footprints: when cheap ghee loses its utility.

HOW much does a packet of ghee cost? Rs650 a kilo if you ask the well-heeled; Rs300, humiliation and a few hours of waiting for those less fortunate.

The air inside the Diwan-e-Khas Utility Store on Gizri Boulevard is rank with desperation. Tired citizens, both young and old, have lined up for two packets of subsidised ghee. Some sit, some squat; waiting for their turn as the line inches forward. They've been here for hours. Ask any one of them why they're putting up with such misery, and they'll tell you they cannot otherwise put food on the table.

A government announcement on June 9 had promised subsidised ghee at selected Utility Stores across the country at a rate of Rs300 per kg. Each customer was to be allowed two pouches of one kilogramme each, along with some other items - sugar, toothpaste, soap bars, detergent, etc - on subsidised rates.

To avail the subsidy, the purchasers were asked to provide a copy of their CNIC and SIM number to staff. A one-time password (OTP) - sent via SMS to the purchaser's SIM number and to be displayed to the storekeeper - was set as a condition to avoid 'cheating'.

'Only the poor come to the Utility Stores, and they treat us like beggars,' shares Shehnaz, in her late 30s and looking extremely exhausted. A breast cancer patient, she is accompanied by her two young daughters.

'I asked the store staff to open the doors so we could have some air inside, but they refused,' she says, wiping the sweat from her brow. She is waiting for the confirmation message to come through.

'My husband barely makes Rs18,000 a month. My eldest daughter is appearing for her matric exams privately. I do not have money to pay for the little one's fee. I had to take her out. When I heard that cooking oil would be more than Rs400 per litre and petrol prices had also gone up, my heart sank.'

It is not easy getting inside the store. The guards only let 50 people in at a time. They have been instructed to keep the store's glass doors and iron gates locked to avoid any 'incident'.

Back at the cash counter, an air cooler and split AC set at 28 degrees fail miserably to provide relief. Both cashier and customer suffer the sweltering heat and suffocating humidity. The refrigerators - usually stocked with chilled drinks - have been emptied out. It is a cost-cutting measure, a staff member...

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