LAHORE: Three prominent progressive organisations have urged the Pakistan Peoples Party-led government to refuse paying all foreign debt worth $54 billion as well as annual instalments of $3 billion, and divert the entire amount to relief and rehabilitation projects for the 20 million flood victims in the country.
Under the umbrella of the Labour Relief Campaign, representatives of the organisations Campaign for the Abolition of Third-World Debt, the Labour Party of Pakistan and the National Labour Federation, Abdul Khaliq Shah, Farooq Tariq and Niaz Ahmad respectively, addressed a press conference at the Lahore Press Club on Friday, pressuring international financial institutions and donor countries to repudiate Pakistans debt.
Abdul Khaliq Shah, a spokesman for the Campaign told journalists that Pakistan was currently paying about $3 billion in debt servicing every year, while the countrys current foreign debt worth $54 billion was also increasing day by day. As a result, he said, the debt-servicing ratio would also increase.
He said that Pakistan was facing the worst disaster in its 63-year history, with more than 20 million people having been badly affected and major infrastructure having been destroyed in many parts of the country by recent rains and continued floods.
Justified: He said that in such a situation, certain provisions of international law could be invoked as legal justifications for the refusal to pay external debt. One such justification, he said, is the State of Necessity, in which the economic or political survival of a country is jeopardised, and it becomes impossible to pay the debt and provide for the very basic needs of the population such as health, food, water and housing.
He said that since the state of Pakistan is now unable to fulfil the fundamental human needs of more than 20 million people, the government needs to show its political will and should refuse to pay its foreign debt.
Farooq Tariq of the Labour Party also announced a campaign to put pressure on the government to refuse to pay foreign debt. He said the campaign would hold rallies, long marches, seminars and door-to-door awareness drives in favour of its demands.
Source: Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
Under the umbrella of the Labour Relief Campaign, representatives of the organisations Campaign for the Abolition of Third-World Debt, the Labour Party of Pakistan and the National Labour Federation, Abdul Khaliq Shah, Farooq Tariq and Niaz Ahmad respectively, addressed a press conference at the Lahore Press Club on Friday, pressuring international financial institutions and donor countries to repudiate Pakistans debt.
Abdul Khaliq Shah, a spokesman for the Campaign told journalists that Pakistan was currently paying about $3 billion in debt servicing every year, while the countrys current foreign debt worth $54 billion was also increasing day by day. As a result, he said, the debt-servicing ratio would also increase.
He said that Pakistan was facing the worst disaster in its 63-year history, with more than 20 million people having been badly affected and major infrastructure having been destroyed in many parts of the country by recent rains and continued floods.
Justified: He said that in such a situation, certain provisions of international law could be invoked as legal justifications for the refusal to pay external debt. One such justification, he said, is the State of Necessity, in which the economic or political survival of a country is jeopardised, and it becomes impossible to pay the debt and provide for the very basic needs of the population such as health, food, water and housing.
He said that since the state of Pakistan is now unable to fulfil the fundamental human needs of more than 20 million people, the government needs to show its political will and should refuse to pay its foreign debt.
Farooq Tariq of the Labour Party also announced a campaign to put pressure on the government to refuse to pay foreign debt. He said the campaign would hold rallies, long marches, seminars and door-to-door awareness drives in favour of its demands.
Source: Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan