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‘Neglect is real, but so is our trash problem’: Zara Tareen on Karachi floods

‘Neglect is real, but so is our trash problem’: Zara Tareen on Karachi floods

The actor pointed out that while poor governance fuels the city’s yearly flooding, Karachiites’ own littering habits also choke drains and worsen the crisis.
21 Aug, 2025

As Karachi reels from yet another round of “unprecedented” monsoon flooding that claimed lives, paralysed the city, and left thousands stranded this week, actor Zara Tareen has taken to Instagram to point out an often-overlooked factor in the crisis: the role of citizens themselves.

In a detailed note on her stories, Tareen acknowledged the government’s neglect, and crumbling infrastructure but stressed that the city’s residents are not blameless. “As much as there is a genuine neglect issue when it comes to Karachi and its infrastructure, there’s another thing that I notice without fail every year,” she wrote.

“Anyone who gets on camera from various neighbourhoods complaining about the city management while showing their streets never ever talks about the visible mounds of trash they throw in those streets all year long. Your filth contributes to blocked drainage systems as well. Keep your damn streets clean all year long instead of just pointing fingers once a year when you’re also the cause of a lot of this issue yourself.”

The actor described how garbage is routinely tossed from balconies, terraces and windows into neighbours’ homes and back alleys, turning them into “self-selected designated areas for trash that collects for years.”

She also criticised the apathy of those who avoid using dumpsters even when they are available. “I’ve seen in Clifton that even when a trash chute is provided by the building, most people can’t be bothered to put it in there; they just leave it outside of it for it to rot,“ she wrote.

Tareen noted how these piles of rubbish attract stray animals, which are then killed instead of the areas being cleaned. Calling the practice both “frustrating and embarrassing,” she asked bluntly, “Why are we such dirty people?”

At a glance, her words, too, might feel like gaslighting for tax-paying citizens who, year after year, expect their money be used to build a functional drainage system to solve the city’s flooding problem once and for all. But as triggered as we may get, Tareen is not wrong for reminding us of our civic duty of keeping our neighbourhoods, and, in turn, our city clean.

While climate change, poor planning and government mismanagement remain central to Karachi’s flooding woes, everyday practices of littering and disregard for public spaces aggravate the problem. Choked drains cannot carry water away, leaving even so-called ‘developed’ neighbourhoods like Clifton and DHA submerged. This is not a problem in one or two areas — it’s a problem across the city.

Karachi’s annual monsoon disaster is often framed solely as a failure of governance — and it undeniably is — but Tareen’s comments highlight the shared responsibility that comes with living in the metropolis. A functioning city requires both state accountability and civic responsibility. Without the latter, the cycle of rain, waste and waterlogging is bound to repeat, year after year.

Comments

Mahmood Aug 21, 2025 12:14pm
Ironic ... Water water everywhere, but not a clean drop of water to drink for this city. Trash everywhere, but no garbage collection, disposal or sanitization process in sight.
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Falcon1 Aug 21, 2025 12:19pm
Pakistan's major problem: Lack of education and ignorance. Misuse of technology. Instead of watching, downloading song and dance videos, porn or useless Tiktok photos, use YouTube at least to learn some skills, learn how rest of the civilized world manages to keep their cities, streets and neighborhoods clean and organized. More importantly, try to be a better version of what you were yesteday.
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Muahammad Hassan Wali Aug 21, 2025 12:23pm
It took me 7 hours to reach home from FTC to Maymar, all because of waterlogging and road blockages due to the absence of a proper drainage system. The main choke points were Nursery, Najeeb Center, PTV, Stadium Road, SSGC, Essa Colony, and Gharibabad. Every single location was stuck, not because of rain intensity alone, but because there is simply no planned drainage. Take Essa Colony as an example: the Lyari Expressway ramp was filled with nearly two feet of water, yet just 50 meters away lies a natural drain (nadi). Why has the government never constructed a proper outlet there? This is not just mismanagement; it is incompetence. Yes, garbage worsens the condition of inner-city lanes, but the collapse of main roads during rain is purely because of the lack of basic infrastructure. Year after year, the same roads drown, the same bottlenecks paralyze the city, and citizens suffer endlessly while no sustainable solution is implemented.
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Taj Ahmad Aug 21, 2025 12:39pm
Everyone of us are responsible for this mess in Karachi, if we do the right from the beginning and disposed off our trashed on a daily basis in garbage containers and city government do their part by picking up garbage on daily basis from the streets. This rain water has no place to go and causing all this mess in Karachi. Let’s KMC and citizens of Karachi work together and help each other’s from now on.
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Howdy Aug 21, 2025 12:49pm
The citizens of Karachi are to be blamed as well since they are not standing up for their rights and expect the government to take corrective measures when we all know how corrupt they are. We are to be blamed because of letting such incompetent people be in power.
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Dr. Salaria, Aamir Ahmad Aug 21, 2025 02:12pm
Old and bad habits die hard.
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Guru Aug 21, 2025 03:53pm
Nothing is going to happen
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mazhar Aug 21, 2025 05:39pm
Karachi or any other city has same problem, garbage disposal starts from kitchen sink and toilets, drains from house to first drain point in the street is the next and than the main drains, which again are open on many places they collect garbage. Millions of karachites when they are in the streets, restaurants, and all kind of mobile food serving places keep throwing garbage on streets and nalas, Natural drains of the cities are also destroyed as area is developing. In advanced countries there are laws and they are strictly enforced for garbage disposal, laws in our country may exist but almost everybody tend to break them.
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TKhan Aug 21, 2025 06:34pm
Cent percent agree! The mindset in PK is the world is my trash bin. Only keep my house clean and throw the rest on neighbors house or street. Just the other day, a mother told a kid to throw sweet wrapper to the bin, he instead just threw it right in front of the shop. Schools should teach them this, mothers also and our Govt must enforce a law that all media channels run public awareness clips during prime time, otherwise revoke their licenses . These messages could be about traffic rules, cleanliness, health etc. In the late 80s and 90s PTV used to run these kind of clips.
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Taha Lateef Aug 21, 2025 08:41pm
"At a glance, her words, too, might feel like gaslighting for tax-paying citizens who, year after year, expect their money be used to build a functional drainage system to solve the city’s flooding problem once and for all." The comment by Zara Tareen is no way is gaslighting. The citizens of Karachi have to be mindful of their civic duties. If we do not use the infrastructure the way it is meant to be, even the best developed infrastructure will struggle.
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Ehsan Aug 21, 2025 08:59pm
We expect everything from the government, but when it comes to our responsibilities, we totally ignore them
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HUSSEINALLY j hASHAM Aug 21, 2025 10:14pm
And, whose job is to remove thrash?
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Abid Aug 22, 2025 02:07am
She is very right. We as a nation seem to lack civic sense as it’s not someone else’s responsibility to clean up after us but our own.
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Laila Aug 22, 2025 02:01pm
I assure you change IF a couple of millions of pakistanis will camp outside ministries, parliament and government building. Do sit ins like the Egyptians did on Tahrir Square during the Arab Spring revolution. Don't budge. Demand solutions, accountability and action. No empty promises can be accepted. Without sacrifice and struggle, no change can happen. Force those in power to their knees.
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