For Karachi, 2013 will be a record year of extortion demands: Police

Businesses are facing a surge in extortion demands from politically-linked criminal gangs.

Citizens Police Liaison Committee (CPLC), displays one of several extortion demands handed over to them by businessmen based in Karachi, Pakistan's financial hub, June 14, 2013. PHOTO: REUTERS

KARACHI:
One afternoon a stranger called at Muhammad Faizanullah's stationery shop in Karachi and wordlessly handed the man behind the counter two items: a piece of paper with a phone number scrawled on it, and a bullet.

"The letter contained a demand for Rs200,000," Faizanullah, 20, said. "The man said 'Just call this number and pay the amount, otherwise the bullet is meant for you.'"

Businesses in Karachi are facing a surge in extortion demands from criminal gangs, forcing many owners to delay new investment or to relocate their families to escape the sense of insecurity gripping the urban heart of country's economy.

The worsening law and order situation in Karachi, which generates 25% of Pakistan's economic activity, presents one of the many challenges new Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif must overcome to fulfill promises to set the country on a path to faster growth.

An expanding middle class is fueling consumer spending but extortion is hurting confidence among thousands of family-run firms that form the backbone of the economy.

With Ramazan due to start in July, a traditional time for extortionists to come calling, Karachi traders and shopkeepers are braced for what police say will be a record year of demands.

"The extortion racket has blown out of all proportion with the previous year," said Ahmed Chinoy, chief of the Citizen Police Liaison Committee (CPLC), a body set up to help police by providing crime statistics and technical support.

The growing demands reflect the shifting dynamics of a city of 18 million people where new challengers, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban, are locked in an increasingly violent, neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood battle for control.

Figures collected by Chinoy's committee show there were more than 630 extortion complaints registered in Karachi from January to mid-June, compared to 589 in the whole of last year. Most cases were registered by people who have refused to pay.

Police say the actual number of incidents is many times higher since the vast majority of extortion demands go unreported and victims usually decide to pay. There is no way to know the sums involved, but police say payments run into tens of millions of dollars annually and that 2013 will be a record year.

Ten days after the extortionist paid his visit to Faizanullah's shop in the bustling Alam cloth market in December, two men on motorbikes stopped him, his father and uncle as they were driving home from work.

One of the men, a gun visible in his waistband, told Faizanullah: "You people don't seem to understand our polite attitude, we will have to shoot you." They demanded the men's cellphones and roared away.

"We live under constant stress," Faizanullah said. But he has insisted that his family refuse to hand over any cash.

Professionals, not just shopkeepers, are also targets.

When Javed Hanif, a doctor, answered his cellphone in June the caller reeled off a list of Hanif's personal details: his work in a government hospital, the registration number of his car, and preparations for his son's wedding. The man demanded Rs500,000.


Hand grenades

Karachi traders say paying extortion has long been part of the cost of doing business in Karachi.

The police say thugs working for the dominant political party in the city are the biggest extortion menace.

The police have also linked other political parties to extortion, although all parties in Karachi repeatedly deny any involvement.

In the past year, the rules of the game have changed as competing political parties, militant groups and criminal entrepreneurs intent on challenging the extortion monopoly in Karachi have expanded their extortion rackets to fund ever deadlier turf wars, police officials say.

The number of killings in Karachi jumped to more than 2,300 in 2012 from 1,700 the previous year. More than 1,400 murders have already been recorded since the start of this year. The increasing death toll has made it easier for gangs to coerce people into paying money, although there have been few reports of extortion-related killings.

"The extortion racket in Karachi has become an industry," said senior police officer Niaz Ahmed Khosa.

"There are around 50 no-go areas in Karachi, which police cannot enter. Most of the extortion rackets and other crime are being generated from these population pockets."

The police blame much of the increase in extortion on the People's Aman Committee (PAC), based in Lyari, one of the police no-go areas, and which they say is expanding into new parts of the city.

"If some political party says they are not involved in the extortion racket, they are lying," said Majyad Aziz Balagamwala, a former president of the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Police say the TTP has also ramped up extortion operations in Karachi in the past year and has been blamed for attacks that have killed dozens of police.

In spite of the climate of fear, business sentiment is not universally bleak. Retail is booming in Karachi, symbolised by the opening of shopping centres which showcases international brands such as Debenhams and Fatburger.

But nobody is immune from an extortionist's call.

Byram D Avari, the owner of a prominent hotel chain and a well-known figure in Karachi, refused to pay the demands of a caller who threatened to set off hand grenades at his hotels and home. But many others dare not say no.

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