Is Karachi equipped to deal with bio-hazardous trash on its beaches?
The one day in the last five months that 17-year-old Abdul Rafiq decided to sleep in and not report for work, was the day he missed all the excitement when Shaniera Akram, wife of cricket legend Wasim Akram, sounded the alarm over Twitter and Instagram of "kilometres of medical waste including hundreds of open needle syringes" strewn on Clifton beach, on Tuesday September 4, urging authorities to close the beach to public.
The following day turned out to be the same mundane work. Sitting on the red tractor, Rafiq continued with scraping the sand, manoeuvring it deftly, then masterfully hauling the bloated plastic bags and dumping them on a heap. He stopped his work, for a few minutes to speak to Dawn.com.
"I don't know really what happened, but I see far more workers today than ever," he said, after spitting the gutka from his mouth.
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But his supervisor, Zahoor Ahmed, a contractor working for the Cantonment Board Clifton, and who has been supervising the cleaning up of the area for the last 14 years — from the Village Restaurant to Hyperstar — was present that ominous day. He, along with 150 brigade of labourers, reported on duty to clean the beach of all the bio-hazardous vile, sickening stuff that the sea had spewed.