The metro bus joyride

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All projects are equal, but some are more equal

A public transport revolution has been claimed in the city of Lahore with the inauguration of the Rs 30 billion Metro Bus Service last Sunday. Minor accidents, multiple near misses and jam-packed buses have been the order of the first three days since the service was inaugurated as government officials have begun to sing the chorus of ‘conspiracy’. Seven buses were sent to the docks for “minor” repairs on the first day with over 800 people arrested for various “violations” of discipline.” Only 20 of the 45 buses were functional with the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz MPA incharge of the project admitting that a number of buses were not being run for “fear of the people”.

The chorus sung by this particular legislator-cum-project manager reeks through the entire Metro Bus project. It is a strange logic via which a project that was been charioted by the Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif as “pro-people” is now being saved from “the people”. The discourse of the benevolent ‘developers’ and the ill-disciplined, jaahil awam has been pandered about amongst the middle classes and PML-N wallas. “Oh, look how organised this looks, this is exactly what Lahore needed,” are the words spoken by people who shall neither travel on the buses nor bear the cost of the piling of the province’s meager funds into a single bus route. Let us cut to the chase and be brave enough to say: “This is exactly what Lahore did not need.”

The sheer jahalat with which the project was executed aside – although one should take out time to count out the number of violations that went into making the project possible in paperwork and on the ground – the project fails to fundamentally challenge the city’s public transportation trajectory. In fact, before we go on to discuss alternate public transport proposals, let us begin to count the violations that took place.

For a project on which work began one fine day in March 2012 without a legally mandatory Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report – or even any form of public disclosure whether such a project was in the pipeline, claiming transparency was never going to be easy. Moreover, to avoid the mandatory approval from the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC), since rules dictate a provincial government must seek approval for a project worth over Rs 5 billion, it divided the MBS into six projects, and approved them individually. When the first public hearing for the project was finally held on March 30, the project was reported to have been ‘slammed’ by citizens. Asked about the actual problems faced by disabled or elderly commuters, TEPA officials preposterously suggested they could cross the main Ferozepur Road to reach the bus stops. The escalators plan, worth another Rs800 million in the budget, was added as a result of this public criticism.

Added on to it was that almost all public utilities across the rapidly changing bus route (the elevated highway was a later innovation, we are told) were being dug out, laid and relaid again. One official at WAPDA in charge of the process told this writer his team would be given new instructions “midway into a relay” and “be sent to the same spot the next day”. No environmental protection measures were taken, as dust filled the air of the entire city, and smoke from motor vehicles clogged the city roads. Moreover, labour laws were also flouted, with no protection available to workers for over a thousand workers working on the route. There was no separate fund existing, no helmets, gloves, with hundreds of injuries being reported on a daily basis, and one of the safety inspectors having suffered crushed legs from falling debris. The human cost of the project shall never be calculated nor the number of deaths reported. Of course, the criticism the project received did not mean the provincial government ever revised its plan, let alone admit that there were serious flaws in how it was going about it. Add on to that the fact that businesses and people’s properties were demolished at will and compensation was doled out also at will.

Somehow, despite all these violations on the part of the government, we are expected to believe that the motorcycle rider crossing the buses route through the metal grills, or, the man who jumps onto the one-metre high doors, is the jahil in the picture. This is a classic case of so-called ‘development’ being imposed on a city’s people and a great deal made out of it. The fact that the Punjab government undertook no consultation means it has no basis to claim that this particular MBS model was what the ‘people of Lahore’ wanted. Of course, one also has to ask: why is the Punjab government taking a decision the Lahore government should take?

Furthermore, one cannot see the MBS project as separate from the various other ‘developments’ being enacted on to re-configure Lahore’s road infrastructure: the Multan Road widening, the Canal Road widening, the Kalma Chowk flyover, the Kalma Chowk underpass, the Muslim Town flyover, Garhi Shahu road renovation, MM Alam Road widening and so forth – all of which were built almost in parallel. In fact, the current MBS infrastructure construction falls in line with an earlier plan to create an elevated expressway on Ferozepur Road for which Rs 250 million were sanctioned for a study in 2008. In constructing the current MBS route coupled with two flyovers on the same route, the chief minister has killed two birds with one stone: instead of just an elevated expressway, an elevated bus path was created, while the rest of Ferozepur Road serves as an expressway for all practical purposes.

One would also suggest that the MBS project cannot also be seen outside the PML-N’s wider practice of the semi-privatising public service provision in Lahore. This process includes the creation of the Lahore Waste Management Company, Lahore Transport Company and more recently the Lahore Parking Company. Defined and registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as ‘private, profit-making’ companies, these are operating as government-run subcontractors for multinational service providers, with the board of governors for each made up of sitting MPAs, the DCO and Commissioner for Lahore, and the CEOs serving DMG officers.

This brings us to the question of financial transparency of the project. Does anyone know where the money for the project is coming from? And, if, as the Punjab government claims, it is funding the project from its coffers, why has a preferential Turkish bidder been selected, instead of inviting an open bid, or running the system itself? What is the nature of Turkish involvement in the project, whose own Metrobus (Istanbul) has been facing questions of its own? And frankly if the Punjab government is indeed paying for the MBS, then why is a Turkish company going to be subsidised by as much as Rs 1 billion a year to run it for half a decade? Somehow, despite laying down a Rs 30 billion infrastructure and promising unilateral subsidies to the Turkish company, both the company and our chief minister have insisted that the MBS is “not about making money, but about brotherhood”.

If the Rs 30 billion cost figure provided by the Punjab government is taken at face value then it is equivalent to almost 50 percent of the entire province’s transport budget: a measly Rs 63.5 billion has been allocated for the entire province. Compared with the Rs 16.5 billion health budget and Rs 25 billion education budget, both of which are expected to lapse by at least 20 percent or more (as is usual), the amount of money put into the project is lavish, if not wasteful.

This is not to suggest that Lahore, a city of 10 million people and a growing population of cars, did not need a revamp of the public transport system. The point rather is that there were much more apt proposals that were put to the current Punjab government, including a visit in 2008 by the former Mayor of Bagota, who pitched a public transport overall: to increase walking spaces, shrink major roads and create a designated-lane MBS with much lower cost. The Bagota model had emerged after the rejection of a Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) proposal to build a multi-billion dollar rapid mass-transit system. The same JICA that was rejected in Bagota has one of the key advisors on the Lahore transport plan and Master Plan since the 1990s, including the current period. That suggests that the project is less revolutionary and more of the same that opinion makers are imagining it to be.

If one may make a prediction from its first few days of operation, Lahore’s Metro Bus Service has kicked off as a bit of a circus and a safari ride, and shall end up as a labour quarry as soon as ticket fares are charged. The Khadim-e-Aala’s promise that “the rich and the poor, bureaucrats and ordinary citizens, the chief minister and the voters, all will travel in these buses” is already fading fast. It goes without saying that the dearth of public discourse about urban planning in Pakistan is such that inviting a foreign company to run 45 buses on a purpose built route at the cost of Rs 30 billion is being considered a ‘revolutionary’ step in public transport. One may only hope that the high and mighty too – for the poor would have no other choice but to – take CM’s advice and step aboard one of the Metro Bus joyrides.

The writer is the general secretary (Lahore) for the Awami Workers Party. He is also a journalist and a researcher, with a focus on urbanisaton and law. He can be contacted at: [email protected]

30 COMMENTS

  1. Sir election year hai mian sahab ne vote nae layne? as for the shabby excecution well sadly this is Pakistan what did we expect? other than that the effect it will have on the livelihood of other transporters who ran wagons and buses on that route
    lekin hamaray mian sahab ko sher shah suri bannay ka shock hai lahore k andar he GT road banna di hai and we being ignorant lambs vote phir hum unhee ko dayte hain

  2. Utter nonsense article. Clearly the writer cannot set his own biases aside and look at the siutation objectively.

  3. Its a shame we cannot set aside our political differences and appreciate good developmental projects like this one. shame on the writer!

    • Dear Javaid,
      If the project is not used for political mileage by PMLN, we should definitely refrain from discussing it with a political point of view. But, tell me how can it be possible while all the route is decorated by Sharif Family Photographs?

      • All projects are used for a degree of political mileage my friend… look around you. The USA , UK and other countries of the developed world are good examples. Thats the purpose of democracy…. it is self-correction. If the projects are good, the parties will be re-elected… if they arent… then move over.

  4. I mean no disrespect but this seems to be a very biased article and some figures from the budget are also not correct.

  5. Awami Workers Party? who are they? regardless, the writeup seems to be politically motivated and looks to be from a grudge laden heart.

  6. It is most unfortunate to note that istead of taking pride in the FIRST mass transit system in the country, in a city where its requirement existed, there continues a negative tirade against it. There may have been lapses as we are all human,but it is a project successfully completed. If the common people are behaving as reported, they will mature with time, afterall its a quantum jump in the way people travel. Lets make metro bus a success

    • Firstly its not a MASS transit its not more than 1 bus route
      secondly set priorities right. Timing is wrong and all about political gain

  7. Only in Pakistan can people laud a Rs.5 Billion mansion for one man but cannot tolerate a public utility project of Rs.30 Billion for millions.

  8. Amusing to see that the author is getting lambasted from all sides for his contradictory and biased views in this "article" . Shame on the author for putting politics above what is right.

  9. And what has the Awami Workers Party done for the people? I dont support PML N but Shahbaz Sharif is without doubt the hardest working elected official in the country and the only CM who is result-oriented. You shouldnt call yourself a "journalist" or a "researcher" if you cannot write without discarding your own prejudices.

    Extremely disappointing.

  10. most of the comments above are a clear indication of the fact that most people don’t know jack about the project and urban transport and choose to attack the writer. Great write up and thanks for exposing the kings of Raiwand!!

  11. Pathetic article. Keep your own biases to yourself. The people of Lahore are grateful for this amazing project!

  12. I certainly believe that instead of spending Rs 30 billion on 27kms, which turns out to be over Rs 1.1billion per km, there good be other measures taken to widen existing roads and create seperate lanes for buses. And this would have cost half of what was spent. The project is well meaning, no doubt, but the concept, the planning, the execution, the transparency could have been handled much better. Furthermore, the dynamics of handling day to day operations of such a project are much more complex than, for example, managing a motorway. I can assure you that within a year, you will start seeing signs of deterioation in the overall outlook of the lanes, buses, stations, escalators etc.

  13. The project cost shall be compared if there was a possibility to improve government schools structure. punjab has 65000 primary government schools. All of them look like a istable

  14. nice article!! I wonder why so much hate-speech against the writer when he has only pointed to the facts!! Way to go Hashim and keep it up!! Further, good or bad, an asset has been created for the city!! Overtime, this will improve!!

  15. It is rather amazing to see, how educated people prefer to oversimplify reality. Concerns like environmental cost, ignoring the laws are under the radar for many. Since the time of Rome people like “Shows”. And that’s what Shebaz is good at. Thanks for enlightenment Mr Rashid. Keep the good work up.

  16. Amazing how people call the article 'bias' without pointing out any discrepancies or contradiction to the facts. The author has just stated plain facts. You can disagree with his opinions but not with 'facts'.

  17. Totallt agree with the author. Look what happened to the parking plaza being built on the liberty round about. The cost of that project was around 700 million which was almost 2 times more of the prevailing construction rates at that time. A project was made with the peoples money which is of no use. And i have reason to believe the same goes for mbs. This much much money could have been diverted into making electricity rather than spliting the city in two halves. The leadership of pml n is cle
    arly incompetent And vendictative. 1700 accounts of punjab have been drained and there is not detail of the expenses, so far for transparency. Secondlt i would like to point out that the construction of the project is around 30 billion but if u add up the land acquisition then the cost is much higher.

  18. Writer pointed to real and correct issues that are linked to this project. Same infrastructure could have run Mono Rail – thats what it requires. Mono rail also cost effective after commissioning and cheaper to run compared to buses. We have ruined train project – Green Line and got buses. For buses a much cheaper solution as suggested by writer Bagota plan should have worked!

    Coming days will reveal the fuss about this hurry, cut and shut of this project which is only for Shareefs election campaign on public money!!

  19. AoA: I read a news item lately from some leader, that we should stop critcism for the sake of criticism and be a civilized nation. Can we be?

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