Paper no.
3983
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18-Aug-2010
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PAKISTANI FLOODS: Strategic Invisibles
By B. Raman
"It wiped out villages. Destroyed crops.
Over 3.6 million people were directly
affected. Nearly 85% of the area was
destroyed. Three months after the
catastrophe some 75% of the population was
receiving food from relief workers (more
here).
"It happened in Pakistan. Yet few Pakistanis
even know of it by name. Fewer still
remember that it eventually contributed to
Pakistan’s break-up.
"The 1970 Bhola cyclone hit then East
Pakistan on November 12, 1970. It brought
with it winds of an unbelievable 185 km/hr.
It left in its wake a half million
Pakistanis dead.
"Meteorologists remember it as being one of
the most deadly natural disasters in human
history – sources suggest that it left
between 300,000 to 1 million Pakistanis dead
in its wake; most estimates suggest around
500,000 Pakistanis died.
"Historians tend to agree that although
there were many other forces at work, the
devastation caused by the cyclone and the
widespread view that the government had mis-managed
the relief efforts and West Pakistan had
generally shown an attitude of neglect,
contributed to high levels of anti-West
Pakistan feeling, a sweeping victory for the
Awami League, and eventually the breakup of
Pakistan and the creation of Bangladesh.
"Such, then, are the forces of nature. And
such are the forces of history."
A post from a Pakistani website called "pakistaniat"
at http://pakistaniat.com/2010/08/16/remembering-bhola-the-cyclone-that-broke-pakistans-back/
"The cost of rebuilding in the flood-hit
areas could reach $15 billion and a Marshall
Plan will be needed to meet the challenge,
Pakistan’s High Commissioner to Britain
Wajid Shamsul Hasan said on Monday (August
16).
He said this was a rough estimate because an
assessment of the extent of the damage
caused by the floods – which have affected
20 million people – had yet to be carried
out. But the number gave an indication of
the scale of the reconstruction needed after
the floods swept away roads, bridges,
telecommunication infrastructure and
destroyed crops. “It will take at least five
years,” Hasan told Reuters in an interview.
Asked about the cost of rebuilding, he said,
“I think more than $10 to $15 billion”.
Pakistan is appealing for international aid
to help it cope with one of the worst
natural disasters in its history. The United
Nations says only a quarter of the estimated
$459 million in international aid needed
just for immediate relief has arrived so
far. “If something happens to Pakistan, the
whole region will be plunged into
Balkanisation. You can’t stop it there,”
Hasan warned, adding, that he was not
suggesting Pakistan would collapse, but
nonetheless drew a parallel with a cyclone,
which hit East Pakistan in 1970, which
fuelled resentment against the government,
then, as now, it was accused of not doing
enough. “In the longer term, when the water
subsides, we need reconstruction ... we’ll
have to have a long-term plan, something
like the Marshall Plan,” Hasan said.
From the "Daily Times" of Lahore of
August 18,2010
On November 12,1970, a cyclone of
devastating magnitude struck the then East
Pakistan. Over 300,000 people-----the
overwhelming majority of them
Bengalis----perished. East Pakistan's
economy suffered extensive damages.
2. The indifference of the federal
Government then ruled by Gen.Yahya Khan to
the plight of the Bengalis and its failure
to mobilise humanitarian relief for the
victims created a permanent wedge between
the Bengalis of East Pakistan and the
non-Bengalis of the then West Pakistan and
set in motion the train of events that
ultimately led to the separation of East
Pakistan and the birth of independent
Bangladesh.
3. It is not without reason that an
increasing number of Pakistanis with a sense
of history are asking: Can history repeat
itself?
4. Those who rule out a repeat of 1971 point
out that the devastation caused by the
current floods in Pakistan is not comparable
to that caused by the cyclone of
November,1970, in East Pakistan. Those, who
are concerned over the prospects of a repeat
of 1971, highlight that the present
political class in Pakistan has been as
indifferent to the plight of the victims as
the political class of 1970 was. The
disaster of 1970 took place when the army
was in power. The current disaster has
struck Pakistan when an elected civilian
Government is in power. In the perception of
many, the Government has shown itself to be
not only incompetent, but uncaring. The
international community has cared for the
victims more than Pakistan's own political
class.
5. The current disaster due to floods has
had two dimensions-----the humanitarian and
the strategic. The details of the
humanitarian dimension have already been
covered by me in an earlier article on the
floods. While the humanitarian dimensions
are important from the immediate and
short-term points of view, the strategic
dimensions could assume importance from the
medium and long-term points of view.
6. The humanitarian dimensions are
quantifiable and their consequences
predictable. The likely strategic dimensions
are as yet not fully visible, unquantifiable
and their consequences unpredictable. The
strategic dimensions of the disaster would
arise from the following factors:
-
Firstly, nearly 90 per cent of the
fatalities have taken place in the areas
inhabited by non-Punjabi minorities----
in Khyber-Pakhtunkwa, the
Federally-Administered Tribal Areas
(FATA) and Balochistan. Of the ethnic
communities which constitute the
Pakistani population, the Pashtuns have
suffered the worst with nearly 1100
fatalities as against a total of 1400.
Many Pashtun families in Khyber-Pakhtunkwa
and the FATA have lost their near and
dear ones. Among the other sufferers in
terms of fatalities are the Balochs, the
Punjabis, the Kashmiris and the Sindhis
in that order.
-
Secondly, from the point of view of
economic and infrastructural damages,
Punjab and Sindh have suffered more than
the Pashtun belt and Balochistan. The
devastating quake of 2005 in
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (POK) and some
parts of Khyber-Pakhtunkwa did not have
a major impact on the Pakistani economy.
Agriculture, the main prop of the
Pakistani economy, hardly suffered any
damage.The current floods have hit hard
the granaries of Pakistan in Punjab and
Sindh and its gas-rich areas in
Balochistan. The resulting impact on the
agricultural and industrial economy will
be considerable. Already, the Baloch
freedom struggle has affected the flow
of gas from Balochistan to the
industries of Punjab. The damage caused
by the floods will add to their
difficulties.
-
Thirdly, the floods have hit hard the
main recruiting grounds of the Pakistan
Army---- the rural areas in Punjab,
Khyber-Pakhtunkwa and the FATA. What
impact will this have on the morale of
the soldiers whose minds will be on the
sufferings of their families back home
due to the floods than on their fight
against the various Talibans and Al
Qaeda?
-
Fourthly, the increase in rural
unemployment could help the recruitment
drive of the army as well as the
terrorists. An increase in the flow of
suicide volunteers to the terrorist
organisations is a possibility to be
reckoned with.
-
Fifthly, the credibility of the
political class, which has never been
high, has suffered further due to its
slow response to the tragedy.
Perceptions that the political
leadership and the bureaucracy have been
more concerned with rapairing the
economic and infrastructure damages in
Punjab and Sindh than in attending to
the human tragedies in the Pashtun belt
and Balochistan could aggravate the
feelings of alienation in these areas
with unpredictable consequences.
-
Sixthly, from all accounts, the
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) and the
Jamaat-e-Islami (JEI) have been winning
the hearts and minds of the affected
people by the energetic way they have
mobilised the relief and rehabilitation
measures. While the image of the
mainstream political class has suffered,
that of the jihadis and fundamentalists
has benefited. While the aid flows from
the US and other Western Governments
have been to the discredited
governmental agencies, the aid flows
from individuals and charity
organisations of the Islamic world have
been to the LET and the JEI. Any
serious mismanagement of the relief and
rehabilitation measures by the
Government could not only further dent
the image of the political class, but
also damage the image of the Western
Governments by association.
-
Seventhly, what impact will the floods
and the resulting damage have on the
capacity of Al Qaeda and its associates?
It would be difficult to answer this
question presently. One can only note
that in the FATA the maximum damage
seems to have been in North Waziristan,
where Al Qaeda and its associates are
based.
7. The post-flood situation in Pakistan
needs careful monitoring by Indian strategic
experts.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate
of the Chennai Centre For China Studies.
E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com)
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