Friday,
November 18, 2005, 10:55 a.m.
A Model Summit
Showing effective leadership in crisis
MUSHARRAF LEADS PAKISTAN'S DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Mansoor Ijaz, chairman of Crescent Investment Management in New York
just returned from the earthquake-stricken areas in northern Pakistan
and Kashmir.
On Saturday, Pakistan's president, Gen Pervez Musharraf, is convening a
donor conference in Islamabad to forcefully and transparently present
his case to the world for the type of assistance his country will need
to rebuild Kashmir and other northern areas of Pakistan ravaged by a
magnitude 8.7 Earthquake on October 8th.
Reconciled estimates compiled by Pakistani government agencies, and
endorsed by the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and other
supranational lending organizations, show that $5.2 billion is needed,
of which $3.7 billion will go into long-term rehabilitation and
reconstruction efforts and $1.5 billion will be needed in the near term
to keep Kashmiris and Pakistanis alive through the long Himalayan winter.
The international community's response this weekend will define how a
world awash in liquidity and increasingly bankrupt in morality manages
humanitarian crises in the years to come. The inadequate response thus
far is as alarming as it is unacceptable. Barely 10% of what is needed
has been committed, including by oil wealthy Arab nations whose ruling
elite routinely enjoy Pakistan's rich culture and environs.
The United States, criticized near and far for always doing less than it
could, has almost unilaterally carried the heavy lift burden of getting
aid to the needy with its fleet of Chinook-class helicopters. State
Department records show over 1,200 American personnel are in Pakistan to
assist with relief efforts. 158 U.S. military and civilian cargo airlift
flights have delivered about 1,900 tons of medical supplies, food,
shelter material, blankets, and rescue equipment to Pakistan.
Chinooks and other US helicopters have flown 2,400 sorties delivering
over 4,000 tons of relief supplies to the disaster area and transporting
over 16,000 people needing medical attention. A U.S. Army Mobile Army
Surgical Hospital (MASH) is operating in Muzaffarabad, the capital of
Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, providing urgent medical care to more than
2,000 injured people. Nine U.S. military ships have delivered over 100
pieces of heavy equipment, 34 containers of supplies and 176 tons of
humanitarian assistance through the port of Karachi.
America certainly cares. But we could, and should, do a lot more.
A tour of Kashmir's earthquake-stricken areas leaves one speechless -
roads blocked by boulders the size of houses, mountains whose sheered
faces buried the villages below them, rivers diverted by rockslides and
entire villages flattened like pancakes. Amid the ruin, hope remains
alive - Kashmiris walk with purpose throughout what is left of their
villages and temporary tent cities, busily preparing to rebuild their
lives. Their resiliency is the sole reason the world should act
generously to help them help themselves.
Here are the most important ways in which that can happen:
Sponsor-a-Village Program
The immediate needs of the affected areas are for 3,000,000 blankets and
250,000 temporary tent shelters to help residents get through the harsh
Himalayan winter. In order to both speed the process by which the
supplies get to Kashmir and distribute the burden for doing so,
President Musharraf should call on the leaders of major cities in the
United States and other wealthy countries to sponsor a village by
collecting blankets and tents and transporting them to a gateway city,
like New York or London, from where United Parcel Service, whose former
chairman visited the earthquake-stricken areas this week as part of a US offer to transport them to Chaklala Air
Force Base in Islamabad. 300 cities collecting 10,000 blankets each does
not seem an unreasonable task if there is an organizing force and
willing spirit behind the effort. Hotels and large department stores
could make a big initial contribution to such an effort.
Heavy Machinery
The biggest intermediate term problem is rebuilding road infrastructure
in the region so that aid and reconstruction materials can be
transported by road rather than airlifted at much greater cost. Focus
needs to be trained on making tangible requests of Caterpillar, John
Deere and other heavy equipment manufacturers to contribute on loan the
needed machinery to rebuild Kashmir's road infrastructure.
Housing
Innovative solutions exist for creating earthquake proof housing units
in Kashmir (Out of Disaster,Innovation by Mansoor Ijaz, 16 November
2005, National Review Online:
http://www.nationalreview.com/ijaz/ijaz200511160848.asp ). The Pakistan
army has already approved and is beginning to permit construction of
Eco-Domes by Cal Earth Pakistan, a joint venture between California-based Cal Earth and Pakistani American entrepreneurs. USAID,
the US government's partner in disaster relief, has committed to provide
funds for low-cost housing solutions. Rather than buying more tents than
can be deployed or are needed, USAID's able management team, which will
be in Islamabad for the conference, should look seriously at investing
its resources in these earthen super-adobe style homes, many of which
saved the people of Bam, Iran (where the last big earthquake struck in
the region) from a lifetime of living in tent cities. Rebuilding
Kashmiri lives with dignity is crucial to this effort.
Pakistani Trade
Finally, for the long-term, the world needs to look at Pakistan as a
more equal trading partner. Years of various types of trade sanctions
and other punitive measures have left the economy reeling. An example of
how the international community could take a politically bold decision
that helps Pakistan to help itself is reversing the European Union's
March 2004 decision to reintroduce punitive tariffs against Pakistani
bed linens. Cotton and cotton-based products are Pakistan's largest
export component in its vital textile industry, generating over $400
million alone in trade profits with Europe. That's a lot of funding to
help build homes, hospitals, food warehouses, power generation
facilities and water distribution plants.
The concept of "donor fatigue" has become a fashion statement for
inaction during a humanitarian crisis. The world has a historic chance
to put forth a comprehensive plan for rebuilding distressed lives. South
Asia's earthquake should become a contest of generosity.
Give, world. Just give...
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