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It
would be a very serious mistake to blame the catastrophic damage
from the earthquake of October 8, 2005, on nature, terrain, or even
worse - sins of the victims. Enough has been written on the actual
damage, the tragic stories of how victims have suffered and how
civil society, the international community and the government have
mobilised support. Of far greater importance is to review the failings
that led to the disaster, and the lessons learned from this calamity
to chart a course for a safer future.
Disasters
expose the vulnerable underbellies of the societies in which they
occur. Susceptibility to suffer damage in environmental disasters
and the relative inability to recover from the damage, are outcomes
of deep fissures that divide societies along class, gender, age,
ethnic, religious and ideological lines. Disasters serve to dramatically
highlight the deep injustices and social structures of exclusion
and oppression that govern everyday life. The earthquake in Northern
Pakistan and Azad Kashmir did the same that Hurricane Katrina did
in the United States or other disasters have done elsewhere - show
us a horrifying picture of our society that we did not want to see.
What
have we learned from this earthquake? The first, was the greatness
of the people of Pakistan in the face of adversity. The bumbling
initial response of the government notwithstanding, the unity and
generosity displayed by Pakistani civil society made me proud to
be a Pakistani. We must never let anybody tell us again, particularly
the odious bureaucrats and the parha likha "drawing room"
crowd that there is something fundamentally wrong with the Pakistani
people. The people of Pakistan mobilised and opened their hearts
and wallets to help the victims. So one is tempted to believe that
it is the state that holds back the Pakistani people from fulfilling
their destiny. If the state dealt with the Pakistani people as equals,
to be helped to achieve their potential, rather than a rogue population
to be controlled and protected from itself, maybe Pakistan would
be a very different place.
However,
it seems that the state is going to continue to maintain its patronising
and supercilious attitude towards its people. According to news
reports, the cabinet is talking about giving out reconstruction
contracts to foreigners, because they are more honest than us!
Second,
it was an eye-opener to see the poor and vulnerable state of the
communication infrastructure in Azad Kashmir and adjoining districts
of the NWFP. Not to mention the limited lift capacity of the Pakistani
armed forces. We found out that there is not a single C-130-capable
airstrip in Azad Kashmir. What did our military planners expect
in the event of a war? That the enemy would spare the bridges and
roads? How did the military plan on supplying the three divisions
that it has stationed in Azad Kashmir? Clearly the establishment's
neglect of the communication infrastructure over the past 57 years
crucially contributed to the tragedy. So many thousands of lives
could have been saved if areas had been more accessible faster.
The disaster revealed the rampant corruption in our society
where authorities allow shoddy, haphazard construction, because
palms are greased and building codes are ignored. But beyond the
issue of government and business corruption, is the issue of inappropriate
or non-existent building codes and the cultural predilection towards
inappropriate building technology. Being from the area and having
grown up there, I can recall how cultural preferences and building
styles have changed in Azad Kashmir and the adjoining Mansehra district.
I distinctly recall what a source of pride and joy it was for my
family, and many others like them in Muzaffarabad, when they could
finally afford to have 'lanter' on their houses. House and building
construction was supposed to reflect the owner's ascent up the class
ladder. The poorest had thatched roofs and mud walls. As you found
a job with the government and joined the ranks of lower middle class
you got yourself a tin roof. If you made it abroad or had become
a senior officer, you got yourself a concrete roof. 'Lanter' was
the ultimate statement to the world that you had arrived! Today
we all know what this blind worship of "modern" trends,
without proper building codes, meant for the thousands of women
and children in Azad Kashmir, Mansehra and Kohistan.
The
disaster also revealed what a marginal place environmental hazards
hold in our collective consciousness and policy formulation. There
was not one qualified, well-equipped Pakistani rescue team in a
country of more than 160 million. Every time you see disaster pictures
from any part of the world - even from the poorest of countries
- you see some uniformed, professional-looking disaster relief workers
trying to put out a fire, investigating a bomb explosion, or rescuing
flood victims. In the case of Pakistan, invariably the television
shows scores of people in shalwar kameez milling around or looking
into the cameras, while those in uniform - the military and police
are generally keeping a safe distance. Sadly enough, the images
this time around were no different - especially in the initial days
of the quake.
Repositioning
hazards into the centre of our collective consciousness and policy
thinking has to be the starting point of building a safer future
for our people. Examples abound of ongoing policy boondoggles that
completely ignore the potential hazards associated with such policy
decisions. Two examples are the proposed construction of the GHQ
in Islamabad and drought management in Balochistan, which clearly
reflect blatant official neglect of future natural calamities.
To
be fair, Islamabad's master plan formulated by the Greek born, German-
trained architect, Constantinos Doxiados, is fatally flawed in terms
of neglecting the effects of greater urbanisation on the hydrology
and geomorphology of the headwaters of the Lai river in Rawalpindi.
It is elementary geomorphology that greater urbanisation of headwaters
contributes to greater surface runoff and higher flood peaks. The
government instead of remodeling the ongoing rampant urbanisation
in Islamabad to mitigate the flooding problems in the Lai, or removing
human encroachment in the Lai flood plain, is planning on building
the GHQ in the headwaters of the Bedranwali kas, an eastern tributary
of the Lai. This was the only tributary of the Lai, which did not
have urbanised headwaters.
The Supreme Court took suo moto notice of Islamabad Chalets,
a small 200-kanal development in Pir Sohawa, among others, on the
plea that the development would pollute the headwaters of Khanpur
dam, and cause traffic problems on the only road leading up to it.
However, evidently nobody even bothered to look at a toposheet,
which would have shown that the development is not even in the same
valley as the headwaters of Khanpur dam. The Court, however, has
not taken notice of the ill advised development of the GHQ in E-10
which has real potential for accentuating flood peaks in downstream
Rawalpindi, and making the potential traffic problems associated
with the Islamabad Chalets look like rush hour in the central Sahara
desert. The relative ignorance of potential hazards associated with
developmental activity, and arbitrary inquisitions in the aftermath
of a great national tragedy are illustrative of the policy and popular
attitude towards hazards.
In
Balochistan, the drought has devastated entire communities. Ask
anybody in Balochistan and there will be tales of destitution, hunger,
displacement and environmental degradation associated with the drought.
Almost everybody in Balochistan also knows that if it were drought
alone, they could have dealt with it. The actual disaster really
unfolded when the government encouraged tubewell installations,
and then imposed a minimal flat rate on tubewell electricity. Today,
more than 14,000 tubewells, often installed for free by the government,
running 24 hours are mining the scarce groundwater resources of
the arid province. The tubewells are destroying traditional karez
irrigation, and dugwells, and depriving thousands of small farmers
of their livelihoods. The government in the meantime is continuing
to subsidise 3 per cent of the total farmers in Balochistan with
flat rate electricity, planning on installing more free tubewells,
and continuing to encourage water-intensive crops like apples and
onions in the name of agricultural modernisation and increased productivity.
What will happen in the event of another drought and once the groundwater
has been mined to the point of no return, is something every child
in Balochistan knows. The government, however, has chosen to ignore
the realities. Focus on accumulation and narrow views of development
have made the policy makers and rich farmers blind to the increasing
vulnerability of the province to drought hazard, and that is quite
typical of the policy attitude towards hazards in general.
In the coming days,
weeks, months and hopefully, years, there will be much soul-searching.
Hopefully, the soul-searching will be along the lines of avoiding
the mistakes of the past and reorienting the developmental trajectory
of the country away from greater accumulation and outward trappings
of modernisation and towards building resilience among communities
and greater equity in distribution of the fruits of development.
But in the meantime the Pakistani people must demand that the government
makes hazard management and disaster response the centrepiece of
its policy and developmental agenda.
However, the most fundamental insight is humility. We may be quite
up- to-date when it comes to the rituals of Islam, but when it comes
to core attitudes of a religious system, we are ignorant or downright
hostile. Building multi-storey concrete buildings and dams in earthquake
zones and drilling tubewells in drought-prone deserts, are all expressions
of arrogance in the face of nature. Environmental hazards occur
when humans degrade the natural environment in the arrogant belief
that their technology can defeat and subjugate nature. We cannot
fight nature, we must learn to live with it, as harmoniously as
possible. Every time our mandarins, politicians and businessmen
think of one more mega-project without considering the consequences,
they would do well to remember the faces of the victims of this
recent tragedy.
Arrogance breeds recklessness, and the reckless fall - and fall
hard. All of them.
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