
Live chicken missing from shops despite price revision
Despite official efforts to regulate market prices, consumers faced rampant overcharging across the city during the past week as vendors continued to ignore government-issued price lists and failed to comply with the mandated sale of live chicken at fixed rates.
The Punjab government had revised the price of live chicken for the first time in over two and a half months, reducing it by Rs13 per kilogram and setting the official rate between Rs384 and Rs398 per kg. However, live chicken was not available for sale in the city.
Instead, sellers offered only chicken meat, charging between Rs590 and Rs700 per kg, while boneless chicken was sold at prices ranging from Rs900 to Rs1,050 per kg, significantly above the approved rates.
The price violations extended to essential vegetables and fruits, many of which were sold at double or even triple the official prices. Potatoes (A-grade), officially priced at Rs45 to Rs50 per kg, were sold for Rs80 to Rs100. Lower grade potatoes were also priced far higher in the market than the official rates. Onions (A-grade), with a fixed price of Rs40 to Rs45 per kg, were sold for Rs80 to Rs100, while B- and C-grade varieties also saw inflated rates.
Tomatoes saw an official reduction of Rs20 per kg, bringing the price of A-grade tomatoes to Rs36 to Rs40 per kg. Yet in the markets, they were sold at Rs80 to Rs90 per kg. Garlic (local), priced at Rs152 to Rs160 per kg, was available for Rs150 to Rs250, while the GI variety, fixed at Rs343 to Rs360, was sold between Rs400 and Rs500. Chinese garlic, officially Rs353 to Rs370 per kg, reached Rs500, and the Harani variety, fixed at Rs220 to Rs230, was sold for up to Rs400.
Both Thai and Chinese ginger, fixed at Rs353 to Rs370 per kg after a Rs20 reduction, were sold between Rs450 and Rs500.
Other vegetables saw similar discrepancies. Farm cucumbers, fixed at Rs42 to Rs45 per kg, were sold for Rs60 to Rs100. Brinjal, officially Rs47 to Rs50 per kg, was sold at Rs80 to Rs120. Spinach, with an unchanged official price of Rs23 to Rs25, was sold for Rs50 to Rs60.
Capsicum, cauliflower, cabbage, and carrots also showed large price gaps.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Express Tribune
15 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Man held for blackmailing woman
The National Cybercrime Investigation Agency (NCCIA) has arrested a man accused of blackmailing a woman using a compromising video and extorting over Rs700,000 in cash from her, officials said on Friday. According to an official statement, a case was registered on the complaint of the victim, who alleged that the accused, identified as Ghulam Kazim, had secretly recorded an inappropriate video of her. He allegedly used the footage to threaten and blackmail her, demanding both money and illicit favours under the threat of releasing the video on social media, she added. The woman told investigators that Kazim had already extorted Rs700,000 from her in hush money. Acting on the complaint, the NCCIA arrested the suspect during a raid on Autobahn Road in Hyderabad. The agency also seized his mobile phone, which reportedly contained incriminating data, including the video used for blackmail. The accused, a resident of Sobho Dero in district Khairpur, was taken into custody and an FIR was registered against him. Officials said further investigations are under way to determine if the accused was involved in similar offences against other victims.


Express Tribune
15 hours ago
- Express Tribune
CM outlines fiscal, development agenda
Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah outlined a fiscal and development agenda for the province while highlighting serious financial challenges and federal shortfalls. Addressing a post-budget press conference on Saturday, the CM criticised the federal government for failing to meet its financial commitments, revealing that Sindh was informed just one day before the budget presentation that Rs105 billion in expected funds would be withheld. Sindh has received Rs1,478.5 billion from the divisible pool since last year, but Rs422.3 billion remains outstanding. He expressed hope that the withheld amount would be disbursed by the end of June. Despite being under an IMF programme that demands strict fiscal discipline, the Sindh government will allocate Rs590 billion for development projects this year, with a total budget of Rs3.45 trillion, Rs1 trillion for development and Rs2.15 trillion for current expenditures. Notably, Rs1.1 trillion is earmarked for salaries and pensions, leading to salary increases of 12 per cent for lower-grade employees and 10 per cent for higher grades. Sectoral budget increases include an 18 per cent rise in education funding and an 11 per cent increase in health. Funding for agriculture, irrigation, and local government projects has also seen significant boosts. Furthermore, Rs236 billion has been allocated for infrastructure projects in Karachi, including public-private partnership initiatives. CM Shah highlighted Sindh's social welfare achievements, particularly in housing for flood victims, with 500,000 homes built and another 850,000 under construction, totalling 1.3 million. To enhance rural living standards, the CM announced a Rs600-billion-project for rural water and sanitation, benefiting 4.5 million villagers. Regarding taxation, Murad noted that no new taxes were introduced in the budget, with some taxes eliminated or reduced, including the abolition of the entertainment tax and cuts to restaurant taxes. The stamp duty on third-party vehicle insurance has been reduced to Rs50, with a drop in the insurance tax from 15 per cent to five per cent. To modernise governance, the Sindh government is digitising land records through block chain for easier access. The CM claimed that free laser levellers will be provided to small farmers, with subsidies for larger ones, alongside the implementation of cluster farming technology. The CM said that improvements in education and health include the establishment of 34,000 new caste centres and expanded support for persons with disabilities. Cognitive Remediation The CM outlined the K-4 water project structure, where the federal government is responsible for sourcing water from Keenjhar Lake, while the Sindh government manages distribution and has allocated necessary funds. A total of Rs20 billion is earmarked for the K-4 feeder, alongside plans for a costly five-million-gallon desalination plant. The CM also noted 20,000 to 25,000 job vacancies in grades I to IV, with plans for recruitment via IBA-administered tests for BPS-V to VII and filling higher Grade 16 positions. The CM mentioned Sindh's conditions for supporting the federal budget, emphasising equitable distribution of development schemes and the detrimental cut of university funding from Rs4 billion to Rs2 billion, which has sparked protests. On the critical Sukkur-Hyderabad Motorway, the CM expressed concern over the halving of federal funding from Rs30 billion to Rs15 billion. The CM emphasised that major projects are not included in the Federal Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP) and criticised the 18 per cent tax on solar panels as unjust. He warned that the Pakistan Peoples Party would not support the federal budget if unresolved.


Express Tribune
20 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Boeing resumes China deliveries
Listen to article Boeing delivered a new 787-9 aircraft to China's Juneyao Airlines on Saturday, Chinese media outlet Yicai reported, as trade tensions between Beijing and Washington ease. The delivery comes two days after a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner with 242 people on board crashed in a fireball shortly after takeoff in western India. The US aerospace giant had suspended new aircraft deliveries to China in April as President Donald Trump's tariff war escalated between the world's two largest economies. Boeing said at the end of May that deliveries would resume this month after the tariffs were temporarily scaled back for 90 days. China and the US concluded two days of negotiations in London on Tuesday to resolve key trade issues in the two superpowers' bruising tariff war, where negotiators from Washington and Beijing agreed on a framework covering tariff rates.