Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article (merged)

I strongly suggest guppies read all the way to the end, both success and difficulties faced by Pakistan.

Oh BTW nay sayers please keep out we know 911 yada yada yada, Amreeka yada yada yada, aid yada yada yada is an old theme that simply don’t cut it.

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=316989&area=/insight/insight__international/

Pakistan: the ‘poor neighbour’

William Dalrymple

22 August 2007 11:59

** A mid all the hoopla surrounding the 60th anniversary of Indian independence, almost nothing has been heard from Pakistan, which also turned 60 recently. Nothing, that is, if you discount the low rumble of suicide bombings, the noise of automatic weapons storming the Red Mosque and the creak of slowly collapsing dictatorships.

In the world’s media, never has the contrast between the two countries appeared so stark: one is widely perceived as the next great superpower; the other written off as a failed state, a world centre of Islamic radicalism, the hiding place of Osama bin Laden and the only United States ally that Washington appears ready to bomb.

On the ground, of course, the reality is different and first-time visitors to Pakistan are almost always surprised by the country’s visible prosperity. There is far less poverty on show in Pakistan than in India, fewer beggars, and much less desperation. In many ways the infrastructure of Pakistan is much more advanced: there are better roads and airports, and more reliable electricity. Middle-class Pakistani houses are often bigger and better appointed than their equivalents in India.

Moreover, the Pakistani economy is undergoing a construction and consumer boom similar to India’s, with growth rates of 7%, and what is currently the fastest-rising stock market in Asia. You can see the effects everywhere: in new shopping centres and restaurant complexes, in the hoardings for the latest laptops and iPods, in the cranes and building sites, in the endless stores selling cellphones: in 2003 the country had fewer than three million cellphone users; today there are almost 50-million.

Mohsin Hamid, author of the Booker long-listed novel The Reluctant Fundamentalist, wrote about this change after a recent visit: having lived abroad as a banker in New York and London, he returned home to find the country unrecognisable. He was particularly struck by “the incredible new world of media that had sprung up, a world of music videos, fashion programmes, independent news networks, cross-dressing talkshow hosts, religious debates, and stock-market analysis”.

I knew, of course, that the government of Pervez Musharraf had opened the media to private operators. But I had not until then realised how profoundly things had changed. Not just television, but private radio stations and newspapers have also flourished in Pakistan over the past few years. The result is an unprecedented openness. Young people are speaking and dressing differently. Views both critical and supportive of the government are voiced with breathtaking frankness in an atmosphere remarkably lacking in censorship. Public space, the common area for culture and expression that had been so circumscribed in my childhood, has now been vastly expanded. The Vagina Monologues was recently performed on stage to standing ovations.

Little of this is reported in the Western press, which prefers its sterotypes simple: India-successful; Pakistan-failure. Nevertheless, despite the economic boom, there are three serious problems that Pakistan will have to sort out if it is to continue to keep up with its giant neighbour – or continue as a coherent state at all. **

One is the fundamental flaw in its political system. Democracy has never thrived here, at least in part because landowning remains almost the only social base from which politicians can emerge. In general, the educated middle class – which in India seized control in 1947, emasculating the power of its landowners – is in Pakistan still largely excluded from the political process. As a result, in many of the more backward parts of Pakistan the local feudal zamindar can expect his people to vote for his chosen candidate. Such loyalty can be enforced. Many of the biggest zamindars have private prisons and most have private armies.

In such an environment, politicians tend to come to power more through deals done within Pakistan’s small elite than through the will of the people. Behind Pakistan’s swings between military governments and democracy lies a surprising continuity of interests: to some extent, the industrial, military, landowning and bureaucratic elites are now all related and look after one another. The current rumours of secret negotiations going on between Musharraf and Benazir Bhutto, the exiled former prime minister, are typical of the way that the civil and military elites have shared power with relatively little recourse to the electorate.

The second major problem that the country faces is linked with the absence of real democracy, and that is the many burgeoning jihadi and Islamist groups. For 25 years, the military and Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), have been the paymasters of myriad mujahideen groups. These were intended for selective deployment first in Afghanistan and then Kashmir, where they were intended to fight proxy wars for the army, at low cost and low risk. Twenty-eight years after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, however, the results have been disastrous, filling the country with thousands of armed but now largely unemployed jihadis, millions of modern weapons, and a proliferation of militant groups.

While the military and intelligence community in Pakistan may have once believed that it could use jihadis for its own ends, the Islamists have followed their own agendas. As the recent upheavals in Islamabad have dramatically shown, they have now brought their struggle on to the streets and into the heart of the country’s politics.

The third major issue facing the country is its desperate education crisis. No problem in Pakistan casts such a long shadow over its future as the abject failure of the government to educate more than a fraction of its own people: at the moment, a mere 1,8% of Pakistan’s GDP is spent on government schools. The statistics are dire: 15% of these government schools are without a proper building; 52% without a boundary wall; 71% without electricity.

This was graphically confirmed by a survey conducted two years ago by the former Pakistan cricket captain turned politician, Imran Khan, in his own constituency of Mianwali. His research showed that 20% of government schools supposed to be functioning in his constituency did not exist at all, a quarter had no teachers and 70% were closed. No school had more than half of the teachers it was meant to have. Of those that were just about functioning, many had children of all grades crammed into a single room, often sitting on the floor in the absence of desks.

This education gap is the most striking way in which Pakistan is lagging behind India, where 65% of the population is literate and the number rises every year: only last year, the Indian education system received a substantial boost of state funds.

But in Pakistan, the literacy figure is under half (it is currently 49%) and falling: instead of investing in education, Musharraf’s military government is spending money on a cripplingly expensive fleet of American F-16s for its air force. As a result, out of 162-million Pakistanis, 83-million adults of 15 years and above are illiterate. Among women the problem is worse still: 65% of all female adults are illiterate. As the population rockets, the problem gets worse.

The virtual collapse of government schooling has meant that many of the country’s poorest people have no option but to place their children in the madrasa system, where they are guaranteed an ultra-conservative but free education, often subsidised by religious endowments provided by the Wahhabi Saudis.

Altogether there are now an estimated 800 000 to one million students enrolled in Pakistan’s madrasas. Though the link between the madrasas and al-Qaeda is often exaggerated, it is true that madrasa students have been closely involved in the rise of the Taliban and the growth of sectarian violence; it is also true that the education provided by many madrasas is often wholly inadequate to equip children for modern life in a civil society.

Sixty years after its birth, India faces a number of serious problems – not least the growing gap between rich and poor, the criminalisation of politics, and the flourishing Maoist and Naxalite groups that have recently proliferated in the east of the country. But Pakistan’s problems are on a different scale; indeed, the country finds itself at a crossroads. As Jugnu Mohsin, the publisher of the Lahore-based Friday Times, put it recently: “After a period of relative quiet, for the first time in a decade, we are back to the old question: it is not just whither Pakistan, but will Pakistan survive?” On the country’s 60th birthday, the answer is by no means clear. – © Guardian News & Media Ltd

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

I am glad that people are see the actual realities i.e. a growing economy, a wealthier populous and declining poverty. Thanks for posting Abdali. :k:

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

this face of Pakistan always not reported well in world.

thanks for good read, tired of reading about motherland always negetive only.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

We’re collecting almost $14 billion in taxes now - it was barely $5 billion when Musharraf took over.

http://thenews.jang.com.pk/updates.asp?id=28049

**FBR collects taxes beyond target **

The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), during the financial year of 2006-07, collected taxes of Rs.11,400 million more than the target. According to the FBR’s quarterly analysis, taxes of Rs.835 billion were collected during the previous year which are 18.6 per cent more compared to 2005-06. Besides getting taxes more than the target for the fifth consecutive year, the rate of taxes also rose to 9.7 per cent during 2006-07.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

My regard for Darlymple’s works further increased! :k:

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

That is very good news! Now only if we can get NAB working, we can get even more taxes. With likes of Miandad paying more taxes than Nawaz Sharif/Benazir (historically speaking) tax collection was really sham.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Forex Reserves up from just $1 billion to nearly $16 billion.
Tax revenues up from just $ 5 billion to nearly $14 billion.
FDI up from under $1 billion to $8.4 billion.
Remittances up from less than $0.5 billion to $5 billion.
GDP has doubled from $70 billion to $140 billion.
GDP Growth rates averaging 7% over the last 4 years (up from just 3% in 99).

BB and Nawaz are probably salivating seeing all this money in Pakistan and want to come back to loot it all, like they did in the 90's.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Mush's performance in most of the indicators u posted is impressive Reza but the doubling of GDP may also have something to do with the re-basing of GDP in 2000. Shaukat promised at that time that accounts will re-based every five years, as done by S. Korea. Sadly that did not happen.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

He isn't the finance minister now, is he?

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

he keeps the finance minister portfolio. So yes, he is.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Send him an email..

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Mashallah. What a shame the so called elected leaders took Pakistan to the gutter, yet under the leadership of a so called dictator Pakistan has done so well.

The so called elected leaders should hang their heads in shame.

:jhanda:

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

We need to invest more in education.

I am glad that there are people who actually realize that Pakistan made progress during Musharraf's rule. I mean the least you can do is acknowledge the facts. Now that media and courts are free, its time for us to have democracy. President have cleared the pathway for democracy, its time for Pakistanis to make the sensible decision and elect people that will work for them rather vote for their ethnic/ political base.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Pretty impressive!!! This is what I call walk the walk.. Economy has delivered yet another year of solid growth.. Only if we can keep the momentum going which seems unlikely with great leaders like BB and Tind (BTW did tind had a hair transplant?) in the picture again... (Allah Rahem keray)

Economy has proved itself as remarkably resilient in the face of shocks of extra-ordinary proportions e.g. natural disasters like earth quakes or man made disasters like war on terror but there is one disaster that even the best and most resilient economy cannot survive, its called NS/BB....

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Big Tind didn't do that bad of a job. It was BB and her Mr. 10% who made every Pakistani ashamed. I feel if Musharraf starts investing 7-10% of the annual budget towards Islamic education, he'd be a good leader.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

No it should be Education which is English, Math, Science, History

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

"Islamic education"????? you mean Mullah run-hujra bazi

You know Mullah and education is now a well established oxymoron.

The moment Mullahs step in, any kind of education and awareness goes out the door.

The reason has nothing to do with religion. It is the fascistic tendencies of our religious zealots that destroys the core of their follower's brain.

Fascism is highly infectious disease, that has no cure. Hitler, Stalin, Mao were all stricken with this disease and the result was equally horrible for their countrymen.

Mullahs will kill maim and destroy just like Nazis and Commies. The only difference is that Mulalhs do it in the name of a beautiful religion called Islam. However Mullah's Islamism is only skin deep and underneath that thin facade, it is the same anarchist, inhuman behavior so common among the fascists of yesteryears.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Pakistan should have conscription.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

Sir, it is because of these mullahs that Pakistan is almost 96% Islamic- aren't you proud of this fact. Doesn't it make feel you good that you live in an Islamic country? Had it not been for these mullahs, most of Pakistanis would have been Hindus- I know you are feeling bad hearing this but truth is bitter.

Re: Pakistan at 60 a Well-Written News Article

should include overseas Pakistani's.