City
Epaper

Karachi's water crisis exposes deep rot as residents accuse authorities of deception

By ANI | Updated: May 10, 2026 13:15 IST

Karachi [Pakistan], May 10 : Karachi's worsening water crisis has triggered outrage across the city, with thousands of residents ...

Open in App

Karachi [Pakistan], May 10 : Karachi's worsening water crisis has triggered outrage across the city, with thousands of residents rejecting official claims that normal supply has been restored. Despite assurances from the Karachi Water and Sewerage Corporation (KWSC), taps in several neighbourhoods have remained dry for nearly two weeks, forcing citizens to rely on costly private tankers, as reported by The Express Tribune.

According to The Express Tribune, the KWSC announced that repairs at the Dhabeji Pumping Station had been completed and that 40 million gallons per day had been reintroduced into the system. Officials insisted that Karachi was once again receiving its regular 650 MGD water supply and claimed all pumping stations were operating smoothly without interruptions. However, residents from Korangi, Clifton, Liaquatabad, DHA, Gulshan-e-Iqbal, Malir and other localities disputed those assertions.

Many citizens said they had not received pipeline water since April 25 and accused authorities of presenting a misleading picture of the situation. Several residents alleged that while domestic pipelines remained empty, government hydrants continued functioning uninterrupted, intensifying suspicions of unequal distribution. A resident of Gulistan-e-Jauhar stated that families were spending heavily on tanker services despite repeated claims by officials that supply had normalised.

The controversy deepened after authorities uncovered a large-scale water theft operation connected to the city's main supply network. In a joint raid carried out by Rangers and KWSC officials near Lasbela Bridge, an illegal underground system syphoning sweet water from a 33-inch main line was discovered. Investigators found a concealed tunnel linked directly to the corporation's pipeline, along with a powerful suction pump and an illegal extraction setup allegedly used to steal clean water, as cited by The Express Tribune.

Laboratory testing of water samples reportedly confirmed low TDS levels, indicating the stolen supply was potable water rather than groundwater. Officials claimed the operation was linked to influential figures operating sub-soil networks in the area. Cases have been registered under the Water Corporation Act, while investigations continue, as reported by The Express Tribune.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalPakistan: Transporters hold protest against hike in prices of petroleum products

NationalLocal Trinamool leader killed in Hooghly’s Goghat, party blames BJP

NationalNTA responds to alleged irregularities in NEET UG 2026, says "exam conducted under full security protocol, probe underway"

NationalTripura CM congratulates Himanta Biswa Sarma on being elected as NDA Legislature Party leader in Assam

InternationalPeople of Finland support EU reducing economic and technological dependency on China, US

International Realted Stories

InternationalIsrael built secret base in Iraq to support air campaign against Iran: WSJ report

InternationalIndia, South Africa cement scientific ties with focus on astronomy

InternationalSpain: Hantavirus-hit cruise ship reaches Tenerife as WHO oversees passenger evacuation

InternationalNepal government, judiciary clash over Chief Justice nomination

InternationalFuel levy shock deepens public anger as Pakistan faces mounting inflation