Motorcycle subsidy fails to deliver relief
While implementation has commenced following the government's announcement of a reduction in petrol prices, the promised relief for motorcycle riders, however, has yet to materialise.
The unchanged price of diesel has prevented any reduction in passenger and goods transport fares.
Goods transport operators have reportedly increased freight charges by a staggering 60 to 65 per cent, significantly raising the cost of transporting essential food items and daily necessities.
In the twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad, flour dealers have fixed transportation charges at Rs20 per 15-kilogramme bag for delivery to grocery shops, tandoors, and hotels, while the carriage cost for a sack of flour or refined flour (maida) has been set at Rs80.
Traders, shopkeepers, and citizens have widely rejected the government's petrol price cut, describing it as "a drop in the ocean." At petrol stations, many motorists expressed anger, alleging that the government had initially increased prices excessively to "test public tolerance" before partially rolling them back.
The controversy follows a nationwide outcry after the federal government had set the petrol price at Rs458 per litre. Subsequently, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif took immediate notice and reduced the price by Rs80 per litre, bringing it down to Rs378.
Petrol pumps have since implemented the revised rates, yet public dissatisfaction persists, with many rejecting even this reduction as insufficient.
The announced Rs100 relief for motorcycle riders has also come under criticism. Citizens argue that the standard operating procedures (SOPs) required to avail the concession are so complex that ordinary riders are unable to benefit from it in practice.
Meanwhile, the decision not to reduce diesel prices has deprived the general public of any meaningful relief, as public transport vehicles predominantly run on diesel, which remains at record-high levels. As a result, fares have not decreased, with stop-to-stop charges reportedly reaching Rs60.
Nasir Abbasi, a Bykea motorcycle rider, remarked that the SOPs attached to the Rs100 subsidy are so impractical that the concession period may expire before applicants can fulfil the requirements.
Separately, Tariq Mahmood Sajid Awan, President of the District Bar Association, announced his intention to challenge the price increase in the Rawalpindi Bench of the High Court.