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Symptoms of distress

Pakistan is sick. And this is no mild ailment or passing cough. Our federation is suffering from a back-breaking, blood-curdling, fever that won’t seem to crack. The infection that has caused this fever has crept its way through the country and nestled deep inside the economy.

As time has passed the state has continued to ignore this ailment and continue on its path of destructive gluttony. With eve ry day the infection has spread. It has stretched its dark, insidi ous limbs like an enraged octopus, engulfing and squeezing the life out of everything in its path.

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The results have been clear as day. The pain of inflation has spread through the population like an angry wound. The cold sweats caused by unemployment have resulted in the jitters of a nxiety. And the overwhelming exhaustion that comes with any fever has run its course through the country leaving its people spent , its businesses weary, and its economy in a state of absolute lethar gy.

And now there is a new kind of symptom that has come to the fore — thrashing. After all, this country is a sick creatur e. It is burning up, it is scared, it is angry, it is confused, it is af raid for its life and now it is lashing out. In the ensuing flailing the stat e has begun to hurt itself. The recklessness with which helpful membe rs of this country such as Jibran Nasir have been picked up and ha d their constitutional rights violated is symptomatic of a state that is writer is senior editor at Profit. He can be reached at abdullah.niazi@ pakistantody.com.pk reacting in anger and frustration.

This is of course not the first time that the state has lashed out in anger or used its powers unjustly. We have many examples of such behaviour. Same came in other moments of ailments and other came out of hubris and gluttony. What we must remember is that it is the actions of the past that have brought us to this point. This is perhaps an unique moment in Pakistan’s history because we are struggling from a trifecta of social, economic, and political crises at the same time.

In many ways the fever is the result of circumstances we could not control. Pakistan did not cause the Covid-19 pandemic which halted the global economy. Pakistan also had nothing to do with the Russia-Ukraine war which disrupted fuel supplies and caused a global recession.

Yet in so many more things it is our own folly. There was plenty Pakistan could have done to protect itself from such a situation. For decades we have allowed ourselves bad habits and harmful indulgences. We have made our economy dependent on foreign aid and have consumed more than we have produced. As a result our bureaucracy has become bloated, clogged, and inefficient Time and again we have chosen to address the symptoms rather than the cause.

Liquidity injections, foreign aid, and debt restructuring have been used as balms and cold compresses to cool our heating economy. And even though the fever may go down at times, all the doctors know that by morning it will be raging again. This time it is burning everything, and it will take every ounce of our resources to fight back and survive.

There are many things wrong with this country. Many things that its founders and its first generations got wrong. We are suffering from those. They picked up bad habits such as military dictators and never picked up on healthy habits like democracy. The result has been a slow, morbid, poisoning that people in the corridors of power have watched with cold apathy. Despite all those flaws that they plagued this country with, they ensured that Pakistan survived. Today, we are standing at a mom ent where the symptoms of our distress are reaching a breaking point. Pakistan will survive t his. The age of 75 is quite young for a nation. Yet as things stand, we will come out of it weakened and perhaps unable to get back up from the next blow.

If we are to have any hope, there must be less thrashing and mo re acceptance of the illness.

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