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In the aftermath of the earthquake which struck South Asia barely two weeks
ago, the picture in the North-West of Pakistan is worse than has been reported.
For instance, in Balakot, according to estimates, at least half the city's
population of 100,000 are now dead. As commentator Tariq Ali says, "At times
like this the entire country feels the need, but it will soon be forgotten,
till the next disaster. In a privatized world, the state is not encouraged
to buck the system. Things are bad here this week, but they will get worse
when rescue teams arrive in areas still out of reach."
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The scale
of the disaster has traumatized the entire country or perhaps
not quite. Here in Lahore a group of people collecting funds for
earthquake relief were apprehended and charged. They were amassing
money for themselves. Even in the midst of disaster, life goes
on.
Like a giant
vulture flock, the global media has descended on the country. The
same images repeated every few minutes over three days. The same
banal comments. Soon they will get tired and move on. When they
are really needed, to monitor relief efforts and reconstruction,
to maintain a watch on the funds and alert viewers to the inevitable
corruption (in the past blankets and tinned food designed for victims
of the floods earlier this year were being openly sold in the black-market)
they will not be there.
The South is only worth a disaster. Emote and disappear. And, as
the media circus moves on, the citizens of the West--they with the
short memory spans--also forget. Pakistan will never forget this
horror.
The
picture in the North-West of the country is worse than has been
reported. The Prime Minister, Shaukat Aziz, a World Bank favourite,
lost his cool at local journalists for reporting the destruction
of schools and the deaths of hundreds of children. "Why are you
being sensationalist? Be optimistic!" The defensiveness was unnecessary.
Nobody blames the regime for the earthquake and even the normally
loquacious Frontier province and Afghan mullahs, eager to pronounce
Katrina as God's punishment for US wars, have fallen silent. Why
would Allah punish the Islamist strongholds in Pakistan?
Even
in normal times the poor
have limited access to doctors
and nurses. The state-of-the-art
hospitals in the big cities are
exclusively for the wealthy.
The shortage of medical staff
has been a curse for the
last fifty years.
The death
toll has been underestimated. Balakot, a small city which is the
gateway to the beautiful Kaghan valley and heavily dependent on
seasonal tourism, has been destroyed. Corpses litter the streets.
According to today's estimates, at least half of the city's population
of 100,000 is now dead. A whole generation has been wiped out.
Survivors were, till yesterday, without food or water because
the roads had been wrecked and helicopters were in short supply.
It
is the same story in Muzaffarabad, in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir.
Everything is wrecked. Here there have been anti-Government manifestations
and citizens have looted shops in search of food, just like in
New Orleans. Further up on the Indo-Pak border where a state of
permanent tension is deliberately kept alive by both sides, there
was another tragedy. Four hundred Pakistani soldiers, sitting
in their trenches, were crushed to death as the mountain wall
protecting them crashed and buried them alive.
What
of the relief effort? The government is doing its best, but it
is not enough. The lack of a proper infrastructure, no serious
reserve funds in the budget to deal with unexpected tragedies
and a total lack of preparedness despite annual disasters on a
lesser scale, has cost innumerable lives.
To
watch General Musharraf on state television bemoaning the shortage
of helicopters was instructive. A few miles to the north of the
disaster zone there is a large fleet of helicopters belonging
to the Western armies occupying parts of Afghanistan. Why
could the US, German and British commanders not dispatch these
to save lives? Is the war so fierce that these were needed every
single day? Five days after the earthquake, the US released eight
helicopters from war duty to help transport food and water to
isolated villages. Too little, too late.
The
Pakistan Army has been put into action, but armies here and elsewhere,
are not suited to relief effort. They are not trained to save
lives and reports today that aid convoys are being attacked and
seized by angry crowds long before they reach their destination
is an indication of the chaos. Even in normal times the poor have
limited access to doctors and nurses. The state-of-the-art hospitals
in the big cities are exclusively for the wealthy. The shortage
of medical staff has been a curse for the last fifty years.
No regime, military or civilian, has succeeded in creating a proper
social infrastructure, a safety net for its less privileged citizens
who compose a large majority of the population. At times like
this the entire country feels the need, but it will soon be forgotten,
till the next disaster. In a privatized world, the state is not
encouraged to buck the system. Things are bad here this week,
but they will get worse when rescue teams arrive in areas still
out of reach.
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Note:
Tariq
Ali is author of the recently released Street Fighting Years
(new edition) and, with David Barsamian,Speaking of Empires
& Resistance. He can be reached at
tariq.ali3@btinternet.com
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Click
here to order Tariq Ali books.
Other articles by Tariq Ali:
The Logic Of Colonial Rule
A Viler Barbarism
The Price Of Occupation
The New Ultra-Imperialism Of The World
"They Think God Runs The IMF"
Imperial Delusions: "Domocracy Promotion" And Resistance
The New Model Of Imperialism: Saddam On Parade
The Importance Of Hugo Chavez: Why He Crushed The Oligarchs
Getting Away With Murder
The War Is Not Going Well For Bush |
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