Gulf Today

WHAT OTHERS SAY

HOUSING CRISIS

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Experts had for years been warning of a housing emergency — especially in Pakistan’s urban centres — and a new report, prepared for the Asian Coalition of Housing Rights, appears to back up their dire diagnosis. As the palatial residences of the rich continue to expand, the poor are being squeezed out onto the streets. The report notes that in Karachi and other urban centres there are a considerab­le number of people who now sleep in the open. Much of this is, of course, due to greater urban migration, as people from rural areas head for the cities in search of jobs. It appears there is a shortage of 8.5m housing units in Pakistan, with urban demand said to stand at 350,000 units per year. The housing shortage, especially for the poor and working classes, is met by katchi abadis or informal settlement­s. In many cases, the land maia proits from grabbing others’ real estate and creating katchi abadis, in which they sell or lease out houses to lower-income groups. In fact, much of the existing housing lacks even the basic necessitie­s. For example, numerous ‘colonies’ dot Karachi, in which the poor are stuffed into small hovels that lack proper sanitation. Successive government­s have neglected the housing issue, especially affordable housing for the poor, and it is due to this oficial apathy that the crisis has ballooned. As experts have noted, there is a serious need for urban land reform in this country. They say that land use should be based on social and environmen­tal considerat­ions, and that non-utilisatio­n of land should be penalised, while suggesting that a person who has taken one house loan should not be allowed to take another.

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