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To recover from the floods, the right investments must be made

OPINION

Uzair Younus

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To recover from the floods, sion in the already yawning opportunity gap. Dealing with the human and emotional challenges exacerbated the right investments by the floods will require both investment in rebuilding what has been destroyed and investing in programmes that prevent these households must be made from falling further behind. The priority should be on ensuring that what little these households owned is fully replaced, and on providAs floodwaters recede, the devastation caused by the floods across Pakistan, particularly in Sindh and Balochistan, is becoming more and more evident. The government is estimating the costs at around $30 billion at this time, while an ongoing analysis being conducted by this author and Ammar Khan places the financial losses ing basic education to not only children, but women who have been affected by the floods. Doing so will not only ensure that the wealth gap does not widen further, but that women are provided with the education and tools to improve not only their own lives but the lives of their children, leading them to have access to better opportunities. In addition, efforts need to be made to provide mental health services to those displaced, such that these households – children in and reconstruction costs between $20-25 billion. particular – can better deal with the trauma caused by these floods. While the exercise of counting the economic losses and recon- Research increasingly shows that natural disasters lead to generationstruction costs is a useful and important exercise – one cannot mobilize al trauma, which inhibits the success and development of future gendomestic and foreign resources without such analysis – it is simply not erations. Given that these citizens have been devastated not once but enough. For without assessing, accounting for, and making efforts to twice in just 12 years, it is important for the state to mobilise resources deal with the emotional trauma caused by this devastation, Pakistani to mitigate against the risk of generational trauma creating a vicious society will be unable to recover from this tragedy. cycle that feeds on itself. Many of the regions devastated by this unfolding catastrophe are Making these investments is going to be difficult at best, not some of the most underdeveloped parts of Pakistan. These regions were only because of the lack of capacity in rural parts of the country, but also devastated in the 2010 floods, meaning that they were only just also because of the resource constraints that Pakistan faces. This is beginning to recover from the last disaster. where a conversation about restructuring the very core of Pakistan’s

Almost 69% of households in rural Sindh belong to the lowest economy, which currently works for a select few at the expense of the wealth quintile, compared to almost 30% of households nationally, many, is sorely needed. according to the Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey (PDHS) As argued in previous columns, Pakistan is a kleptocracy where 2017-18. The devastation caused by the floods will only exacerbate the over $17 billion a year are diverted to elite segments of society. This wealth gap between these households and the rest of Pakistan. structure, where there is socialism for the privileged and nothing for

The humanitarian crisis will also widen the education gap the downtrodden, needs to be destroyed. Reform, however, requires between the rural parts of Sindh, Balochistan, and the rest of Pakistan: elites that have captured power and wealth to proactively and willing82% of females in rural Sindh and 89% in rural Balochistan have no ed- ly give up some of their own wealth for the benefit of the many. ucation, compared to almost 62% across rural Pakistan. The dislocation Given the ongoing political polarisation across the country, caused by the crisis will mean that another generation of women will such a conversation is unlikely. Which means that the most likely face high barriers to attaining an education, leading to a further expan- scenario is that households devastated across Pakistan, especially in rural Sindh and Balochistan, are going to fall further behind. This is and will be tragic, undermining the overall recovery from these floods, generating further trauma among vulnerable groups, and reinforcing Pakistan’s status as the sick man of South Asia. The writer is Director of While Pakistan’s elites try to vociferously argue for reparations from the rest of the world – a comthe Pakistan Initiative pletely valid argument – the fact is that their claims are likely to be ignored. This is not only because of the at the Atlantic Council, a apathy of global elites, but also because Pakistan’s elites themselves have not done enough to show that Washington D.C.-based they will utilise resources for those on the periphery. Take for example the PPP, which claims to be the think tank, and host of the flag-bearer of progressivism in Pakistan, and has been ruling Sindh for years. Its leaders have failed to break podcast Pakistonomy. He the power of landed feudals in Sindh, perpetuating an extractive and inhuman system in rural parts of the tweets @uzairyounus. province.So long as domestic elites fail in their own moral duty towards their citizens, global elites will remain unconvinced of their own moral responsibility to assist Pakistani citizens devastated by these floods.

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