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Politics

Sindh scraps BRT Red Line construction contract, plans emergency re-award

Last updated: April 22, 2026 12:35 pm
Aqil Rahman
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The Sindh government has cancelled a key construction contract for Karachi’s long-delayed Bus Rapid Transit Red Line and says the work will now be re-awarded on an emergency basis, according to Senior Minister Sharjeel Inam Memon. The move comes after fresh disruption on the project’s University Road section, where work had already slowed sharply amid a dispute involving the contractor.

The decision matters because the Red Line is not some side project. It is one of Karachi’s biggest transport schemes, designed as a 26.6-kilometre corridor meant to serve roughly 1.5 million people, with expected daily ridership of around 350,000 passengers. Official Sindh government material describes it as a zero-emission mass transit project, while the provincial transport department says TransKarachi is the implementing agency for the scheme.

The latest contract cancellation appears tied to worsening performance on Lot 2, the section stretching from Mosamiyat to Numaish, which has repeatedly run into trouble. Recent reports said progress on that stretch had slowed to a crawl, reviving criticism over one of Karachi’s most disruptive infrastructure projects. The same section had also faced financial and contractual friction in the past, including stoppages that added to public frustration along one of the city’s busiest corridors.

Memon had already signalled in recent weeks that the Red Line remained under pressure. In February, he said the project could take another year or more to complete, even as the government pushed to finish side roads and clear parts of the route causing daily hardship for commuters. Around the same time, he also acknowledged that the scheme had come close to suspension at one stage because of rising costs, though the government decided to continue it in what he described as the larger public interest.

That background helps explain why the emergency re-award is politically significant. The government is trying to show it still intends to rescue the project rather than let another contractor dispute drag on for months. Still, cancelling and re-awarding a major civil works contract is rarely simple. Even when framed as an emergency measure, it can create another round of administrative, legal and mobilisation delays before visible work resumes at full pace. That last point is an inference based on the project’s record of repeated stoppages and revised timelines.

The Red Line has long been promoted as a flagship urban transport upgrade for Karachi, backed by the Sindh government with support from international financiers including the Asian Development Bank and other co-financiers. Official Sindh material places the project cost at $503 million, while project documentation linked through official channels shows earlier cost estimates in the same range, underscoring how closely watched the scheme is by both government and lenders.

For Karachi residents, though, the story is less about financing structures and more about the daily mess on the ground. Years of roadworks, diversions and half-finished stretches have turned parts of the corridor into a symbol of delay. The government’s latest gamble is that scrapping the troubled contract and rushing a fresh award will finally restart momentum on a project that was supposed to ease commuting, not become part of the problem.

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