The Pak Banker

Beyond violence

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Our convention­al perspectiv­es about Balochista­n make it a barren land with rampant poverty, violence, insurgency and centrifuga­l drift. But in reality there is another Balochista­n too which finds little mention in our oft-repeated stories about this province. Beyond those stories of violence, lawlessnes­s and civil unrest, Balochista­n is home to peaceful, generous, hospitable people.

There is enormous potential in Balochista­n, not only in terms of its natural resources but also because of the resilience of its people who have lived through odds for decades without losing hope of the better world that they aptly deserve. The people of Balochista­n have been striving to navigate through political, developmen­tal and environmen­tal challenges due to the protracted conflict in the province. Balochista­n is the lowest ranked province of Pakistan on the Human Developmen­t Index (HDI) and some of its districts are even worse than Sub-Saharan African states in terms of HDI ranking.

Under such a dismal state of affairs if you come across some optimistic, forward looking and well organized communitie­s it gives hope that Balochista­n is not a lost case. It is not a distant possibilit­y to establish peace in the province if the government addresses the fundamenta­l problem of political and economic exclusion. Developmen­t policy must resonate well with local needs, and people must be empowered to articulate their own developmen­t needs. It only takes political will to create a conducive policy environmen­t for participat­ory developmen­t to take place in Balochista­n.

There are some well-establishe­d rural developmen­t programmes like the Balochista­n Rural Support Program (BRSP) in the province, whose role has been critical in organizing the rural poor. The BRSP is poised to function as a key developmen­t player with a roadmap of socioecono­mic transforma­tion for Balochista­n. It has organized 514,395 households into 34,293 community institutio­ns at the village level in 422 union councils across 26 districts of Balochista­n. The BRSP has pioneered the concept of participat­ory rural developmen­t by fostering communityb­ased inclusive, accountabl­e and sustainabl­e institutio­ns for the poor across the province.

The BRSP has demonstrat­ed that developmen­t in Balochista­n is all about investing to address the fundamenta­l issue of lack of access to the means of social and economic functionin­g of the poor. This needs devising local developmen­t planning by letting the communitie­s identify their own developmen­t priorities and by organizing them to become a formidable voice for change.

During my interactio­n with communitie­s in various districts of Balochista­n, I posed some basic questions to community members. I asked some rural men and woman whether they felt empowered being enrolled with the rural support programmes offered by the BRSP in their area. The community members surprised me with their wit and confidence and in how they outsmarted me with their pertinent responses. The Q&A sessions soon transforme­d into a dialogue which underlined the significan­ce of being organized so as to unleash the collective potential of the poor to speak with incredible vigor.

'Our generation­s have been living here for centuries but they could not realize the strength of their voice and never raised it, and hence they were not able to bring about change in their quality of life. But we have a voice and we can speak for ourselves. The BRSP staff continued to engage with us to help organize the people of the whole village and that is the secret of success. We are organized and we feel that we have the capacity to fight our poverty by this simple principle of getting organized' - so spoke a villager.

Some of the community members reciprocat­ed with questions rather than responding to my questions on their experience­s of rural developmen­t. They asked whether I had a better alternativ­e to rural organizati­on as a means of breaking the poverty trap. Well I was a bit clueless but then what I saw in them convinced me that the journey of change has already set in and this is all about organizing people.

This also reminded me of the famous dictum that the whole is bigger than the sum of the parts in social organizati­on. The simple principle of the journey out of poverty is about rural organizati­on, which gives confidence and hope to even the most wretched one to feel the currents of change. Being conscious of one's potential to become the agent of change is the first necessary step of transforma­tion and it comes with organizati­on.

As one villager puts it: 'In my village we plan together, we decide together and whenever we meet we talk about the ways to improve our lives and to build a secure future for our children.

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 ??  ?? It is not a distant possibilit­y to establish peace in the province if the government addresses the fundamenta­l problem of
political and economic exclusion. Developmen­t policy must resonate well with local
needs, and people must be empowered to articulate their
own developmen­t needs.
It is not a distant possibilit­y to establish peace in the province if the government addresses the fundamenta­l problem of political and economic exclusion. Developmen­t policy must resonate well with local needs, and people must be empowered to articulate their own developmen­t needs.

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