The Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) appears to be the source of this irregularity, as it has approved a report by a sub-committee that has established the authority of the federation to override the watchdog, which is the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (PPRA) Ordinance of 2002 when considering “strategic projects”. The whole point of having a body such as the PPRA is to ensure transparency in a complex process, which in the past and in connection with a myriad of public projects, has proved to be riddled with corruption. This is not to say that corruption can be assumed in the furtherance of this important component of the CPEC, but it does set a precedent when it comes to the tendering for other projects within the wider CPEC structure. Given the political sensitivities that surround the CPEC and particularly the suspicion that it is Punjab-centric, it would have been in the interest of the government to ensure that a move such as this had stakeholder approval and support across the political spectrum. Inclusivity was never a strong suit for a government increasingly divorced from democratic or even parliamentary processes, boding ill for all our futures.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 19th, 2016.
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