To aid or not to aid flood-hit Pakistan The Statesman 06 Sep 2022 Maj Gen Harsha Kakar

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To aid or not to aid flood-hit Pakistan The Statesman 06 Sep 2022

          Pakistan is experiencing its worst floods in history. The government claims that over twelve hundred have lost their lives. The UN estimates that 33 million have been affected, of which around 450,000 are displaced and 6.4 million are in dire need of humanitarian aid. Over a 1000 health facilities have been damaged. The British High Commissioner to Islamabad stated, ‘The evidence I am seeing on ground is that this level of impact is unprecedented.’  

Pakistan and the UN launched a joint aid appeal for USD 160 million. Many nations have contributed. The UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, in his appeal stated, ‘Pakistan is awash in suffering. The Pakistani people are facing a monsoon on steroids — the relentless impact of epochal levels of rain and flooding.’ Turkey, UAE, Qatar, Ireland, Saudi Arabia and China are amongst nations which have rushed material aid to Pakistan.

The Pak government, Imran Khan, as also its army chief, General Bajwa, have independently appealed for aid. Imran Khan in an international telethon raised Pak Rs 5 billion for flood victims. These are likely for his party run provinces of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, ignoring the rest of the country.

PM Modi offered his condolences to the Pak government. He tweeted, ‘Saddened to see the devastation caused by floods in Pakistan. We extend our heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims, the injured and all those affected by this natural calamity and hope for an early restoration of normalcy.’ There was no mention or promise of aid.

In response, Pak PM, Shehbaz Sharif thanked the Indian PM by mentioning, ‘With their characteristic resilience, the people of Pakistan shall, InshaAllah, overcome the adverse effects of this natural calamity and rebuild their lives and communities.’ Again request for support was missing.

There are reports of discussion within the Indian government on providing aid to Pakistan. Under normal circumstances, it would have been announced without hesitation, but this being Pak, the government is cautious. It needs to be diplomatically correct. Meanwhile in Pakistan, its finance minister, Miftah Ismail, mentioned that the government could consider importing edibles from India on account of sharp rise in local food prices.

Miftah Ismail tweeted, ‘More than one international agency has approached the govt to allow them to bring food items from India through the land border. The govt will take the decision to allow imports or not based on supply shortage position.’ Meanwhile Pakistan permitted duty free import of onions and tomatoes from Iran and Afghanistan. It finally announced that it will not resume trade with India.

While trade and aid are two different subjects, Pakistan is sending the message that it hesitates to accept Indian support.

Pakistan is aware that India is the global pharmacy and could provide emergent medicines to prevent outbreak of diseases linked to floods. India has assisted other nations impacted by natural disasters and could do the same for Pakistan but procrastinates as rejection of its aid offer could result in a diplomatic fiasco. Hence, it awaits Pakistan’s request.

Shehbaz requesting India for support could provide fodder to Imran Khan. Fawad Choudhary, the erstwhile Imran government information minister, tweeted, ‘We will oppose such decisions and never allow trade on the pretext of floods. The government should not betray the blood of the people of Kashmir.’

It is strange that even in its moment of crisis, Pak politicians continue to play power games, ignoring the suffering of their populace. Pakistan could be repeating the mistake of the Bhola cyclone which hit East Pakistan in Nov 1970 and led to the breakup of the state due to delayed and poor response of Islamabad.

Historically Indian aid to Pak has always met with resistance from Islamabad. In 2001, India accepted Pak aid after the Gujrat earthquake. 

In Oct 2005, India pledged USD 25 million at a UN donor’s conference in Geneva, in support of earthquake victims in Pakistan, after an earthquake hit both nations along the LOC. India sent three trains and an aircraft carrying relief material, while rejecting reciprocal aid, claiming it had sufficient resources. The Guardian, in an article of 28th Oct 2005, stated, ‘The Indian donation was a minor breakthrough in relations between the two states, which are seeking to overcome old animosities.’

India also offered to employ its helicopters to assist POK residents trapped near the LOC. Musharraf was acceptable for Indian helicopters but without crews, which India rejected. Pakistan rejected joint army rescue operations.

In Aug 2010, when Pakistan was reeling under floods, the Indian government offered USD 20 Million as aid. Simultaneously, Pak newspapers blamed India’s release of excess water into the Sutlej and Beas rivers as the cause and implored the Pak government to refuse Indian aid. An editorial in the Pakistan Urdu daily, Nawa-i-Waqt, even stated, ‘The offer of aid is akin is throwing salt on our wounds.’ The Pak government dithered on the Indian offer for a week and finally accepted that its aid be routed through the UN, which India did.

Indian assistance to Pakistan during calamities, has neither improved relations nor reduced its support to terrorism. There is a pause, then the scenario returns to normal.

It is true that aid during calamities should not be linked to relations or behaviour of states and be considered a humanitarian gesture. However, if there is no positive response by the recipient state on the goodwill of the donor, then there is bound to be hesitation.

Most damaging for India would be rejection of its aid on account of internal politics of Pakistan. It could lead to a diplomatic loss of face. A simpler option would be to send aid through the UN, as was done in 2005 and 2010. However, this would imply Indian support being invisible in the eyes of the common Pakistani. The Shehbaz government requesting India for aid could damage its internal credibility, especially after claiming no diplomatic engagement till restoration of article 370. Thus both nations hesitate.

An ideal option would be simultaneous request and acceptance through backchannel dialogue. This will ensure both governments’ interests are protected. However, that is unlikely to happen.