Pakistan must use flood aid responsibly: World Bank

World Bank urges Pakistan to take steps to reassure donor countries it is capable of using flood aid transparently.


Reuters September 20, 2010
Pakistan must use flood aid responsibly: World Bank

The World Bank and the United States on Sunday urged Pakistan to take steps to reassure donor countries that it is capable of using their flood aid responsibly and transparently and that it can enact reforms.

The United Nations has said the floods affected more than 20 million people, damaged or destroyed nearly 1.9 million homes and killed 1,700 people.

World Bank President Robert Zoellick told a high-level UN meeting on Pakistan that Islamabad would have to prove its ability to manage foreign aid ahead of an October meeting in Brussels to review a flood damage assessment report the World Bank and Asian Development Bank are preparing.

"To make most effective use of help and even to secure full donor support, the government will need a reconstruction founded on transparency, accountability, flexibility, backed by law," Zoellick said. "Senior Pakistani officials have told us that this is what they wish to do," he said. "Yet experience from many countries warns that the machinery tends to slide back to business as usual." He added that the Pakistani government should "continue to take concrete steps by the October meeting, backed by law, so we have an opportunity to build Pakistani ownership, governance and capacity."

Reform efforts

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoed Zoellick, saying that Pakistan must "lead by instituting the reforms that will pave the way to self-sufficiency."

"The international community will support Pakistan's efforts at reform and reconstruction," she said. Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi responded by saying that every dollar it receives "will be utilised in the most efficient manner ... and in the most transparent manner."

Under the terms of $11 billion in loans the International Monetary Fund has made to Pakistan in recent years, Islamabad had agreed to implement a number of reforms, such as improving the energy sector, boosting tax revenues and fiscal improvements. But it has been slow to implement those reforms.

The United Nations asked member states on Friday for $2 billion to help Pakistan recover from massive floods that have displaced millions of people, the largest natural disaster appeal in UN history.

COMMENTS (1)

Asmat Jamal | 14 years ago | Reply Flood aid is going to be "CORRUPT BUREAUCRACY'S BONANZA". 1. Irrigation departments which did not spend the maintenance money on the canals and bunds will now be paid again to reconstruct these canals and water courses. 2. Wapda which did not spent money on its system and was other wise dying due to their corruption will now be paid for another round of loot. 3. C & W will now be paid for the roads which they had not made. 4. AG offices will be paid for passing the bills including some fake ones. 5. Agriculture department will be paid for the undone work. 6. Police will be paid for failing to protect the fleeing flood affecties from the dacoits in Sindh and Talabans in Pakhtunkhwa. 7. DMG for heading all the departments and their lion's share. . MY BELOVED COUNTRY. HOW CAN WE SAVE YOU FROM THESE SAVAGES?
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