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Blighted Pakistan: Swamped, bruised and resentful

Nahraf

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Blighted Pakistan: Swamped, bruised and resentful | The Economist

Blighted Pakistan
Swamped, bruised and resentful
Terrifying monsoon floods add to a sea of other woes in Pakistan—and intensify pressure on the president
Aug 5th 2010 | Charsadda
201032asp001.jpg


PRESIDENT ASIF ZARDARI may yet regret sticking to a European jaunt this week, just as his countrymen struggled to cope with the worst flooding in Pakistan’s history. As the heaviest monsoon rain in decades swept away the houses of over 140,000 people, killing an estimated 1,500 and affecting over 3m, Mr Zardari was pictured swanning about in sunny France, taking a helicopter trip to his 16th-century chateau in Normandy, and promoting the fledgling political career of his son. In the process he took time to admonish Britain’s new government for daring to point out that elements in Pakistan export terrorism and to scold the West for losing “hearts and minds” in its war in Afghanistan.

Back home, the Pakistani government is fast losing the hearts and minds of many of its own people. In places anger is intense over an inadequate response to the disaster. Neighbours and relief charities, including some with links to Islamic extremists, appear to be doing a better job of helping victims than the national authorities, at least in some blighted areas.

The worst of the flooding, which began late last week, is in the North-West Frontier Province (newly named Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), including the Swat valley, the region that has suffered most from terrorism and the domestic Taliban insurgency. Last year some 2m people were displaced from Swat as a military offensive drove the Pakistani Taliban out of the scenic valley.

Although the scale of the flooding and needs of the victims would have overwhelmed any government, the provincial and national authorities have largely been in a state of paralysis. The prime minister, Yousaf Raza Gilani, who had previously been almost absent, urged his ministers on August 4th to speed up relief efforts. Some 50,000 troops have been deployed, and thousands of stranded people plucked by army helicopters from their rooftops. But the normally well-organised armed forces have not managed to do much beyond rescue and evacuation.

Roads, bridges, electricity and irrigation canals have been ripped away. People reported how, by the time they managed to gather their children, flood water was already waist high, or worse. The United Nations says that 1.8m are in urgent need of water, food and shelter. As ever after such events, an outbreak of waterborne diseases such as cholera is feared. The torrent headed south, following the course of the Indus river, wrecking lives and infrastructure in the heart of Pakistan, Punjab province, and, by-mid week, in Sindh.

“We never imagined that this could happen. We were not prepared for such a big disaster,” confesses Kamran Rehman Khan, a senior official in Charsadda, one of the districts of the north-west that has suffered most. At one construction on a river in Charsadda, built by the British colonial government, more than twice the volume of water of the previous record flood, in 1929, gushed in, snapping off its gates. Mr Khan says that the effect has not only been to wipe out this year’s crops, but because of damage to the irrigation network, next season’s crops will be lost too. The areas worst hit, including Charsadda and the neighbouring district of Nowshera, as well as Punjab, are all big food producers.

Into the void have stepped aid organisations, local and international, as well as Islamic charities, some of which are hardliners. Among the religious outfits active in flood relief is Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a supposedly banned group linked to the horrific November 2008 terrorist attack on civilian targets in Mumbai, India’s commercial capital.

Such groups may now gain in popularity at the expense of the national government, led by the secular Pakistan Peoples Party, and the provincial government of North-West Frontier, run by the Awami National Party, which is also secular. Pakistanis have not been inclined to back religious groups in elections that were held fairly, but the generally hapless and lofty rule of the two secular forces since they came to power early in 2008 is worrying.

The deluge, which was many times the usual monsoon and fell farther north and west than usual, has exposed the lack of investment in water infrastructure, including big dams, much of which was built in the 1960s. The removal of forest cover may also have allowed rainwater to drain faster into the rivers.

Pakistan is lurching from crisis to crisis, with an anaemic economy, religious extremism and an uncertain political dispensation. On August 4th a suicide bomber killed a senior police commander in Peshawar. Earlier in the week a leading politician was shot dead in Karachi, ever an ethnic tinderbox, igniting a frenzy of tit-for-tat killings that left over 70 dead and all but shut the commercial capital. Mr Zardari’s attention is needed back home.
 
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We have seen far worse and we will persevere as always. I am sick and tired of these people making claims that now that the extremist groups are giving out aid the people will become more radicalized. They said the same thing about Kashmir and nothing happen.
 
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Lets hope PPP popularity will also drown in these floods..We need a young and dynamic political force in next elections.

SUKKUR, Pakistan: Pakistan's biggest floods in 80 years threaten to inflict widespread suffering in Sindh province after the unpopular government failed millions of people ravaged by the disaster in other parts of the country.

Raging waters have spread from the northwest to the Punjab agricultural heartland and then down to the southern province of Sindh, as Pakistanis watched villages collapse, thousands of people drown, and their president leave for state visits abroad at the height of the disaster. Officials in Sindh, home to Pakistan's biggest city and commercial hub Karachi, are scrambling to prevent heavy loss of life and more destruction to the mainstay agriculture industry.

Meteorologist Hazrat Mir said flood waters were moving swiftly in north Sindh province and would enter the town of Sukkur by Saturday.

So far, the floods have killed more than 1,600 people and officials said the toll was likely to climb. More than 4 million have also lost their livelihoods and homes.

"What we see is a sea of people in need," said Manuel Bessler, head of the Pakistan office of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

"It is an evolving emergency. We are afraid it will get worse before it gets better," he added. Pakistan's seasonal monsoon rains normally continue through the month of August.

The government's lacklustre response has reinforced the view among Pakistanis that civilian administrations, perceived as corrupt and weak, are unable to handle big crises, leaving the army to step in. The military has ruled Pakistan for more than half of its turbulent history.

"There is nothing but just water all around us," said a Reuters cameraman who traveled for several miles by boat with army troops just southeast of the town of Sukkur.

Children, their homes swept away, helped parents to set up temporarily shelters of clothes and plastic sheeting on a roadside in Sukkar, bunkering down to wait for rescue, or aid. Elderly villagers puffed on traditional water pipes in an attempt to regain some normalcy.

"I've lost my house, food. We have nothing. Nobody has come to us," said villager Ali Nawaz. About 350,000 people have been evacuated from low-lying areas of the Indus river basin in Sindh.



CASH CROPS AT RISK

President Asif Ali Zardari, already squeezed by a Taleban insurgency, chronic power cuts and many other critical issues, is on the political defensive once again after his decision to travel abroad during the catastrophe drew fierce criticism.

The United States wants Zardari's government to bring political and economic stability to Pakistan, an ally it believes can help ease a Taleban insurgency in Afghanistan, where an American troop pullout starts next summer.

Unable to rely on authorities, Pakistanis must innovate to survive, using makeshift, hand-operated pulleys to move people on wooden planks above rivers where waters brought down bridges.

Others simply don't have the energy.

In Sanawa village in Punjab, a Pakistani soldier carried an elderly man to a helicopter. A big crowd waited around a nearby mosque, some waist-deep in muddy water, hoping for relief.

Authorities in Sindh said treacherous conditions were hampering evacuation efforts, but added that villagers were reluctant to leave their homes.

Determining the overall costs of the floods may not be possible until authorities survey vast areas where raging waters have swallowed up entire villages.

In a country that heavily relies on foreign aid, this disaster is likely to have a crippling effect on the the economy.

At least 1.3 million acres of crops have been destroyed in the Punjab agricultural heartland alone, relief officials said.

Huge agriculture losses would mean Pakistan will have to spend more to import cotton for its crucial textile industry, as well as sugar, and will have less rice to export.

"The body of water going south is affecting a large area that is highly-densely populated. It is the food basket of Pakistan, so it will have long-term effects," said Oscar Butragueno of the United Nation's Children's Fund (UNICEF).
 
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Politicians and bureaucrats must be licking their chops, now there will be even more free foreign tax payer money they can scheme over -- a senior official admits that "they" did not "think" sucha event as these floods were possible in Pakistan, a country known for it's hydro potential - is that rich or what?

Anyway, focus on the free money that honest and hard working persons in foreign countries have paid --- only to have it finally end up in the pockets of Pakistani politicians and bureaucrats. All the while a degenerate plans to continue "dynasty" the people of Pakistan will never condone.
 
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Man i feel so sad and helpless for the innocent and the poor.......:cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry:
 
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This is in Urdu but explains some of the water management politics going on ground;

حفاظتی بندوں کا ٹوٹنا ۔۔عدالتی تحقیقات کا مطالبہ

سیلاب کے دنوں میں آبپاشی کے تعمیراتی سٹرکچر ، بیراجوں اور ہیڈ ورکس کو بچانے کیلئے نہروں میں شگاف ڈال کر دریائی پانی کی سطح کم کرنے کی روایت پرانی ہے لیکن اس سال جنوبی پنجاب کے سیلاب زدہ علاقوں میں یہ تاثر عام ہے کہ حالیہ سیلاب کے دوران طبقہ اشرافیہ کو نقصانات سے بچانے کیلئے جان بوجھ کر نہروں میں ایسی جگہوں پر شگاف ڈالے گئے جس کی وجہ سے سیلابی پانی کا رخ غریب بستیوں کی طرف موڑ دیا گیا ۔

بستی شہیداں میں موجود محمد اشرف کہتے ہیں کہ دریائے چناب سے نکلنے والی ایک نہرمیں شگاف ڈالنے کے فیصلے کے خلاف مقامی لوگ مزاحمت کر رہے تھے کہ اچانک رات کے اندھیرے میں نہر توڑ دی گئی اور علاقے میں یہ تاثر پھیلا دیا گیا کہ پانی کی زیادتی کی وجہ سے یہ نہر ٹوٹ گئی ہے ۔

اسلم نامی ایک اور شہری کہتے ہیں کہ اگر اس حفاظتی بند کی بجائے ڈیرہ غازی خان کا حفاظتی بند توڑا جاتا تو پانی پہاڑوں سے ٹکرا کر واپس دریا میں آ جاتا اور غریب بستیوں میں جانی اور مالی نقصانات نہ ہوتے۔

مقامی صحافی عمر دراز کا کہنا ہے کہ ایک اعلیٰ حکومتی شخصیت اور ڈیرہ غازی خان کے سرداروں کی فصلوں کو بچانے کیلئے کوٹ ادو ، گجرات اور محمود کوٹ جیسے کئی قصبوں کی قربانی دی گئی ہے ۔

?????? ????? ?? ????? ???????? ??????? ?? ?????? | ????? ????? | Deutsche Welle | 06.08.2010
 
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