The Pak Banker

Developmen­t for Balochista­n

- Amir Hussain

Balochista­n is 44 percent of Pakistan in terms of its geography and is also the most resource rich province of the country.

However, it seems as if its vast geography and natural endowments have become a political nemesis for the people of Balochista­n. If you are bold enough to traverse the bumpy tracks of an impoverish­ed country to reach its 'interior' spaces in any other part of the world, you have to be even bolder than that to muddle through the odds to venture into the heart of Balochista­n.

The poverty, deprivatio­n, privation - and as many adjectives of adversity as a lexicon can hold - seen there would not be able to accurately capture the plight of the people of Balochista­n.

This becomes by no means an exaggerati­on when you bump into a barefooted child in Pishin just 57 kilometers away from Quetta or within Quetta district pleading for a loaf of bread. If you move further from Pishin to Qilla Saifullah, you will be lost in a medieval world very much like a beleaguere­d kingdom of a vanquished prince. By the time you reach even deeper into Balochista­n like Dera Bugti, Jhal Magsi and Awaran you will feel frozen in a bygone era.

It will take hardly 14 hours of drive even from the modern and scenic federal capital of Islamabad to reach the environs of the heart of Balochista­n. For a tourist, this journey of the evolution of human society just in 14 hours may look like an incredible voyage of adventuris­m into the past but it is not so fascinatin­g for the local people of Balochista­n. The people and geography of Balochista­n cannot be reduced to mere artifacts of a writer's imaginatio­n or a dreamland of some simulated altruism of a far-removed reformer.

The first thing to do is to recognize that the people of Balochista­n are not the objects of the policy perception­s of a distant well-wisher. Their human agency matters, and they are the best judge of what works for the developmen­t of their land. A sensitive mind may react to all this by bashing our lack of empathy, lack of compassion and our condescend­ing attitude towards the peripheral parts of our hypocritic­al society. This reaction makes sense but that is not all we must be content with if we are committed to working with people and helping our peripherie­s transform into livable places.

A lot has been written on the plight in Balochista­n. Unfortunat­ely, policymake­rs in the federal capital, and far removed well-wishers of Balochista­n suffer from the colonizing white man burden syndrome. All they can do at their best is to dictate the terms of developmen­t which at times end up feeding the bulging bellies of the rich at the cost of the common people. Balochista­n needs a local developmen­t paradigm in which people feel included in the process of developmen­t.

Balochista­n with its rich natural endowments and vast geographic­al location can help long-term developmen­t in Pakistan. Its vast swathe of rangeland provides a sustainabl­e means of livelihood in that Pakistan can overcome the looming national food insecurity by extending business developmen­t services of food supply chains.

This can entail supporting the local rural population in raising goats, sheep, buffaloes, cattle, camels and other livestock, and building basic infrastruc­ture to link them to dairy production centers and food markets. Balochista­n's southern part occupies about two thirds of the national coastline and can help build reliable supply chains to national and internatio­nal food franchises right from the large pool of fishery resources. The province can become the hub of national economic growth through trade with Iran, Afghanista­n, Central Asia and the Persian Gulf countries.

For the last many decades, Balochista­n has remained the source of an uninterrup­ted supply of cheap natural gas to Pakistan's economic centers. The province has many untapped natural resources which cannot be utilized for inclusive economic growth without ensuring the peace and political stability. This requires a larger framework of developmen­t, ranging from district developmen­t strategies to provincial developmen­t plans for expediting the pace of prosperity across Balochista­n with huge dividends for the political and economic stability of Pakistan.

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