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Drowned in rivers of incompetence & greed

Brig (R) Samson Simon Sharaf



THE destruction caused by the massive flooding from Gilgit-Chitral to Thatta is a tale of destruction wreaked by nature, misery, incompetence and massive corruption. In most places, devastation was avoidable had the water managers of Pakistan not tinkered with nature in exchange for ill gotten wealth, insensitivity to people’s welfare and political mileage.


As I wrote in ‘Drowned in Rivers with no Water’, 70% of Pakistan’s external debt has been consumed in the Water Management Sector with 60% of it going away in incompetent feasibility studies by foreign experts. The net result is that either there is no water or too much of it. Drainage, flood protection bunds, dredging and lining of canal schemes designed to control the fury of rivers have all failed because of shady and ghost civil works. Dredging though an annual budgetary feature was never implemented in letter and spirit neither the height of bunds and shoring through stone and concrete works ever carried out on the supposedly completed projects.


Despite month long floods, administrative reactions in lower reaches of Indus are still slow, inefficient and malafide. The biggest manifestation of this inefficiency, incompetence and vested management is the new course of River Indus to the north. The inundation of the entire productive and fertile plains of Southern Balochistan will neither seep nor have an exit. As a result, lakes will be created on the southern slopes of the Kirthar range that shall hang like a daemon on the towns of Shadadkot, Qambar etc. The flood will continue to flow into this area till the fatal bunds breached on the northern side of Indus are not plugged or the flood waters do not run out.


River Indus and its tributaries have always had a history of fury obliterating civilizations and creating new ones. The lowest depressions of this massive river system still lie in South Eastern Pakistan from Bahawalnagar to Nagar Parkar. This contour of the land also indicates the old course of the lost Nara River called the great Nara depression itself created by the natural forces of earthquakes, tsunamis and flooding.


It was not very long ago that Brigadier Ahsan Tiwana, a nature loving agriculturist had gone from pillar to post suggesting that the extra outflow of Rivers Indus, Jehlum and Chenab should in any emergency be diverted towards this great depression thereby providing water for agriculture, charging of aquifers and reclaiming lands of the Choolistan and Nara Deserts. The wisdom of his proposal is now vindicated. Much of the water could have been diverted to these areas especially when Ali Wan Bund had earlier been made just for diverting water to this untamed desert. As a result the main desert remains dry because its upper fringes irrigated by the canal systems owned by political elites had to be protected. But there is still a heavier cost to be paid by the cities of Kotri, Thatta, Hyderabad and Badin for this act tantamount to criminal intent and complicity to incompetence and vested interests.


25% of Pakistan’s plains including heartland are flooded, infrastructure and cash crops destroyed and over 30% people mostly poor have to start life from scratch after the water has receded. Once the water goes away, the land revenue department will have a field day delineating boundaries and open gateways to massive corruption and bloody feuds. The over centralized response (in reaction to corruption at lower tiers) of NDMA and ERRA-like reconstruction and disaster management organizations and legal issues will slow resettlements.


Many people are now comparing the indigenous national and international response of the 2005 earthquake to these floods. There are three simple explanations for the lack of it.


First, more than 40% of Pakistan’s population has been directly or indirectly affected. Many of the people who responded in 2005 are either victims of this disaster or are helping relatives and friends who are. We are now talking of the entire KPK minus Peshawar, Mardan and Kohat, at least 11 districts of Punjab, 11 of Sindh, over 7 of Balochistan and entire Gilgit-Baltistan. With over 50 million population affected, the scale is just too big for such a response.


Secondly, international donors have been slow to react. They fear that like 2005, much of the aid will fall into the wrong hands. Aid workers are reluctant to travel due to security reasons as the entire Southern Punjab and Northern Sindh has been portrayed as a hotbed of Talibanisation. In fact there is vested interest that would hope that the flood situation breaks up Pakistan.


Thirdly, a country that had the world’s highest Charity to GDP ratio is at a contradiction within itself. They are reluctant to trust their charities in the hands of political and bureaucratic elites that are corrupt and part of the problem. This trust deficit is the biggest cause of delayed national mobilization. People either go and do something directly or are waiting for a GODOT to take charge.


But there are many other scars that will be left on the political and development fabric of Pakistan.


First, and of immediate nature is the misery caused to the fertile plains of Balochistan. Soon the rising poverty, absence of governance and resettlement issues will give rise to crime and centrifugal forces. Much of the area will for times to come become permanent lakes and ponds and a grim reminder of the manipulation of flows by political elites. Ironically, this is also the part of Balochistan that has stood like a rock against forces of secession. Poverty may breed crime at the societal level but one step up, it also breeds sub nationalism.


Secondly, government’s insensitivity to Atabad Disaster and landslide phenomena since 2002 is a cause of concern. No teams of geologists and hydrologist have been created to study these unprecedented phenomena that have virtually cut off vast areas of Pakistan as also land routes to China.


The third issue relates to dredging of the dams. Warsak has outlived its life and Tarbela is badly silted. It is hoped that these heavy flows may have carried away some of the embedded silt. But more than building new controversial dams, there is a need to study latest technologies and evolve a method to dredge and reclaim these dams not only on continuous basis but also taking advantage of high peak floods and water velocities.


Fourthly, would Kalabagh have averted this disaster? Considering that the dam will be down of KPK that faced the joint brunt of Kabul, Panjkora, Chitral and Swat Rivers the answer is no. If anything, it could have prevented some damages downstream at the cost of submerging Nowshera, Kohat, Chaarsada and some areas of Swabi. So what is the logic of making a dam that inundates the major cities and economic hubs of KPK? Maybe the geologists, hydrologists and engineers consider the option of a smaller storage reservoir at Kalabagh by reducing the height of the dam.


Fifthly, considering that Kohistan and Diamer are beset with mysterious land slide phenomena, very young and loose rock structure and in proximity of major fault lines, would it be prudent to construct Basha at all? With a 300M vertical wall hanging over Tarbela, KKH realigned and memories of Bunji and Atabad still alive, would it be sensible to rush for a Basha that has its own destruction writ large.


All these are very crucial issues at a time when the nation waits for a GODOT. What Mr. Altaf Hussain and Imran Khan are saying is a true reflection of the feelings of majority Pakistanis. —Opinion-Maker




 
Stonehearted leaders

Sajida Khan Niazi



F LOOD in Pakistan caused huge destruction, million people have rendered homeless, many people died, injured and displaced because of nasty flood. This flood is most devastating disaster in Pakistan’s history. It almost affected approximately 10% of total population, their crops have annihilated and their homes submerged; according to the International Red Cross said “in addition to other damage, floodwaters have destroyed much of the health infrastructure in the worst affected areas, leaving people especially vulnerable to water-borne diseases”.


Our stonehearted government has been fail in handling situation. The estimated 4 million rendered homeless, and the 8 million people who have now become dependent on aid for their survival. When our nation was going through huge destruction caused by natural disaster, and when they were sobbing and requesting for help, at the same time, our President was on Europe’s joy-ride, spending millions from national kitty while staying in expensive hotel, he was enjoying with his son and daughter, focusing on his son’s entry into politics and ignoring thousands of Asifas and Bilawals who had fallen prey to monstrous floods, looking for a morsel of bread, craving for food, they did not have eaten anything for last many days, our President was enjoying in France and UK, while his nation looked for help. Flood victims was without shelters, while our so called democratic President with his son and daughter staying in expansive hotel.


Our President did tour of France and also did visit of his luxury and expansive house, while his miserable and depressed nation was mourning for their homes witch submerged because due to flood. President also did visit of Britain, he give the justification of that visit that he is going to negotiate with Cameron on his statement in India, but justification was just justification, nothing more; he just accomplished his own desires and interests. British government executed Zardari’s demands or not is another fact but a man fling a shoe-drone on Zardari, after this incident not only our President joined shoe club but also Pakistani nation has to face criticism, and international media also criticized Zardari tours that when his nation is suffering from perilous disaster at that time President is own his visit and that is not appropriate time for his visit. While for Zardari foreign tours are more important than his nation, after these tours our President thought there is need of one more amusement and that time he did choose Russia for his trip, here he joined Sochi summit. I would suggest that our president must take some classes from Russian leaders that how they do prefer their nation over their entertainment; because the Russian leader cancelled his holiday’s trip when he found his nation in trouble; maybe after Russian leader’s lecture President change their nature. The money which Zardari spent on his trips could have been used on the relief for flood victims.


Victims of devastating floods have accused the government of failing to provide adequate shelter, water, food and medicine in the aftermath of the disaster. Our democratic government has fake degree holder and corrupt representative. Inflation and electricity shortage are also endowment of that government to their poor nation. Two days off in one week is also act of kindness by this government, for those peoples who were earning money in private or government offices on daily bases, these poor peoples have to face reduction in their salary because of two off in week. Due to electricity shortage commerce sector is going to decline and people prefer suicide to miserable life.


During flood our corrupt government got an opportunity to abscond their mistake but during flood, government has proved that they has not learnt from past. Our government is asking for aid but donors show sluggish attitude. According to some analysts international as well as domestic donors are not giving aid because they have no trust on that corrupt government. There was a time when Nawaz Sharif asked his nation that he wanted to return foreign debt and for that purpose nation will has to help the government, so nation had trusted on their leaders, even the ladies did give their gold jewelry to their PM, but our leaders knows very well that how to play with the emotion of innocent nation and how to deceive them; but now pot turn to the hands of nation and nation not trusting on their leaders.


Our Army moves ahead in relief process while our government is eying over international community for aid, individual donations for flood victims from around the world are coming in at a trickle; the sluggish response may be due to donors fear over how the government in Pakistan will use their aid and funds; now limited donation has came in Pakistan as compared to previous disasters. People were accepting that international community will help us but donors show sluggish reaction.


Even Middle Eastern states also send limited funds. India being Pakistan’s much larger and wealthier neighbour in South Asia, virtually has not offered large amount of aid or assistance at all but India did offer small amount of aid by giving a statement that donors must directly provide aid to flood victims, this all shows that no one has trust on our government. In this critical situation US is also criticizing us, Richard Holbrook vowed by taunting Pakistani nation always preferred China and Iran over other states and now where is China and Iran in this difficult and critical situation; China always support Pakistan in complicated situations, especially in wars but now China is not in the list of top donors for flood victims.


We can not criticize other states that they are not providing us assistance but we have to realize the fact that when our government is not interested than other states what can do… international donors can not trust on those leader who are corrupt, our present government having record of violation of their promises in every matter, so our leaders have been loss the trust of not only their own nation but also international community. Our leaders have been loss the credibility, now they are not able to handle situation, non-official personality moving ahead to requesting for aid for flood victims; if the government has lost their credibility on that level what can they do when this disaster will terminate, the victims has lost their all goods and shelters, their houses and crops, without foreign assistance how can our government can plan future of these flood victims? Our government should open the eyes and must pay attention on their nation rather than their own bank accounts. Leaders comes with slogan of “Roti, Kapra, aur Makan”, while flood affected nation wants these three things and leaders not taking notice.


Our government will has to start development projects for flood infected areas, but they doing nothing for future of flood victims and if the situation remains same and our government showing the same attitude which they are showing from last three years than we must accept that after this flood another flood is waiting which will tell us that stonehearted once again playing with our emotion.






 
Islam’s emphasis on charity

Khwaja Mohammed Zubair



CHARITY towards man, in its widest sense, is laid down in the Holy Quran as the second great pillar on which the structure of Islam stands. Spending out of whatever has been given to man stands for charity in a broad sense, i.e. for acts of benevolence to humanity in general. For what Almighty God has given to man is not only the wealth which he possesses but at the faculties and power with which he has been gifted.


The most frequently recurring words for charity in the Holy Quran are Infaq, which means spending benevolently; Ihsan, which means the doing of good; Zakat, which means growth or purification, and Sadaqah, which is derived from the root, Sidq, meaning truth, and comes to signify a charitable deed.


The very words used to donate charitable deeds are an indication of the broadness of the concept.


The Holy Quran not only lays stress on such great deeds of charity as the emancipation of slaves, the feeding or the poor, taking care of orphans and doing good to humanity in general, but gives equal emphasis to smaller acts of benevolence. It is for this reason that the withholding of ma’un, which specially indicates small acts of kindness and charity, is stated to be against the spirit of prayer.


And in a similar strain the speaking of kind words to parents is referred to as Ihsan, and generally the use of kind words is recommended as in itself a charitable deed in many places in the Holy Quran. The Holy Book also speaks of extending charity not only to all men, including believers and non-believers, but also to the dumb creations.


Charity, in the sense of giving away one’s wealth, is of two kinds, voluntary and obligatory. Voluntary charity is generally mentioned in the Holy Quran as Infaq or Ihsan or Sadaqah, and though the Holy Book is full of injunctions on this subject, and hardly a leaf is turned which does not bring to mind the grand object of the service of humanity as the goal of man’s life, the subject is specifically dealt with in the 36th and 37th sections of the second chapter.


A charitable deed must be done as a duty which man owes to man, so that it conveys no idea of the superiority of the giver or the inferiority of the receiver. Love of Almighty God should be the motive of all charitable deeds so that the very doing of them fosters the feeling that all mankind is but a single family. Only good things and well-earned money should be given in charity.


Charity has value only if something good and valuable is given, which has been honourably earned or acquired by the giver or which is produced in nature and can be referred to as bounty of Almighty God.


These may include such things as are of use and value to others though they many be of less use to us or superfluous to us on account of our having acquired something more suitable for our station in life, for example discarded clothes, or an old horse or used motor car. But if the horse is vicious, or the car engine is so far gone that it is dangerous to use, then the gift is worse than useless — it is positively harmful, and the giver is doing a wrong. It applies to fraudulent company promoters, who earn great credit by giving away in charity some of their ill-gotten gains, or to robbers (even if they call themselves by high sounding names).


Charitable deeds may be carried out openly or secretly, although the latter form is better. Those who do not beg should be the first to receive charity.


Obligatory charity is generally mentioned under the name of Zakat. The word Zakat is derived from Zaka, which means it (a plant) grew. The word Zakat is also used in the sense of purity from sin.


Zakat is wealth which is taken from the rich and given to the poor, being so called because it make the wealth grow, or because the giving away of wealth is a source of purification. In fact, both these reasons hold true. The giving away of wealth to the poor members of the community, while, no doubt, a source of blessing to the individual, also increases the wealth of the community as a whole. At the same time it purifies the heart of the giver, ridding it of the inordinate love of wealth, which brings numerous sins in its train. The holy Prophet himself has described Zakat as wealth “which is taken from the rich and returned to the poor”.


The two commandments, to keep up prayer and to give Zakat, often go together, and this combination of the two is met within the earliest chapters of the Holy Quran as well in those, which were revealed towards the end of the holy Prophet’s life. Not only are prayer and charity mentioned together in a large number of passages but these two are also treated as being the basic ordinances of the religion of Islam. —KT




 
Continual disasters

Yin Pumin



AMID sirens and wailing horns, people across China stood in a silent tribute to victims of a massive mudslide in Zhouqu County, Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in northwest China’s Gansu Province on August 15.


On August 8, a deadly mudslide struck the county, killing 1,270 while 474 people remained missing as of August 17, according to the local disaster relief headquarters.


At 10 a.m. on August 15, more than 5,000 rescuers and villagers stood still on the debris of the mudslide at Dongjie Village in Zhouqu, bowing their heads in remembrance of those killed in the disaster.In Beijing, the giant Chinese national flag at Tiananmen Square was lowered to half-mast.National flags across the country and at overseas embassies and consulates were also lowered to half-mast. Although the Shanghai Expo site was open on August 15, it also mourned. Its regular music broadcast was halted, and more than 100 performances and cultural activities were cancelled, according to the Bureau of the Shanghai World Expo Coordination.


Under requirement by the Ministry of Culture, public recreational activities, such as movies, karaoke and online entertainment including games and music were suspended that day.It was the third time in two years that China has observed a period of national mourning for a disaster. The government ordered a three-day observance after the 2008 earthquake in Sichuan Province that killed nearly 90,000 people and one day following April’s quake in Yushu in Qinghai Province that killed 2,700 people.


Rescue efforts continue


Before and after the three-minute mourning, rescuers continued to clear the debris, searching for bodies and spraying disinfectant in Zhouqu.


About 7,000 soldiers and armed policemen are still working around the clock to clear the rubble and restore transportation links.


The military men and armed police played a crucial role in rescuing people in Zhouqu, said Major General Wang Wenjie of the Lanzhou Military Command of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA).


“People can count on us whenever disaster strikes. The army will always be a strong and reliable force in rescue missions,” Wang said at a press conference in Beijing on August 13.


On August 12, the Ministry of Health warned of disease-prevention challenges in Zhouqu, as dead bodies and dead animals entombed in the mud may easily decay in the hot weather.


In order to prevent disease, soldiers also sterilized an area of 128,000 square meters, while giving medical treatment to 12,000 local residents, Wang said.


Local health authorities have received no reports of any infectious disease, according to local government sources.


Although wells had been dug to ensure water supply, the Ministry of Health said sterilization work was difficult as the water may be contaminated during transportation and storage.


While more equipment is en route to Zhouqu, Wang said more epidemic prevention workers are ready to go if needed.


Besides personnel, 17 helicopters and airplanes and 35 rubber rafts have been sent to the disaster-hit area.


Meanwhile, China’s Ministry of Commerce announced on August 16 that the supply of daily necessities for those affected by the mudslides in Gansu and Sichuan provinces is a top priority.


The ministry urged local authorities to help establish supply centres for goods and catering services and open more retail stores so that daily needs could be met.


It also urged local bureaus to strengthen market monitoring of price changes for goods such as rice, edible oil, meat, eggs and vegetables.


As of August 15, a total of 106 million yuan ($15.52 million), as well as relief materials worth more than 20.3 million yuan ($2.97 million), had been donated to Zhouqu, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.The relief materials include 1,030 tents and 1,000 sleeping bags, as well as thousands of boxes of bottled water and instant noodles.Authorities in Gansu have issued regulations to govern the purchase, acceptance and delivery of relief materials to ensure they are sent to the affected people in a safe and speedy way. Rescue workers have been racing to restore water, communications and power supplies in the area.—(The Daily Mail-Beijing Review Articles Exchange Item)


Local government sources said on August 17 that emergency water supplies were currently keeping pace with demand.


Mobile phone networks have resumed operation, though landline services remain cut off in most of the county.


More disasters


China’s National Disaster Reduction Commission issued an urgent circular on August 16, ordering the civil affairs authorities across the country to step up measures to prevent and control floods and other rain-triggered disasters.


The civil affairs authorities must closely monitor the development of torrential rains and guard against flooding and other rain-triggered disasters, it said.


Further, it ordered the evacuation and relocation of residents in high-risk areas prone to flooding, landslides and mudslides, and said that disaster relief materials and temporary shelters must be in place well in advance.


It also asked civil affairs authorities to increase publicity of disaster-related information and survival tips.


Floods and other rain-triggered disasters have left more than 2,300 people dead and 1,200 missing nationwide this year.


The Gansu provincial meteorological bureau and land and resources bureau issued a level-IV warning for possible geological disasters in the area, according to local disaster relief headquarters.


Not far from Zhouqu, torrential rain left 36 people dead and 23 missing in Longnan as of August 16, provincial authorities said in a statement on August 17.


As of 4 p.m. on August 16, secondary disasters triggered by rain, including mudslides and landslides, had injured 295 people.


They caused 6,090 houses to collapse and damaged another 15,223.


The rain prompted the evacuation of 122,835 Longnan residents to emergency shelters, the statement said.


In Gansu’s neighbouring province of Sichuan, floods and landslides triggered by heavy rains have killed at least 13 people and left another 59 missing as of August 15.


Nearly 500,000 people are affected and more than 20,000 have been evacuated in the province, according to the emergency response office of the Sichuan Provincial Government.


The first landslide struck Qingping Township in Mianzhu on August 12 after heavy rain.


The rainfall amounted to 220 millimetres within two hours, and mudslides caused by the heavy rain left at least seven people dead and 500 others trapped in rural mountainous areas, according to Luo Yingguang, an information official with the city.


The downpour, which struck Dujiangyan, a city battered by an 8.0-magnitude earthquake on May 12, 2008, caused a landslide that killed one villager and stranded more than 5,000 people in the city’s mountainous Longchi Town and Hongkou Township.


The massive mudslide that hit Wenchuan County on August 14 had killed 15 people and injured nine others by August 16, local authorities said on August 17.


A 200-meter section of National Highway 213, the only highway linking Wenchuan to the provincial capital Chengdu, was inundated with water 4 meters deep.


According to Chen Kefu, Deputy Director of the Department of Civil Affairs of Sichuan Province, the landslides damaged some 24,000 homes and 17,000 hectares of crops. Direct economic losses were about 1 billion yuan ($146.41 million).







 
 
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