Can Pakistan learn from Katrina?
Pakistan's floods have been called Katrina on steroids. The disasters have a lot in common. Neither country’s president seemed to realise the cataclysmic nature of things.
This weekend, as my home state of Mississippi prepares to memorialise the five-year anniversary of America’s worst natural disaster, Pakistan will mark a month since the start of the floods.
Because of this post-Katrina milestone and my upcoming travels to Karachi, I’ve been considering the scope and response to both of these catastrophes. The two floods have superficial similarities, despite the fact that Hurricane Katrina was a smaller event in a better-equipped country.
This means that on the fifth anniversary of Pakistan’s worst natural disaster, things will probably look even less rosy than they do now in New Orleans.
Hurricane Katrina formed over the Bahamas on August 23, 2005, clipping the southern tip of Florida before making a second landfall on August 29, seventy miles southeast of New Orleans—Louisiana’s biggest city, with a pre-storm population of 454,863. With winds of 205 kph, the hurricane was strong enough to breach levees surrounding the city.
New Orleans was submerged and 1,464 of its residents, dead. Not long after, the Mississippi coast sustained a direct hit, wiping out entire towns and taking the lives of an estimated 300 people. Altogether a million people lost their homes, damages totalled over $100 b and five years later, key infrastructures such as public education remain in disarray. New Orleans still has thousands of uninhabitable houses and has regained only 80 per cent of its pre-Katrina population. Thousands of displaced residents continue to live in temporary shelters. None of this bodes well for Pakistan, which one blogger has termed “Katrina on steroids.”
What Pakistani floods and Katrina have in common
So far these floods have displaced 20 million Pakistanis and geographically altered over 20 per cent of the country. Four weeks in, the floods are less predictable than Katrina and the relentless rain continues to disrupt aid in a country with shaky infrastructure to begin with. Moreover, the Taliban are worsening the situation by threatening international aid workers. Katrina victims were hungry, dehydrated, terrified and stranded, and at some point the city operated under a dangerous, semi-authorised version of martial law, but within a week, all survivors were rescued. And while a handful of people died from cholera-related diseases, there was scant fear of waterborne epidemics.
In Pakistan however, these diseases are genuine threats. According to Boston University’s Adil Najam, aid has only reached 5 million victims, while 6 million remain in life-threatening conditions and 2 m still need temporary shelter.
Both Katrina and the Pakistani floods have devastated areas that were already struggling politically and financially. Both floods have suffered looting and riots and both New Orleans and Pakistan owe a degree of suffering to resource mismanagement. Pre-Katrina New Orleans was flush with political corruption, violence and racial tension.
Just as dam-building projects have been consistently delayed for over five decades in Pakistan’s conflict-ridden north, a year prior to Katrina New Orleans’s levees were tested and the city was warned. But federal funds were diverted from relevant projects.
Neither country’s president seemed to realise the cataclysmic nature of things. Or at least, neither of them bothered to cancel vacations in order to personally oversee relief efforts. Just as Asif Ali Zardari couldn’t be bothered to abandon his European hotels and dignitaries, President Bush planned a trip in the final days of August 2005, despite advance notice that Katrina was coming. He witnessed the destruction from his jumbo jet four days after the storm. And in both cases, religious organisations—extremist or not—were among the first responders. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, church groups were able to avoid bureaucracy, distributing resources long before refugees crossed paths with government officials.
What does any of this mean?
For me, it’s a lens through which to grasp Pakistan’s latest predicament. But it also illustrates the gravity and aftermath of these floods, particularly if the international community doesn’t take action and if the Pakistani government repeats the Bush Administration’s mistakes.
The aid offers following Katrina were unprecedented in America’s history. In addition to food, cash and supplies, foreign countries offered teams of medical and engineering experts while private citizens rallied. Shortly after Katrina, I spent a few months traveling Europe. There were posters soliciting relief everywhere—a benefit concert in Berlin, a party in Prague, Spanish notices urging Red Cross donation. I was amazed and grateful that, despite reigning European antipathy towards American foreign policy, European civilians cared about American civilians and they wanted to help. But the US government eschewed most aid, and Bush made a public statement, that the US “would rise up and take care of it.”
Only about 4 per cent of proffered aid was accepted, most of it cash—and much of that, diverted to NGO’s. It seemed Bush’s America was in the business of broadcasting strength rather than vulnerability, and both American citizens and America’s international image suffered for this understandable but misplaced hubris. So kudos to Pakistan for finally accepting aid from India, and kudos to India and other donors for demonstrating that a stable, healthy Pakistan is in everyone’s interest—whether Pakistan views you or your government as friend or foe. At some time, every country will experience disaster and vulnerability. Let’s hope the international community, the Pakistani government realise this.
Because of this post-Katrina milestone and my upcoming travels to Karachi, I’ve been considering the scope and response to both of these catastrophes. The two floods have superficial similarities, despite the fact that Hurricane Katrina was a smaller event in a better-equipped country.
This means that on the fifth anniversary of Pakistan’s worst natural disaster, things will probably look even less rosy than they do now in New Orleans.
Hurricane Katrina formed over the Bahamas on August 23, 2005, clipping the southern tip of Florida before making a second landfall on August 29, seventy miles southeast of New Orleans—Louisiana’s biggest city, with a pre-storm population of 454,863. With winds of 205 kph, the hurricane was strong enough to breach levees surrounding the city.
New Orleans was submerged and 1,464 of its residents, dead. Not long after, the Mississippi coast sustained a direct hit, wiping out entire towns and taking the lives of an estimated 300 people. Altogether a million people lost their homes, damages totalled over $100 b and five years later, key infrastructures such as public education remain in disarray. New Orleans still has thousands of uninhabitable houses and has regained only 80 per cent of its pre-Katrina population. Thousands of displaced residents continue to live in temporary shelters. None of this bodes well for Pakistan, which one blogger has termed “Katrina on steroids.”
What Pakistani floods and Katrina have in common
So far these floods have displaced 20 million Pakistanis and geographically altered over 20 per cent of the country. Four weeks in, the floods are less predictable than Katrina and the relentless rain continues to disrupt aid in a country with shaky infrastructure to begin with. Moreover, the Taliban are worsening the situation by threatening international aid workers. Katrina victims were hungry, dehydrated, terrified and stranded, and at some point the city operated under a dangerous, semi-authorised version of martial law, but within a week, all survivors were rescued. And while a handful of people died from cholera-related diseases, there was scant fear of waterborne epidemics.
In Pakistan however, these diseases are genuine threats. According to Boston University’s Adil Najam, aid has only reached 5 million victims, while 6 million remain in life-threatening conditions and 2 m still need temporary shelter.
Both Katrina and the Pakistani floods have devastated areas that were already struggling politically and financially. Both floods have suffered looting and riots and both New Orleans and Pakistan owe a degree of suffering to resource mismanagement. Pre-Katrina New Orleans was flush with political corruption, violence and racial tension.
Just as dam-building projects have been consistently delayed for over five decades in Pakistan’s conflict-ridden north, a year prior to Katrina New Orleans’s levees were tested and the city was warned. But federal funds were diverted from relevant projects.
Neither country’s president seemed to realise the cataclysmic nature of things. Or at least, neither of them bothered to cancel vacations in order to personally oversee relief efforts. Just as Asif Ali Zardari couldn’t be bothered to abandon his European hotels and dignitaries, President Bush planned a trip in the final days of August 2005, despite advance notice that Katrina was coming. He witnessed the destruction from his jumbo jet four days after the storm. And in both cases, religious organisations—extremist or not—were among the first responders. On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, church groups were able to avoid bureaucracy, distributing resources long before refugees crossed paths with government officials.
What does any of this mean?
For me, it’s a lens through which to grasp Pakistan’s latest predicament. But it also illustrates the gravity and aftermath of these floods, particularly if the international community doesn’t take action and if the Pakistani government repeats the Bush Administration’s mistakes.
The aid offers following Katrina were unprecedented in America’s history. In addition to food, cash and supplies, foreign countries offered teams of medical and engineering experts while private citizens rallied. Shortly after Katrina, I spent a few months traveling Europe. There were posters soliciting relief everywhere—a benefit concert in Berlin, a party in Prague, Spanish notices urging Red Cross donation. I was amazed and grateful that, despite reigning European antipathy towards American foreign policy, European civilians cared about American civilians and they wanted to help. But the US government eschewed most aid, and Bush made a public statement, that the US “would rise up and take care of it.”
Only about 4 per cent of proffered aid was accepted, most of it cash—and much of that, diverted to NGO’s. It seemed Bush’s America was in the business of broadcasting strength rather than vulnerability, and both American citizens and America’s international image suffered for this understandable but misplaced hubris. So kudos to Pakistan for finally accepting aid from India, and kudos to India and other donors for demonstrating that a stable, healthy Pakistan is in everyone’s interest—whether Pakistan views you or your government as friend or foe. At some time, every country will experience disaster and vulnerability. Let’s hope the international community, the Pakistani government realise this.