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5 Criticisms UN Official Made of Pakistan: WSJ

Devolution of government, and land-reforms are long overdue. They also need to depoliticize regional police forces, like KPK has, implementing these will fix a lot of problems in Pakistan at once
 
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Devolution of government, and land-reforms are long overdue. They also need to depoliticize regional police forces, like KPK has, implementing these will fix a lot of problems in Pakistan at once
KPK police was always better than Panjab to begin with..

I remember an instance where a politician (minister) ordered a KPK SHO to go and humiliate a political opponent ..

Guess what his reply was?

He took off his belt and told the minister to go do with himself " jao khud Karo mera aus say koi dushmani nai hai"...

Unlike Panjab "puulce" or even Sindh chillars.. KPK & Balochistan and GB police are much better .. And aren't political tools because they didn't stem out of the colonial ideological shyt.
 
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Thank you for sharing this information...

These problems can start to be rectified if we Unite as Pakistanis only...not Religiously, Provincially, etc...
 
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I couldn't agree more :) He snatched my thoughts, and for that matter every patriotic Pakistani's , and echoed those in his voice and words at an international level...


Defending our society is more important than defence against India

MURTAZA HAIDER — PUBLISHED SEP 06, 2016 07:34PM

Their tenures are quarter of a century apart, yet their prognosis of what ails Pakistan is the same.

Marc-André Franche, who until last month was the chief of the UNDP in Pakistan, and Hans Von Sponeck, who held the same post in the early nineties, witnessed an economy where the elite and the middle classes colluded to stifle the country’s potential by monopolising its resources.

Mr Franche, a Canadian national, caused quite a stir last month by speaking the truth about the powerful.

In his final interview as the UNDP’s head in Pakistan, he threw down the gauntlet to the country’s elite. He minced no words:

“You cannot have an elite that takes advantage of very cheap and uneducated labour when it comes to making money, and when it is time to party it is found in London, and when it’s time to buy things it is in Dubai, and when it’s time to buy property it invests in Dubai or Europe or New York. The elite needs to decide do they want a country or not.”
Some 24 years ago, I sat down with Hans Von Sponeck at the Islamabad club, the then-departing UNDP chief, to conduct my first interview as a cub reporter.

Mr Hans also had strong words for the Pakistani elite, but he was equally critical of the donor community that was keen to invest in brick and mortar but not in human capital. What is alarming is that Mr Franche is leaving Pakistan with almost identical prognosis of the state and society as did Mr Hans.

Not much has changed in the country for those at the bottom of the pyramid.

The ruling classes remain oblivious to the unending misery of the poor.

Investment in human capital and employment for the masses remains an elusive concern. They see development only through the narrow and self-serving lens of motorways and trade corridors.

Pakistanis today are celebrating Defence Day to commemorate the sacrifices of those who protected the country’s borders in the 1965 war against India. But what is more important than defending the borders is the urgent need to uplift the society that is inside these borders.

The large number of youth, who were supposed to be a demographic dividend for Pakistan, have instead become a liability, as the rapid increase in the labour force is not met with a commensurate increase in employment opportunities.

The private sector is limited in its ability to grow because of bureaucratic red tape, unprofessionalism, power crisis, and poor logistics. The state continues to employ millions even when the state-run corporations amass billions in losses.

The political discourse in Pakistan remains criminally blind to the needs of the population.

The opposition parties in Punjab are threatening even more sit-ins. The government is retaliating with overt threats to the life, property, and children of the opposition leaders.

Karachi, Pakistan’s economic hub, is undergoing yet another phase of political crisis where the power struggle between, and within, political parties is preventing the city from running at full steam.

Only recently, a prominent lawyer in Quetta was killed in a targeted attack. His peers were subsequently blown up in a suicide attack at the hospital where they had brought his dead body. Even hospitals fail to provide refuge.

Quetta is symbolic of the violence that’s destroying Pakistan from within. Other urban centres are equally vulnerable. The most exposed are the ethnic and religious minorities who are routinely subjected to hate-driven violence.

On this Defence Day, one should look at the two contradictory images of Pakistan.

On one side are those living in gated communities, safe, well-fed, and secure.

On the other side are those who continue to be scarred by violence, unable to protect and feed their families, and with no hope for better future.

I wonder what the new UNDP chief Ignacio Artaza will say when he completes his tenure in Pakistan.

Will he also ring alarm bells at the continued exploitation of the masses by the elite?

Or would he be talking about a prosperous Pakistan where the country’s wealth is shared among its people?





Murtaza Haider is a Toronto-based academic and the director of Regionomics.com.

He tweets @regionomics
 
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Defending our society is more important than defence against India

MURTAZA HAIDER — PUBLISHED SEP 06, 2016 07:34PM

Their tenures are quarter of a century apart, yet their prognosis of what ails Pakistan is the same.

Marc-André Franche, who until last month was the chief of the UNDP in Pakistan, and Hans Von Sponeck, who held the same post in the early nineties, witnessed an economy where the elite and the middle classes colluded to stifle the country’s potential by monopolising its resources.

Mr Franche, a Canadian national, caused quite a stir last month by speaking the truth about the powerful.

In his final interview as the UNDP’s head in Pakistan, he threw down the gauntlet to the country’s elite. He minced no words:

“You cannot have an elite that takes advantage of very cheap and uneducated labour when it comes to making money, and when it is time to party it is found in London, and when it’s time to buy things it is in Dubai, and when it’s time to buy property it invests in Dubai or Europe or New York. The elite needs to decide do they want a country or not.”
Some 24 years ago, I sat down with Hans Von Sponeck at the Islamabad club, the then-departing UNDP chief, to conduct my first interview as a cub reporter.

Mr Hans also had strong words for the Pakistani elite, but he was equally critical of the donor community that was keen to invest in brick and mortar but not in human capital. What is alarming is that Mr Franche is leaving Pakistan with almost identical prognosis of the state and society as did Mr Hans.

Not much has changed in the country for those at the bottom of the pyramid.

The ruling classes remain oblivious to the unending misery of the poor.

Investment in human capital and employment for the masses remains an elusive concern. They see development only through the narrow and self-serving lens of motorways and trade corridors.

Pakistanis today are celebrating Defence Day to commemorate the sacrifices of those who protected the country’s borders in the 1965 war against India. But what is more important than defending the borders is the urgent need to uplift the society that is inside these borders.

The large number of youth, who were supposed to be a demographic dividend for Pakistan, have instead become a liability, as the rapid increase in the labour force is not met with a commensurate increase in employment opportunities.

The private sector is limited in its ability to grow because of bureaucratic red tape, unprofessionalism, power crisis, and poor logistics. The state continues to employ millions even when the state-run corporations amass billions in losses.

The political discourse in Pakistan remains criminally blind to the needs of the population.

The opposition parties in Punjab are threatening even more sit-ins. The government is retaliating with overt threats to the life, property, and children of the opposition leaders.

Karachi, Pakistan’s economic hub, is undergoing yet another phase of political crisis where the power struggle between, and within, political parties is preventing the city from running at full steam.

Only recently, a prominent lawyer in Quetta was killed in a targeted attack. His peers were subsequently blown up in a suicide attack at the hospital where they had brought his dead body. Even hospitals fail to provide refuge.

Quetta is symbolic of the violence that’s destroying Pakistan from within. Other urban centres are equally vulnerable. The most exposed are the ethnic and religious minorities who are routinely subjected to hate-driven violence.

On this Defence Day, one should look at the two contradictory images of Pakistan.

On one side are those living in gated communities, safe, well-fed, and secure.

On the other side are those who continue to be scarred by violence, unable to protect and feed their families, and with no hope for better future.

I wonder what the new UNDP chief Ignacio Artaza will say when he completes his tenure in Pakistan.

Will he also ring alarm bells at the continued exploitation of the masses by the elite?

Or would he be talking about a prosperous Pakistan where the country’s wealth is shared among its people?





Murtaza Haider is a Toronto-based academic and the director of Regionomics.com.

He tweets @regionomics
He told the truth.
 
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10/10. This guy needs credit for saying it "as it is". This guy actually is doing Pakistan a favour by being honest. I detect a element of frustration that a country with such fantastic history, a country full of talent could and should be doing far better than it is.

As it is the ruling class and that includes all of them. The political, military, civil elite in conjunction with landed and rentier industrial class (often this overlaps as they get married into each other) are running a racket in Pakistan. You may ask how does 5% manage to subjugate and enslave the other 95%. Simple. 35% are beholden to the racketeers by being given few breadcrumbs in a dog eat dog system - the bourgeois. The other 60% live hand to mouth with empty stomaches but head full of Islamic brain dopamine.

Religion keeps them busy stopping any chance of collective action because they are too submerged in petty divisions along sect or other religious time occupancy. Above this conflicted, divided mass of poverty of thought and wealth the racketeers get on with living it like rich do everywhere.

Animal Farm anybody?

Agree with every word. Some retrospect is never wrong. We have a long way to go before we have reached our ideals. It is good to hear from an outsider how he views things. A lot of things he has said are based on reality. We have a nasty feudal system in place which doesn't let ordinary people grow to their true potential. In fact, every layer of the society has some form of feudal structure in place. The ordinary folks are also to be blamed for not doing enough to break the shackles of feudalism. It is a two way street in my opinion.

On a positive note, it is good to know that KPK is moving in the right direction. The administrative changes are bearing fruit. IK deserves full credit. Perhaps a model for the rest of the country.
 
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Shame for King Nawaz as outsiders like Marc-André Franche are raising voices against his pathetic government. Time to say Go Nawaz Go.:fans:
 
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. “The fact that even in 2016, Pakistan has 38% poverty; it has districts that live like sub-Saharan Africa; that the basic human rights of minorities, women and the people of FATA [tribal regions in the northwest] are not respected;

How are these poverty figures calculated? I would really like to know.

We have people like Riaz Haq and others claiming there is no poverty in Pakistan and UNDP saying 38% of the country lives in poverty. Where do the figures come from?

The ruling classes remain oblivious to the unending misery of the poor.

Maybe this is the issue with Riaz and his gang!
 
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Really appreciate the honest review and totally agree with the person on all 5 points.
 
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