If Paying Eight Times More to Chinese Companies for Picking Garbage Doesn't Fix Issue, Why Is Tax-Payers' Money Being Wasted?

If Paying Eight Times More to Chinese Companies for Picking Garbage Doesn't Fix Issue, Why Is Tax-Payers' Money Being Wasted?
In 2016, a Chinese company was awarded a contract for garbage collection in the districts South and East of Karachi at the rate of USD 26 per ton – a rate 8 times higher than what was being paid to a local company for the same job.

The Chinese company failed to bring in the required equipment, employ sufficient persons or perform the task satisfactorily.

The performance was so abysmal that that the Judicial Commission on Water and Sanitation, had to state that “If the Chinese companies are not acting according to the contract, the agreement should be revoked”.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqbpi8ZeOo8

As if overflowing with dollars and a desire for their urgent distribution, the Sindh Solid Waste Management Board has once again issued an international tender for sweeping, collection and transportation of municipal solid waste. Clearly the nuclear state finds itself incapable of the complex task and technology involved in lifting and transporting its own garbage.



Also read this by Nadeem F Parach: Trash city - A history of Karachi’s garbage problem







We treat our own janitorial staff like dirt, and give them wages as low as Rs 11,100 per month (current wages of sweepers who clean the roads of Defence and Clifton). Likewise, we paid Rs 320 per ton to our own local companies for garbage collection in Karachi while we are willing to pay 8 times more and that too in dollars to the foreign companies.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2F7xh5igPGM

The recent announcement that the Asian Development Bank has agreed to provide an assistance (read loan) of $358.83 million to the Sindh government to support a number of development projects, well explains our dependency syndrome. One of the world’s poorest countries prefers to borrow dollars from abroad for its basic development projects, while simultaneously passing them on to other foreign companies for tasks as ordinary as garbage collection. Can someone in the Sindh government please respond to this two-pronged sickness?