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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Campus bikes ‘liberate’ Pakistan’s female students

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ISLAMABAD: For Senam Khan, one of the founders of a bike sharing scheme on a Pakistani university campus, the start-up has had unexpected — and welcome — consequences.


The aim of the five young entrepreneurs who conceived the sharing scheme, named CYKIQ, was to solve the problem of covering long distances on the National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST) campus in the capital Islamabad.


But as well as convenience for students, CYKIQ has helped campus society “accept that women are equal to men and their modes of transport should also be the same,” said 21-year-old Khan, in the final year of her industrial design degree at NUST.


CYKIQ “provided all of us a simple solution to our most dire problem — long walking distances and short attendances,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.


In a conservative nation where women are conspicuously absent in public spaces, and the sight of a woman on a bike is a rarity, more than half of CYKIQ’s customers are women.


Hitching rides in cars is common for male students, but, according to another CYKIQ co-founder, Ans Shahzad, “females are hesitant to sit in cars and or jump on motorbikes with their male counterparts”.


Female students at NUST have embraced the scheme, launched earlier this year, in which bikes can be booked and returned through a mobile app.


“CYKIQ is a saviour for me in this scorching heat; it’s reasonable, easy and fun,” said 21-year-old Umme Hani, also an industrial design student and living in NUST’s hostel.


There are 50 imported bikes strewn across 10 locations where cycles can be parked for easy access without the need for elaborate docking stations — covering an area of nearly 1,000 acres of campus — including the hostel, canteen, classrooms and administration block.


The response has been so overwhelming, especially from women, that by mid October, 250 more bikes will be added.


“Uber for bicycles,” is how Shahzad, a 23-year-old engineer and one of the five founders, described the scheme.


“It took us nearly three years of working all days and nights to fine tune it to perfection,” he said. It is the first such venture at a Pakistani college, although at least 33 universities in the United States have some kind of bike sharing programme.


Syeda Farvah Sameen, an MBA student, said she finds biking “liberating”. — Reuters


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