Top Peshawar Development Authority officer removed over BRT delay

KP transport secretary was also removed earlier this week as criticism mounts over BRT project

By
Web Desk
|
Officers' removal comes as criticism grows louder over the ongoing delay in the BRT project, which was slated to be completed in six months but remains unfinished 17 months later. Photo: File
 

PESHAWAR: Director General Peshawar Development Authority Israrul Haq was removed from his post on Wednesday over delay in Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project.

A day earlier, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Transport Secretary Kamran Rehman Khan was also removed from his post, with Dr Muhammad Fakhar-e-Alam Irfan, a senior member of the Board of Revenue given additional charge as the new transport secretary of the province.

The officers' removal comes as criticism grows louder over the ongoing delay in the BRT project, which was slated to be completed in six months but remains unfinished 17 months later.

KP Information Minister Shaukat Ali Yousafzai in a statement said both the officers were removed due to their incompetence.

“Because of these two officers, the government is facing disgrace,” Yousafzai said, adding that they will take action against anyone who hinders the progress of the project.

He added that Chief Minister Mahmood Khan wants to see the project completed. “Those officers who do their work will stay with us,” he asserted.

The BRT project, hailed as a "world-class transport service” aimed at generating "greater economic activity and prosperity in the city" on its official website, was launched by former chief minister Pervez Khattak during his tenure.

Construction on the project began in October 2017, but work on the fixed-rail continues to this day.

The BRT line is a 26-kilometre east-west corridor in the city, designed to move thousands of passengers per day. Of the total 31 bus stations, 11 are still incomplete. Work on the three bus depots, at Chamkani, Hayatabad and Dabgari, is unfinished. Over 200 buses were to reach Peshawar. So far, only 21 have arrived from China.

During all of this, the cost of the corridor has shot up from Rs49 billion to Rs66 billion.

Earlier, an inquiry report about the multi-billion project was released that highlighted a multitude of technical errors, faulty design and inept planning that caused heavy losses to the exchequer.