Karachi Crimes: Moving Violations

Posted on September 7, 2009
Filed Under >Naeem Sadiq, Law & Justice, Society
21 Comments
Total Views: 48952

Naeem Sadiq

It is more difficult to detect a suspicious looking person as compared to a suspicious looking vehicle. While the former requires some understanding of psychology and human behaviour, the later is a comparatively simple affair, based on an individual’s ability to recognise if the moving object on the road is in fact a vehicle and if it is carrying or not, a registered number plate.

Just to give you an example, I find most politicians very suspicious looking. That is however not a good reason for me to report against them. However each time I leave my house, I easily recognise a large number of vehicles which have either no number plate or an illegal number plate such as “Zinda Hey BB”, ‘Laghari1’, “Durrani 2″, ‘lashari 3”, “Bhutto 4”, “Junagarh 5”, “MNA’, “MPA”, “Chief of jhalayan tribe”, etc etc.

In one interesting case some half a dozen vehicles owned by the same individual carry the same number plate “VII”. Most of these vehicles belong to ministers, parliamentarians and other powerful law breakers of the land. This blatant breach of law is visible to all those hundreds of policemen, who remain dutifully engaged in stopping the two wheelers for extracting their pound of flesh, but whose eyes are carefully trained not to recognise the violating vehicles of the powerful and unlawful urban militants.

These pictures, taken at random in Karachi in the past few weeks, just to give you a feel of the size of the problem. You will also appreciate that most big crime is conducted by big people in big vehicles. So the trick is to go after the big.

We need to begin by prosecuting the small crimes by big people, so that they can never get to the big crimes they will ultimately do otherwise: no number plate, unlawful number plate, any sign such as MPA, that hides the original number plate, armed guards, black tinted glasses etc. Intensive training should then be organised for police force in vehicular recognition, the design, types and need for number plates, what is an illegal number plate, and how to stop, challan and if required confiscate such vehicles.

On a lighter note, a half decent title, and a suitable packaging such as “Access to Road Justice,” would easily qualify the project for a handsome ADB loan.

If only the police were to enforce this very basic and visible violation of law, its respect would go up many times in the eyes of the public, which may then develop some trust in reporting the events that are actually not visible to the police.

ATP Editors Note: These photographs are from Karachi but such violations are found everywhere and the problem is nationwide.

21 responses to “Karachi Crimes: Moving Violations”

  1. ASAD says:

    Shiraz, actually people can now buy number plates for a long time. This is different. These are people who are NOT buying these numbers, just putting them up!

  2. wsd says:

    In a country where breaking the law rather than abiding by it, is the sign of elitism what else you expect?
    The real question, once again, is not what needs to be done but who will do it………

  3. Shiraz says:

    This is great revenue generating method for local governments.
    Who cares.

    Legalize it, for a given fee, let people put their own names etc on car license plates. As long as these are unique, there is no issue.

  4. Aliya says:

    So, do people really get impressed by this?
    Do you see this and say I wish I could do this too?

  5. Gardezi says:

    Wah yeh hoee na baat!

    I suggest you get readers to keep sending in these pictures from all over the country and you start a rouges picture gallery by just putting these up.

    Great job ATP!

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