakistan, in the tribal areas near the border. Half his family still lives there.

Two years ago, he joined the other half of the family as they moved to the city. Now, he rents a tiny patch of dirt by the road, where he has set up a cement mixer.

Khan’s employees are rural men who came to Karachi just a few months ago. They live under a little thatch roof a few feet from the cement mixer. The concrete blocks cost the equivalent of 14 cents each. A bag of mortar costs about $4.

Throw in some concrete roofing material, hire some workers for about $3 a day, and you’re on your way to building and selling a house.

Because most locals have no money saved, everything is sold on credit. The electricity, at least, is free. Khan demonstrates how nearby power lines are tapped and how those taps are temporarily removed when government officials visit.

When asked about the danger of using hooks to tap into the lines illegally, he says, “What can we do? We have no choice.”

Because the whole system is outside the law, builders here say they also have no choice in another matter. They say that police, who have a way of dropping by, will threaten to tear down an illegal house unless they’re paid a few dollars.

Occasionally, a whole construction crew will be thrown in jail. It takes a couple hundred dollars to get them out.

The provincial police chief, Inspector-General Muhammad Shoaib Suddle, was not surprised to hear the claims that his men take protection money.

“Of course we all understand that without protection, these things cannot prosper,” he says.

The inspector-general says he recently suspended three mid-level officers for their alleged involvement in land deals. It’s widely assumed that corrupt officials play a role in most of these deals.

The illegal housing system in Karachi has its defenders. A leading urban planner says millions of poor people who otherwise might be homeless find shelter this way.

Still, the new settlements have caused some anxiety. Many of Karachi’s new arrivals have come from the north — from the area bordering Afghanistan, a region that supports the Taliban.

Karachi’s mayor, Syed Mustafa Kamal, considers these ethnic Pashtuns a threat. In his eyes, they are plotting to take over the city.

“These Pashtuns means like fundamentalist — religiously fundamentalist, religiously extremist,” Kamal says. “They are coming in. When it comes to ethnicity, when it comes to Islam they all are … the same.”

The mayor gives a tour of the area, driving past squatter neighborhoods and Islamic schools. He passes the area where the journalist Daniel Pearl was found slain. And he points out the window at a bearded man.

“The man who’s coming in front of you … look at him, look at his face,” Kamal says.

The mayor says he is convinced that Pashtuns are planning the locations of the illegal housing settlements. He says they are choosing strategic spots that block his own plans for the city.

“It’s a very strategic location, you see?” Kamal asks. “The superhighway is there. They can control the whole highway. … They had a master plan before me. And they definitely have a master plan.”

Speaking with several residents of the city’s new settlements, it’s clear that not all are Pashtuns. And they seemed to have no master plan beyond their next meal.

Two of the first residents in the desert neighborhood were outside on their knees cutting firewood. They hacked it out of scraggly bushes they’d found.

Shinaz Begum and Razia Begum live side by side with their families. Between them, they have 16 children, none of whom goes to school.

Their husbands are a fisherman and a fruit-drink vendor. Both women work cleaning houses, and they each earn about 2,500 Pakistani rupees per month, equivalent to $37. The monthly installment on each of their houses is 2,000 rupees, or just under $30.

Look at our children’s faces, they say. Don’t you think they’re underfed?

Even so, the women say their precarious existence on this sandy lot in Karachi is better than their past circumstances.
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Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

As Sindhies complaint their cities have been illegally occupied by aliens from India, is it pay back time now?

historically karachi was a balochi village right?

well in a way what goes around comes around. ethnicity and karachi is a big issue. i wonder what people from karachi feel.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

thejoke,
Pls include the link to reports. Thanks.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

the NPR interview is posted here. I think its in the third or fourth clip.

it is a very bigoted segment, where hes saying things like “they are all the same” and pointing out a bearded pashtun and saying hes a taleban or whatever. whatever the administrative merits of Kamal you cant trust him to be a just person when it comes to race relations on evidence of this moronic display of ethnic hatred.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

So NPR is a new way for spreading hatred?

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

And what would be the problem there??

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

I admire Kamal for the work he has done to improve life in Karachi. But he is wrong about Pashtuns having 'masterplan' or something to take over Karachi. These people are running from violent culture and people in their own areas.

Migration from undeveloped/terror-stricken areas is the price Karachi has to pay for being developed, educated, and forward looking.

Sad part is that even though these migrants are trying to find shelter from violent extremists in their native areas, most of them still believe in the same violent extremism. Thus they try to impose their brand of Talibanic extremism on the city where they have come to get rescue.

What Kamal and Karachi needs to do is to dissuade them from thinking in terms of violence alone.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

Big Cities, Big Problems, Big Jokers !

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

Mustafa Kamal needs to get his head examined. Pashtuns have contributed to the basic infrastructure of Karachi from construction to transportation.

The issue as I see it is the unchecked growth of kacchi abadis where building standards are nto adhered to, and then the strain on municipal budgets to provide services ranging from water and sewerage to electricity and gas to these areas.

What do you think will happen to these huts if an earthquake hits? This is not to say that buildings built after securing permits and supposedly meeting building standards are built to standards in many cases (plus the standards are pretty jacked up as it is)

This is something which mr mustafa Kamal needs to be involved in and rather than spewing bigoted rhetoric, be fully engaged in some regulation and planning of loe cost housing for new residents of the city.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

Why is this a surprise, Kamal is member of a party that feeds on ethnic hatred.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

Now les wait for sa1eem to tell us how important it is to fuel ethnic tensions for economy.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

I like the guy, but that was wrong for him to say.

Karachi like other cities will have Urban problems. In the UK people of Muslim Pakistani origin are thought to be a bit of a problem in terms of integration. As most muslims are Pakistani in the UK so they will get the bad press. Indian muslims and bengali muslims are probably just the same as Pakistani muslims. In reality even non-muslim immigrants Jews, Sikhs, Hindus are not as integrated but the media generally ignores or even applauds them when in reality they as a whole live ghettoised lives.

Goig back to Karachi -Karachi was once a small village but now a big booming badly developed city. Karachi attractsmany people from all over Pakistan and also from Iran, Bnagladesh and other regional areas.

Had not Zia interfered and created the MQM and had there been stricter controls on the drugs and gun culture Karachi would be a much more peaceful city. A market for guns was created and everybody bought guns regardless of ethnicity. Madrassahs with limikted views on Islam were promoted and they sprung up all over the country including Karachi.

With people coming from Nwfp, Punjab surely they will bring their culture with them too?

By the way Prince Abbas states that in a way thesew Pashtuns are bringing extremism to Karachi. In your view is this a deliberate conscious act or is it a reaction against Sunni-shia battles, muhajir-pakhtun battles and to the Afghan Jihad?

There is another ethnic group led by a fugitive moron , which has brought un imaginable violence to karachi/Pakistan.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

There are plenty of Kamals all over the place. They feel insecure about their performance so they try and find others to blame. The buzz in USA is, Illegals (w/out being politically correct: Mexicans) are plotting to take over USA!

Sad sad thing to say. He has done plenty of work for the city of Karachi, he should focus on public service more than conspiracy stories.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

Pathetic indeed.

I am almost 100% positive that Kamal's quotes were taken out of context. It is not like him, to say such irresponsible things. In all likelihood it is probably a fabrication to malign MQM, much like the JinnahPur map, and hundreds of other fabricated cases.

I respect MQM immensely, as it absorbs the insults and hatred that would otherwise be directed to normal every day muhajirs. It's funny how they are blamed for the Pakistan's troubles when they have never been in power. They were not a political party in 1971...but somehow they are the hindus India, sent to destroy Pakistan.

Perhaps one should ask the BLA, if they want liberation from Pakistan due to their dislike of MQM, perhaps the Pathans in the northern areas should be asked if they are waging a war against Pakistan due to MQM's existence. Perhaps Pakistan's immense debt was also orchestrated by them, and they also deliberately failed to make hydro plants to starve the nation of electricity. Yes, it is all MQM...blame everything on them, and glorify the actual culprits.

I know some people may hate what I am about to say next, but I have to say it anyway...MQM will stay, MQM will get stronger, MQM will spread to other parts of Pakistan, and MQM will fight back with violence, if confronted with violence. The people of Karachi learnt after thousands of their citizens were killed that, one must pick up the gun to ward of potential killers.

Re: Pashtuns are plotting to take over Karachi, Kamal tells NPR

^ If wishes were horses, then beggers would ride

In time even Kings become beggers