Copyright brecorder

What is the cost of a dream? For many women in Pakistan it is often the fare of a bus ticket, the availability of a rickshaw or the safety of the journey. It is a cost too high for countless students and working women forcing their ambitions to stall at the front door. The Government of Sindh is now paying that cost. In a move that swaps political rhetoric for practical solutions, the provincial government has launched the Pink Scooty Scheme providing free scooters to deserving women across the province. This isn’t a symbolic gesture; it’s a strategic investment in shattering the single biggest barrier to female participation in education and the economy mobility. Under the supervision of Senior Minister Sharjeel Inam Memon the initiative is the latest in a series of transport reforms that have already reshaped urban travel with bus services. But this one is different. It is personal, direct and uniquely empowering. At the distribution ceremony the atmosphere was electric. The pink scooties lined up like a fleet of new possibilities represented more than just free transport. They represented trust. The government was trusting women with assets and in turn enabling families to trust that their daughters could travel safely. “The biggest challenge for my daughter’s education was the commute,” shared Khalida Banu whose daughter, a medical student, received a scooty. We were worried about her safety. Today that worry is gone. This is the most direct help our family has ever received,” Banu added. The scheme championed by Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari is deeply rooted in the PPP’s political legacy of female empowerment but is executed with a modern understanding of urban challenges. It acknowledges that while buses are for the masses empowerment often needs a personal touch. Critics may ask why pink. The answer is: simple visibility. In a traffic landscape dominated by men these scooties are a deliberate unmissable statement. They announce that women belong on roads, in public spaces and on their own terms. The data is clear: when women have independent mobility everything changes. School attendance rises, female employment increases and household incomes grow. By handing over the keys to these scooties Sindh isn’t just changing commute routes; it’s charting a new course for its economic and social future The message from Sindh is powerful and clear: if you want to empower a woman, first give her the means to move. The rest as the determined faces of the new owners show she will accomplish on her own. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025