Students at the University of Karachi are running late for classes as they are stopped at the entrance for amplified security checks after an attack on April 26 in which a woman suicide bomber killed three Chinese teachers.
Classes were back on Monday (May 9) after campus was closed for two days after the attack. Eid holidays followed. The student body is 46,000 strong and the campus has at least 4,000 faculty members other than administrative and support staff.
But students returned to find that everyone is being funneled through one single functional walk-through gate at every entrance. Guards are sweeping over them with metal detectors.
Every student’s bag is opened and checked and male students are being subjected to body searches. All students must show their university credentials to enter campus.
This has caused chaos, long queues and traffic bottlenecks outside the gates.
Students - most of whom use public transport - are upset at being made to wait for hours in the name of security.
“First we have to wait to get inside the university. Then we have to walk to our class. Then we get marked late for not making it on time,” said one student waiting at the gate of the sprawling campus spread over 1,279 acres.
Following logjams outside the gates and entrance on Monday and the resulting protests, acting Vice Chancellor Professor Nasira Khatoon visited one of the entrances on Tuesday to ensure there were no unnecessary delays.