Rawalpindi remains ‘powerless’ for second consecutive day
RAWALPINDI: After being battered by a freak windstorm, residents of the garrison city got no respite on Thursday either, as most parts of the city remained without electricity. But the Islamabad Electric Supply Company (Iesco) blamed damage caused by inclement weather to electricity pylons for the outage.
This was the second consecutive day that parts of Rawalpindi have been without power. Even before the windstorm struck on Wednesday, most parts of the city had been without electricity for hours.
Most areas of the city, including the densely populated Westridge-III, Allahabad, Airport Road, Dhoke Hafiz, Pirwadhai, Dhoke Hassu, Misrial Road, Peshawar Road, Ratta Amral, Golra Mor, Naseerabad, Kohinoor Mills, Gulshan-i-Nayab and Satellite Town, experienced nine hours of loadshedding, with no power between 10am and 7pm.
The areas around Benazir Bhutto International Airport also remained without power for nearly 24 hours. This triggered an acute water shortage in most areas, as the pumps and tube wells installed by civic bodies were unable to run all day.
Most areas had no electricity between 10am and 7pm; Iesco official warns of more loadshedding on Friday morning
Mohammad Jamil, a resident of Allahabad, said his area had been without electricity from morning to night for the past two days. He claimed the Iesco complaint office had switched off their telephone numbers so they would not have to log citizens’ complaints.
“People have to fetch water from adjoining residential localities to do mundane chores. I couldn’t even charge my mobile phone,” he said.
Ajmal Akhter from Shah Khalid Colony said he had spent a sleepless night without electricity. Most people cannot afford to run generators, he said, adding that there was no word on how long the outages would last or when power was expected to be restored.
Local PML-N leaders, he said, were silent over the issue and PTI local leaders didn’t care, since they were not in touch with citizens and only came around when they needed votes.
Zulfikar Ahmed, who lives on Peshawar Road, said, “The government has failed to solve the electricity crisis and the opposition has never raised the problems of the common man in the legislatures or other forums.”