Karachi Water and Sewerage BoardThe Karachi Water and Sewerage Board (KWSB) also known as the Emirates Sewage Board is responsible for production, transmission and distribution of potable water to the citizens of Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. HistoryKarachi Joint Water Board constituted in 1953 was the first body which was created to expand the Karachi water supply system from the Indus River. It was transferred to the KDA in 1957 after its formation. Since the KMC handled some of the affairs of retailing and distribution of treated water and other responsibilities which were co-shared with 22 other separate agencies, there was a need to unify all of the functions under one body. Hence, in 1981, the Karachi Water Management Board (KWMB) was created, which was given both distribution and cost recovery powers. KMC was still responsible for its revenue and sewerage maintenance, hence KWMB was upgraded to KWSB in 1983 under the Mayor, Abdul Sattar Afghani, on the advice of World Bank. It was placed under the Government of Sindh, but its board of directors was mayor of Karachi.[clarification needed] In 1996, KWSB was separated from KMC and was brought back under mayoral supervision in 2001[1] until it was separated again under the new SLGO 2013 act.[2] Corruption and mismanagementSome members of the Board (along with local police and local politicians) have been accused and suspected in multiple corruption and bribery cases, contributing to low-income areas of the city often being in a state of chronic water crisis.[3][4][5][6][7] In May 2022, local Jamaat-e-Islami chief Hafiz Naeemur Rehman estimated that based on official records, up to 40 per cent of water volume was stolen or wasted[8] (with the KWSB estimating between one-quarter and one-third),[9][10] and experts have estimated that demand in Karachi is nearly double the existing supply.[10][11] Hundreds of hydrants have operated illegally with the support of influential people, with members of the anti-theft cell of the Board established to take action against the illegal hydrants suspected of helping facilitate their operation.[12] Some officials previously arrested for corruption have also later been re-appointed to positions within the Board.[13] Furthermore, as of the 2000s, gangs have set up their own lines to tap into or siphon off an estimated 10 million gallons of water per day from pipes to hydrants and tankers for profit,[10] with unofficial tankers stealing around Rs57 billion worth of water per year.[9] In some cases, official water distributions to certain areas of the city are so low (only providing access to water once or twice a month) that the illegal sources or exorbitantly-priced water from private vendors (which can cost 30 times that which the government charges) are the only way for the local population to get reliable access.[14][15][9][11][16] Aging parts of the system also cannot be renovated due to a lack of funds, and despite a growing population, as of 2016, no new pipeline had been installed in a quarter-century.[9] See alsoReferences
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