'Failure to reform corruption put flood aid in jeopardy'

Britain warns that foreign aid donations to Pakistan have fallen far short of a UN target over corruption fears.


Express November 15, 2010
'Failure to reform corruption put flood aid in jeopardy'

ISLAMABAD: Britain has warned Pakistan that its failure to reform its corrupt and wasteful government has put in jeopardy its chances of emerging as the biggest recipient of British foreign aid.

Foreign aid donations to Pakistan have fallen far short of a UN target over corruption fears. The country's officials have rebuffed efforts to ensure aid spending on recovery from the devastating floods it suffered in August is not tainted by corruption.

Andrew Mitchell, the International Development Secretary, is attending the Pakistan Development Forum in Islamabad on Monday and will demand four sweeping reforms across four sectors in return for continued growth in British aid payment.

If it follows through, Islamabad will be the “winner” from Britain's review of all its aid programmes, which will shift spending from China and Russia to Pakistan and conflict zones in Africa.

"Britain stands ready to increase its support to Pakistan as part of the aid review but this will be dependent on a commitment to put in place much-needed reforms," he said. "If Pakistan takes this opportunity to grasp the nettle of reform as it is starting to do, then it has the chance to come back stronger”.

But Pakistani officials rejected out of hand efforts by foreign countries to impose conditions on how it spends aid. "That is not acceptable," said Salman Siddique, the Finance Secretary.

Siddique said that Pakistan had already submitted a bill to introduce a VAT for the first time and had imposed a 10 per cent flood tax on the incomes of the wealthy. But even after the measures, Pakistan has one of the world's lowest tax takes, at just 10 per cent of GDP.

Mitchell is to demand a root and branch overhaul of the tax system, an overhaul of government spending to eliminate waste, a "transparent" system to dispense rebuilding aid free from political interference and a campaign to drive out corrupt officials.

COMMENTS (2)

Nighat Anjum | 14 years ago | Reply Pakistan has been gifted in every way. It has been bestowed by great deep sea-ports, huge gold and copper mines and one of the largest resources of coal but there is no real or so-called investigation as to why the concerned departments of the concerned ministers were unable to develop any of these mega projects in the last five decades or so. Considering civil bureaucracy along with the military establishment of the country is the only assured reality in Pakistan. When the real policy making is done at the secretarial level, then why is no one asking questions from those responsible for the development of these projects? Why is there no report on why the gold and copper mines of Reko Diq were sold for peanuts to foreign investors? I refuse to believe that there is any document in this country that is not drafted by the concerned bureaucratic division, so why were no questions raised by any of the bureaucrats when such a national asset was being sold off?
Klues | 14 years ago | Reply Govt. admit themselves that 60% goes into corruption. A leading economist puts the figure 90%. Guess where the aid money is going British people?
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ