Standing up to corruption

Corruption threatens Pakistan’s sovereignty, reducing us to a satellite-status state of the US.


Marvi Memon December 01, 2010
Standing up to corruption

Financial corruption is rampant in present day Pakistan. It has eaten the financial backbone and has threatened Pakistan’s sovereignty, reducing us to a satellite-status state of the US. Whether in the form of the Kerry-Lugar Bill or IMF diktats, we have lost our independence. Whilst the government may deny the presence of corruption, its trademark has become so entrenched that even Saudi King Abdullah talks of rotting heads and decaying bodies. Whilst Transparency International has been at the brunt of attacks for declaring Pakistan the 34th most corrupt country in the world, this it is not the issue. Governments who are busy looting don’t like messengers of truth.

The type of corruption present in Pakistan can be classified into three types. First, there is one which destroys the system of merit because most people who are hired for public sector organisations tend to be hired for other reasons. Second, there is corruption through which Pakistan’s precious natural resources are misused. This happens often when large infrastructure projects are made. The third relates to procurement — when money is paid to other parties to secure deals. This can be found in the sugar, wheat and rental power sectors, or the Hajj scandal; in the purchase of medicines for dengue fever patients or in the mismanagement of flood relief aid.

The Public Accounts Committee of the National Assembly is making some ground to uncover the dirt. The basic accountability process, however, needs to start from parliament itself. If corruption could be detected and checked, then perhaps tax-paying citizens wouldn’t have to be burdened with even more taxes. The ongoing fiasco surrounding the reformed GST fiasco which has rocked parliament is one such example of this. It is clear that overburdening those already in the tax net should not be an acceptable policy tool. With increasing interest rates and a faltering financial system, it is clear that the only remedy left is a clean-up operation of corruption. But that is only possible when there is a will.

The answer then lies in public pressure groups on each corruption case that is highlighted in the media. Almost like an anti-corruption brigade that doesn’t rest till some satisfactory action is taken. I propose that the most damaging cases should be highlighted and affirmative pressure groups be formed, with participation from each political party.

Certain reports of the potential of natural resources need to come to the public domain as well. Only then the loss that Pakistan is suffering, as a result of corruption in infrastructure projects, will be clear. Similarly, the opportunity loss of not having merit-based postings in key public-sector organisations needs to be calculated. The underground economy which has been created as a result of bribes needs to be tabulated as well. We can then reach a consensus on how badly Pakistan is being deprived of its true potential.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 2nd, 2010.

COMMENTS (12)

Dr. Mukhtar Ahmad | 13 years ago | Reply I wish you success against a valiant battle against all evils of high society.Allow me to say that I aam not A.Q Khan but my work is noless in Making Pakistan a Nuclear Power. Mukhtar
S | 13 years ago | Reply Why has India succeeded in jealously guarding its sovereignty while also being a highly corrupt country? Because its not corruption that forces us to lose sovereignty, its bad policy choices. Pakistan's military turned us into a satellite in the 1950s by signing treaty alliances with the US. Military expenditure and debt servicing are now our biggest expenditures, with debt steadily increasing to finance increased military expenditure. What was your position on the $1 billion increase in the military budget this year, even as development budget was slashed by over 50%? What about army land-grabs and moving billions of dollars of land and resources from public to private hands? What about the army control of foreign and defense policy that keeps us financially over-stretched and economically limited by keeping natural markets closed off? It is this structural weakness that has crippled Pakistan. The biggest problem facing us today is intellectual corruption, our silence on the military establishment and our inability to tackle the real issues head on.
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