About Me

Th Labour Relief Campaign was created in the wake of the floods that devastated Pakistan in August 2010. It brings together 8 organizations: Labour Party Pakistan (LPP), Labour Education Foundation (LEF), Center for the cancellation of the third world debt (CADTM), Women worker's helpline (WWHL), Progressive youth front (PYF), National trade union federation (NTUF), Kissan Raabta Committee (KRC), Pakistanis for Palestine (PaksForPal). Our campaign has two separate fronts, the relief work and a political campaign for the cancellation of Pakistan's debt in favor of the flood victims

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Pir Sabbaq: not washed away


I am a member of the Labor Relief Committee in Lahore and visited some of the areas affected by the floods. I would like to share with you theses portraits I wrote after interviewing some of the volunteers of the campaign in Pir Sabbaq, in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. I was really impressed by their commitment and the amazing work they have been doing. Even while distributing first necessity goods in the very beginning, they also started a damage assessment survey that now records more than 900 families, noting how badly they were affected and what their needs are. This has enabled them to deliver the aid in a very systematic manner, prioritizing the more needy ones. Two international organizations are now following their advice in their work and these collaborations have led to the development of relief as well as rehabilitation projects. To the families whose houses are completely destroyed, they are providing tool kits that are designed to help them clear away the rubble and construct small shelters. They have also decided to open a community kitchen in the village, where food will be cooked according to the dietary requirements of children and women. Most of the volunteers have lost all they possessed but they have not lost their spirit of solidarity. They seem to believe that another world is possible, where those who are suffering from one of the worst disasters of our times should not become the victims of a system where aid is distributed in accordance with the interests of the donors but that the aid should be used to support and empower them so that they can not only rebuild their lives but also a more just society.

Mukhiara Bibi
In her work with the LRC, Mukhiara Bibi has focused on the women, because, as she explained, given that many of them hardly leave their houses, now with their houses destroyed, they have become even more vulnerable. One of the projects of the LRC in Pir Sabbaq in which Mukhiara Bibi is involved is a community kitchen where food will be cooked for about 500 people and according to the specific dietary requirements of women and children. “I am a very good cook, I am very healthy so I can work hard for this project, I am ready to cook for 500 people!” Ready to invest herself in the relief work, Mukhiara Bibi also sees the importance of a pro-people political campaign in the region. “I want to use this community kitchen to bring the women together, organize them, tell them about their rights. We are going to organize weekly workshops on women's role in politics, we want women to stand for the next elections. We also want to use this space to have workshops on different income generating skills. I can teach embroidery, we also want to organize a beautician's course because they are no beauty parlours in the village and according to our tradition women like to have their make-up done for weddings or other occasions. The flood has devastated our village, we are now working towards rehabilitation but we also need to start thinking ahead of that. My belief is that families will only be able to get out of the cycle of misery once their women will be able to generate an independent income.”

Shabnam Faiz
21 years old, she is the mother of a 2 month-old baby. One of the few women who had the chance to complete her education until F.Sc., she was working as a school teacher in a private institution in the village before the school was closed after the building got destroyed by the floods. The water has taken her source of income from her, partially destroyed her house and swept away all her belongings. Her husband is a labourer, the flood has made him jobless too. “I have joined the campaign because I am from this village, therefore I know who really needs the help unlike outside donors whom I feel are not always delivering the goods to the right people. I am going to help with the community kitchen project but what I would like the most is to make use of my skills in teaching to help either children or adults.” Shabnam is going to participate in organizing and conducting different kinds of workshops with the LRC, focusing her efforts on women's empowerment.

Amarullah
Very active in the Labor Relief Committee, Amarullah explained to us how some organizations are using this catastrophe for their own profit. Not only are they making a business of people's misery but they are also getting a good name out of it. “A Turkish organization came to our village and brought some shelters, they have put up 300 of them until now. According to their plan, they were to be equipped with air conditioning, that was without thinking that there is almost no electricity supply now in the village [the electricity supply in Pakistan, even before the flood was not constant].”
I was invited into one of the boiling hot metal shelters. Amarullah later explained to me why they were planning to hold a demonstration against the Turkish organization: “Those shelters were made in Turkey and then imported by air. The price of only one of them is 7000 USD, this is more than 600 000 PKR! Do you have any idea what these families could have done with that money? They could easily have built a very good house and still have enough money to restart their lives!”

The emergency situation the country is facing has revealed the courage and the commitment of many, but unfortunately it has also revealed the opportunism of others who, in their contemptuous disregard for human life, do not hesitate to exploit the most vulnerable. Boat owners charging unbelievable amounts of money in order to rescue animals and goods, pharmaceutical companies finding in relief organizations a good way to get rid of their expired medicines, for “a very good price”, the list is far too long to be mentioned here... Unexpectedly, I came back from Pir Sabbaq very optimistic. I am optimistic because I have met self-reliant, very strong, committed people. They were not desperate so why should I be? They were not begging for help so we will not give them alms. The people I have met were just ready to work hard for themselves and others to get back on their feet, it is therefore our duty to support them in their efforts. Let us follow their example and support them in any way we can.

Cindy Zahnd

Monday, September 27, 2010

Report: Work with trade union in District Nowshehra (Pir Sabaq)

25-Sept-2010

Pir Sabaq union council is situated on the bank ofKabul River. The population of union council is about 35000. Pahar Mazdoor Union (Stone CrushingWorkers Union) was established and registered with Labor Department Khyber Pukhtoonkhwa province few years earlier. Now the union has 1400 membership in the area. The stones are used for making marbles and for the construction of the buildings.

During the recent catastrophic floods, the Pahar Mazdoor Union (PMU) workers are playing a vital role for providing relief and rehabilitation work in the Pir Sabaq area. On the third day of the floods, PMU called a meeting to organize the workers of the union for flood relief. They decided to join Labour Relief Campaign committee and started relief works.

Two weeks earlier, some local effectees told to the Labour Relief Committee members that a local landlord of this area is hiding 10 relief goods truck and keeping them in his house. The committee decided to take an action that we will recover these trucks and will distribute among the flood victims through the Labour Relief Committee. They organized some 500 local workers and community people and raided the landlord house, where he was hiding the relief goods.

Police was also there for the protection of the landlord. But the comrades of PMU and LRC didn’t show any weakness before the police. They raised slogans and continue shouting against the landlord and their protectors. Finally they succeeded to get in and brought the relief goods into labour relief campaign camp and distributed among the victims.

IN another incident, the Turkish Red Crescent with the help of Turkish organization Hurreyat launched a project of shelters in the area. They chose an area to set up the camps that was about two kilometer away from the Per Samba village. And they started the shelter camp there. Because of the distance of the shelter camp from the village, the people of Pir Sabaq had problems to live in these shelters. They wanted to rebuilt their houses and to go on foot two kilometer away from the village daily was difficult for the locals. LRC decided to demand for stopping making shelters over there and organized some demos and interviewed to some local channels also. This put pressure on the Turkish organization and they agreed to stop making shelters in a distance place. The locals demanded that they should provide the shelters on their own house land. Now negotiations are going on with the Turkish organization.

Labor Relief Campaign with the help of trade union organized the demos in front of District Coordination Officer (DCO) office Nowshehra twice and demanded for fare distribution of relief goods and also exposed the involvement of the DCO with local landlords and industrialists that was paving the way for corruptions in relief works.

Now PMU with the help of National Trade UnionFederation and Labour Party Pakistan is to organize demos for the restoration of their jobs. The Pahar Mazdoor Union workers are working in local area hills. The mine owners have  closed the mines. For the last two months the workers are jobless because they were working on daily wages. Now they are starting campaign against the mines owner and lease holders.

These are the few successful stories of LRC in Khyber Pukhtoonkhwa province during the last few weeks.

Now the trade union of the area fully involved in a relief works with the labour relief campaign. 
Farooq Ahmad
Coordinator
Labour relief Compaign KP

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Meeting Minutes: 25 Sept

Chair and Minutes: Qalandar.

Attendance - Aman, Cindy. Mr. khan.  QM, Mr. F. Tariq.

We had called a follow up meeting from the meeting on the 22nd to decide how to further allocate money - after gaining more input from all locations.

It was a brief meeting and the issue we discussed was where to send money.  The following decisions was taken pending everyone approval:

 - 3 lacs to be allocated to Sindh, Balochistan, and for Afgan refugees in northern areas after we are able to get reports from each of the areas as to how the money is to be spend and an assessment of the ability to deliver.

the following persons are to investigate each area:

 Aman - Balochistan
Qalandar - Sindh
Kashif - Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa
Cindy - Seraiki Waseb

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Meeting Minutes: 22 Sept

Minutes: 22nd sep 2010

Chair and minutes: Qalandar Bux Memon

Attendance- please add your own attendance

The agenda was set to discuss:

-         Review Relief Work
-         Review Rally
-         Future Plans


1        - Review Relief Work

-         Two people from Sindh have gone to Balochistan to assist.  We await a detailed report.
-         A committee for relief work consisting of 9 people formed in Balochistan
-         Rubina Baloch has spent 60, 000 rupees on medicine.  We need to decide if to compensate her on this?
-         FT, AK, QM mentioned further donations collected from Pak and abroad.
-         Need to help Afgan refugees discussed.

DECISION:
-         Cindy to forward form from Mardan to Balochistan for surveying.
-         Wait until detailed report before deciding on Rubina B’s compensation.
-         New communications persons assigned for each area we are working in, as follows:

Qalandar – Balochistan
Kashif – Mardan
Aman – Southern Punjab.

-         Kashif to relay need to work with and support Afgan Refugee effected by flood.

2        – Review of Rally


-         Successes noted – press coverage, PYF participation, Female participation, WP participations was appreciated.

Decisions:

-         Suggested that future press releases should give bracket figures of attendance - 400 -600 people, etc.  Or give conservative numbers of those who attend our protest. 


FUTURE PLANS:

Political Work on Debt:

Decisions:

-         Aman to look to get up street theatre on the issue.
-         Mr. Tariq to call a open meeting next Tuesday or Wednesday.
-         Mr. Tariq to attend meeting in Islo with Oxfam.
-         Agreed we would continue campaign external funding or no external funding.

Relief Work:

Decisions:

-         Meeting on Saturday at 2.30 pm at LEF to decide where to send the collected money – 18 lac +.  The participating members to bring reports from each area and they are in contact with and consult with those absent before decisions are implemented on Monday.

Rally for debt cancellation, Lahore, 19th September 2010


We had a very vibrant rally with a lot of slogans and with full enthusiasm. The rally was organised to demand cancellation of Pakistan debts and spending it on flood affectees. The main Mall Road was blocked for over one and half hour and the road saw many red flags raising slogans against American imperialism, IMF, World Bank and other financial institutions. One of the main feature of the rally was participation of women and young activists from different background.


There were several trade unions who had mobalised their members to attend the rally, they include Rustam Suhrab Cycle and Motor Cycle Workers Union CBA, Lahore Gymkhana Workers Association, Railway Wokers Union, Itehad Carpet Union, Pakistan Bhatta Mazdoor Union. There were many activists of Labour Party Pakistan and Workers Party Pakistan and also some from Communist Mazdoor Kissan Party. Progressive Youth front mobalised over 100 youth from one area of Lahore and National Student Federation also mobilized their members. Women Workers Help Line and Labour Education Foundation worked very hard to mobilized those in their out reach. The activists and leaders National Trade Union Federation, Pakistan For Palestine, CATDM Pakistan, Pakistan Kissan Rabita Committee, Tehreek Istiqlal, Pakistan Trade Unions Defense Campaign, Pakistan Institute of Secular Studies  and students of Lahore University of Management were among others in the rally.

Abid Hasan Minto, president Workers Party Pakistan came to share his voice against the repayments of foreign debts. The rally started from GPO Chouck and ended at Charing Cross on Mall Road. Asim Sajad Akhtar and Naeem Shakir advocate from Workers Party Pakistan, Abdul Khaliq Shah of CATDM, Bushra Khaliq secretary Women Workers Help Line, Mohammed Naseeb of Lahore Gymkhana, Azhar Siddique advocate, Sakhai Mohammed of Railway Workers Union, Hanif Goraya of Tehreek Istiqlal and myself spoke in the end of rally and vowed to continue the struggle for cancellation of Pakistan foreign debt. 

The speakers made it clear that the campaign will not end and we demanded that government should not take any more loans and say no to the repayments of the debts. They were say that we have paid enough and we will not pay more. They criticized the PPP government of assuring the IMF that they will not go for debt cancellation. "Pakistan has a very strong case for debt cancellation. People of Pakistan are totally in favor of getting rid of IMF and World Bank Loan. People are suffering from the conditionalities of these financial institutions. The new loan on the name of flood will put more burdens, we need grants and aid and not loan" were some of the main points of the speakers.  

The rally was organised by Labour Relief Campaign in association with Oxfam. Between 300-600 people participated in the rally on a Sunday afternoon.

Farooq Tariq

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Report: Situation in Swat Valley, 20-Sept-2010

The Floods have destroyed the agricultural infrastructure in Swat valley

Labour releif committee of Khyber Pukhtoonkhwa visited the Matta tehsil in swat district last week. they found the 10 members labour relief committee there. Including four women and six male. Labour Relief Committee KPK and Swat were visited the effectives area. And meet with some effectives there.
In Swat district, agriculture is a major source of livelihood for about
 180 000 farm families. Maize and rice are the major crops grown during the Kharif season. Fruit orchards of apple, peach and persimmon are abundant throughout the district. Summer vegetables, such as tomato, okra, cucurbits and fresh beans, are also grown in the area during the Kharif season. The landholdings are very small but fertile, and farmers have been able to attain good earning from the crops, especially fruit and vegetables recently. The marketing of apple and peach was at peak when severe floods hit the area. The continuous torrential rains followed by the flash floods during the last week of July devastated the livelihoods of farming communities. Further to the destruction of homes, infrastructure, communication networks and loss of human life, the floods have caused immense damage to crops, livestock, agriculture infrastructure, fisheries, forestry/agro forestry and other non-farm sources of income. The worst affected crops include rice, maize, peach and apple, which were at their full productivity stages. Rice, which was at the flowering stage, was most affected as it is usually grown on land near the river bank and streams in order to meet the crop’s water requirements (Sholgara). This land has completely been washed away by the floods. The depth of the rivers and streams were made by the floods very high. Now the remaining land is very high from the streams and rivers. And now the farmers are not able to irrigate their lands and crops. Mostly fruit gardens are going dried, because the floods bring the extra organic fertilizer from the jungles.   
            In Tehsil Matta area the situation of the farmers is very worse. Because the area of Matta tehsil is very fertile and have large number of Fruit gardens. Rice is also most popular crop of the area. Maize and Rice are cultivated in the mostly area. The farmers are selling their fruit about 1 billion rupees in every season. And they grow the maize and rice to feed their families. 
            In recent catastrophic floods the food stock of the families are also wash away which they stock in a season. Now they have no rice and maize in their damage homes.
           The military already prohibited the maize crops because of security reasons. In those areas where there are not prohibited the flood washed away the crops. So in near future the inhabitant of the locality will have the short of food.
            This the area which was the center of Taliban and now the military are commanding the area.
             The area was effected by the taliban and military allredy and now the floods ruins the remaining human needs of the people.
             Basic needs for the rehabilitation of the area long term and short term are:




AGRICULTURE
1- Fertilizers for the current maize and rice crop and other surviving crops.
2- Provision of vegetable seeds along with fertilizers; and provision of winter fodder seeds with fertilizers.
3- Provision of agriculture hand tools for crop management; and provision of wheat seed with fertilizers.
4- Provision of potato seed with fertilizers; and rehabilitation of damaged orchards and trees with provision of fertilizers and agricultural inputs for Kharif 2011.
5- Providing granaries (steel bins) for seed storage.

AGRICULTURE INFRASTRUCTURE, SERVICES AND ASSETS
1- Clearing of flood debris, de-silting of partially damaged irrigation channels and
Water courses.
2- Rehabilitation and reconstruction of water mills.
3- Reconstruction and rehabilitation of water storage tanks and ponds.
4- Rehabilitation of damaged land terraces and construction of protection walls; construction of check
5- Rehabilitation of pasture tracks; and bio-physical flood mitigation measures.


Farooq Ahmad
Coordinator
Labour relief Compaign 

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Position paper on debt retirement

 Issued in a press conference at Islamabad Press Club on 30th August

For every £1 the rich world gives to the developing world in aid, the developing world still pays back £5 in debt repayments.

Introduction
A summer of unprecedented torrential floods has wreaked havoc on Pakistan. Physical infrastructure worth tens of billions of dollars has been destroyed, countless eco-systems devastated, and entire districts cut off from major communication and transport routes. It is conservatively estimated that 20 million people have been directly affected and the livelihoods of countless more destroyed (17 millions acres of agricultural land). Speaking at the United Nations, the federal minister for foreign affairs claimed that total damages caused by the floods are in excess of US$43 billion, which amounts to no less than 25% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

International aid commitments in the aftermath of the flooding have been sluggish. It is said that Pakistan has been in the international spotlight for so many years now that a case of ‘donor fatigue’ has set in. Nevertheless, high-powered missions of the World Bank and Asian Development Bank (ADB) have already come and gone in the wake of the floods and decided to re-direct up to US$3 billion of their existing assistance packages towards the flood relief effort.

A number of high-ranking UN functionaries have said that more money needs to come in. In fact, the reality is that the amount of money leaving Pakistan has consistently exceeded that coming into the country, notwithstanding the numerous ‘assistance’ packages that are designed and executed by bilateral and multilateral donors. The economic policies of successive governments since the 1980s have facilitated the easy entry and exit of ‘hot’ capital to the detriment of the needs of the country’s people. Even when remittances have been high – as was the case in the years following the September 11 attacks – a large amount of money has flowed out of the country as investors look for windfall gains in the stock and real estate markets before shipping out.

However, the resource drain has a much longer history than 10 years – Pakistan’s dependency on private commercial banks and the international financial institutions is written into the global capitalist structure. During the colonial period the political economy of the territory that is present-day Pakistan was engineered in such a way as to ensure a permanent state of productive backwardness and financial dependence on the industrialized economies of western Europe and north America. Following the departure of the British in 1947, Pakistan’s economic dependence grew even more acute due to its insecurity complex vis a vis India which led to the establishment of a national security state and the under-nourishment of democratic processes.

In its initial years the state secured some bilateral grants which eventually gave way to loans and increasingly harsh interest obligations. However the real debt curse was to be inflicted by the multilateral aid agencies. While various governments throughout the 1950s, 60s and 70s did take loans from the WB, ADB and International Monetary Fund (IMF), the policy-based lending that began with so-called ‘structural adjustment’ programmes in the 1980s has exponentially increased the debt burden. In 1970 Pakistan’s total debt servicing burden as a proportion of export revenues was 7.45%, a figure which went up to 35.40% by 1997.[1] While in 1980, 62% of all foreign assistance was in the form of grants, by 2000, grants constituted only 21% of the total.[2]

Needless to say this debt burden has been borne by the working masses in the form of subsidy cuts, regressive indirect taxes, and a general shift towards jobless growth. While worker’s remittances have partially offset the huge outflow of resources since the 1970s, the debt burden has risen exponentially over the past two decades. In 1990 total external debt was US$21.4 billion, a figure which had risen by 2010 to a staggering US$55 billion, an increase of 157%. As a result of this growing burden, which has been exacerbated by numerous adverse factors such as un unsustainable oil import bill, the spread of imperialist war into Pakistan, and the continuing stranglehold of anti-people neo-liberal policies, the Pakistani people have been plunged into economic and social freefall. If the debt burden continues to grow more onerous after the devastation of this summer’s floods, the country and its people could face descent into a never-ending abyss.

The Political Context of Debt
Debt never functions as a ‘neutral’ policy tool, and particularly not in Pakistan. The vast majority of the country’s debt has been contracted during the illegitimate rule of military dictators. The trend was established during the Ayub Martial Law regime. Prior to 1954 (when Ayub Khan became Defence Minister), Pakistan had received virtually no foreign aid, despite its desperate appeals to the western countries. By 1968 Ayub had been in power for 10 years and was the blue-eyed boys of the western countries for his participation in anti-communist pacts; his reward was foreign aid totaling US$4.7 billion, which was equivalent to 50% of total imports and 34% of total development expenditure.[3] The rosy predictions of Pakistan being a model of third world development notwithstanding, it was already apparent by this time that Pakistan was paying for the ‘aid’ it was receiving: foreign sources accounted for 3.24% of total capital receipts in 1955-60 and 52.57% by 1966-7.[4]

Through the 1970s foreign aid packages were sparse. However the heavens opened again following the coming to power of General Zia-ul-Haq in 1977. Geo-political considerations mandated that Zia’s brutal regime be showered with dollars, even while democratic norms were subverted and a large amount of money wasted on the country’s covert nuclear programme. Bilateral aid during the Zia years from the US alone totaled US$4.2 billion. While this aid and large remittance incomes ensured some modicum of economic stability for the regime, the structural crisis of the Pakistani economy was impossible to ignore: net aid flows decreased substantially between 1977 and 1988 and with the signing of the Geneva Accords the western countries turned off the supply line of dollars. From this point onwards the suffocating conditionality-based lending of the IFIs was to rear its ugly head.

Throughout the 1990s the WB, ADB and IMF were exacting in their treatment of Pakistan. However when yet another military General deposed an elected government in 1999, the international aid brigade yet again descended on the country. More specifically it was the events following the September 11, 2001 attacks that precipitated a new wave of loans. Pakistan’s role as frontline state in the so-called ‘war on terror’ garnered Pervez Musharraf’s regime huge benefits. The IMF, WB and ADB together issued ‘assistance packages’ worth more than US$10 billion to the Musharraf dictatorship, while the US alone doled out US$12 billion of economic and military aid. Throughout this period the regime was lauded for ‘reviving Pakistan’s economy’ and ‘good governance’. However, by 2008 inflation (including food inflation) was above 20% and foreign exchange reserves virtually depleted. The so-called ‘economic revival’ was based on a massive financial bubble. Meanwhile external debt, which stood at approximately US$35 billion when Musharraf took power, had ballooned to US$49 billion.

There can be no denying the direct correlation between Pakistan’s debt crisis and military rule. The complicity of international donors and power-hungry generals must be accounted for; the Pakistani people cannot be held responsible for the decisions of generals and bank executives. But this is precisely what has happened throughout Pakistan’s history: the burden of paying back illegitimate debt has fallen on working people. And this burden will intensify dramatically in the wake of the floods if the illegitimate debt acquired over the past five decades is not written-off.


The legal case
We think it is important to proceed into a discussion about the international law based justifications for debt relief with the caution expressed by Wade Mansell that ‘since the 1960’s, Western institutions of law have been able indirectly o perform the miracle which colonialism scarcely permitted’: The miracle of enabling ‘rich, developed and often ex-colonial states…to continue extracting wealth from the poorest countries’.  He suggests that relations between ‘debtor’ and ‘creditor’ are aligned to systems of rules that allow a simultaneous erasure of the social context in which loan agreements are drawn in the first place.


International Treaty Law:
We start with the report of the UN’s Independent Expert on the effects of foreign debt and other related international financial obligations of States on the full enjoyment of all human rights, particularly economic, social and cultural rights.

The following Conventions and articles are particularly relevant:
UN Charter: Article 1(3) “The purposes of the United Nations are: . . . To achieve international co-operation in solving international problems of an economic, social, cultural, or humanitarian character, and in promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion”
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Article 2(1) “Each State Party to the present Covenant undertakes to take steps, individually and through international assistance and co-operation, especially economic and technical, to the maximum of its available resources, with a view to achieving progressively the full realization of the rights recognized in the present Covenant by all appropriate means, including particularly the adoption of legislative measures.”
Additionally, the Convention on the Rights of the Child as well as the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities contain language which stresses the particular duties imposed upon states to ensure and provide for the “economic, social and cultural rights” of children and the disabled: “States Parties shall undertake such measures to the maximum extent of their available resources and, where needed, within the framework of international co-operation.”

A situation wherein there is a continued drain of resources from poor to rich regions of the world violates the principles of cooperation imposed upon all states in the international system as outlined in the above articles. Furthermore, various Declarations and Political Commitments articulated by the General Assembly as well as subsidiary and specialized bodies of the UN make specific reference to relations between the debt burden and the non-realization of basic human rights within low income countries. In 1978 the UNCTAD Trade and Development board agreed on a resolution stating :  ‘developed donor countries will seek to adopt measures for an adjustment of terms of past and bilateral development assistance’.  However, since then, there has been only haphazard advance towards instantiation of processes for the achievement of the same. 

Continuing advocacy efforts towards debt reduction or cancellation therefore are reliant upon relations drawn between the ‘right to development’ as articulated in the 1986 Vienna Declaration and Programme for Action and the possibilities of relieving poorer nations of their debt burdens. Article 12 of the Vienna Declaration states:

  “12. The World Conference on Human Rights calls upon the international community to make all efforts to help alleviate the external debt burden of developing countries, in order to supplement the efforts of the Governments of such countries to attain the full realization of the economic, social and cultural rights of their people.”

In 2002, under the auspices of the UN and with the participation of over 200 nations as well as the heads of the IMF, WB and WTO, the Monterrey Consensus on Financing for Development was articulated.  The statement obliges both creditors and debtors to ‘share the responsibility for preventing and resolving unsustainable debt situations’. The Doha statement recognized that “existing international debt resolution mechanisms are creditor-driven” and that further steps need to be taken to ensure equitable treatment of creditors and debtors in crisis situations.  Furthermore, it recommended that states and multilateral agencies “consider fundamental changes in debt scenarios, in the face of large exogenous shocks, including those caused by natural catastrophes, severe terms-of-trade shocks or conflict.”

Change of Circumstances and International Obligations:
Certain commentators on debt restructuring have suggested that in circumstances analogous to Pakistan’s at this time “the first line of argument in favour of a right to stop debt repayment might draw on the doctrine of clausula rebus sic stantibus”.  The concept which underlays this doctrine is that “obligations can, as a result of supervening developments, be subject to changes”.  This principle is also incorporated within article 62 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969) as ‘Fundamental Change of Circumstance’ for suspension of treaty obligations by state parties.  Relatedly, it has been noted that a ‘state of necessity defence is enshrined in Article 25 of the International Law Commission’s Articles on State Responsibility”.  A necessary condition for application of this principle to overcome an international obligation on the part of state is that there must be a situation of grave and imminent peril that the state party is facing. 

Customary international law also enables us to look at the conditions of exclusion and suspension of international obligations as provided under other treaty based systems such as of the WTO.  Under the GATT Article XX are listed conditions which provide for general exceptions from the enforcement of WTO obligations which include those ‘necessary to protect human, animal or plant life or health;…’.  It is beyond question that the situation currently faced requires a redirection of all available assets towards maintaining the lives and health of a substantial proportion of the country’s population, rehabilitating livelihoods and shelter as well as in rebuilding of essential infrastructure, including the recultivation of devastated agricultural lands towards these ends.  Additionally, a natural disaster of this magnitude could not have been reasonably foreseen at the time of the completion of such loan agreements and the state cannot be held responsible for its unfolding.


Odious Debts:
As already noted, Pakistan’s current debt burden incorporates a significant proportion which was negotiated for and handed over to non-elected military regimes.  The legal precedents vis a vis ‘odious debts’ are therefore applicable in our specific case. A broad description of the Odious Debt doctrine is as follows: ‘those obligations contracted by a predecessor, contrary to the interests of its population, which are later taken over by a successor state, are odious.. those obligations are non-transferable to the successor state’.  The odious debt doctrine has been successfully invoked by the US after completion of the Spanish-American in which the former ceded Cuba to the US and the latter argued that debts incurred by Cuba had been used to suppress a rebellion against its former colonial overlord.  Similarly, after the Boer War, the UK suggested that the debts incurred by the Boer Republics were used in aid of repelling the British and were therefore of an odious nature and to be considered extinguished.  In the case of the US’s seminal use of this exemption it specifically argued that the debt incurred by Cuba had been imposed upon the people of that country ‘without their consent’ and therefore ‘the creditors, from the beginning, took the chances of the investment’.

In 1923, the US Supreme Court decided in the Tinoco Case (after the overthrow of the Costa Rican dictator Frederico Tinoco) that funds lent not for legitimate governmental purpose, within the knowledge of the creditors, could not to be extracted from the nation as a whole.  Similarly, in formalizing the scope of the odious debt doctrine, Alexander Sack suggested that if a despotic regime has accrued debt to strengthen itself against the people of the nation then the creditors who have supplied this sum are to be considered to have committed a ‘hostile act with regards to the people’. 

The United States was at the forefront of negotiating for a full-scale write-off of loans undertaken by foreign creditors to the Saddam Hussein regime after its overthrow.  It was explicitly argued that the people of the nation should not be saddled ‘with those debts incurred through the regime of dictator who is now gone’.  The total sum of debts was therefore written off. 


Contemporary debtors
In 1996 the IFIs launched the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) debt forgiveness initiative through which a substantial portion of the poorest countries’ debt was to be written-off/substantially restructured. Haiti qualifies under the HIPC initiative for debt relief: in the wake of the devastating earthquake in Haiti at the turn of the year, almost all of the country’s multilateral debt was written-off, totaling close to US$2.5 billion. While Pakistan does qualify as a low-income country, it does not qualify under the HIPC initiative due to relatively high export earnings.

However it is important to bear in mind that much of the impetus for a writing-off of Haiti’s external debt in the wake of the earthquake was generated by political leaders in the First World; British prime minister Gordon Brown acknowledged: "It must be right that a nation buried in rubble must not also be buried in debt". In short, Haiti offers a precedent of a country that qualified for debt write-offs following a devastating natural calamity on account of the fact that it simply could not meet the burden of existing debt repayments.


The political case for cancellation of Foreign Debt
Given the blatant support of international aid agencies alongwith western governments for military rulers in the past, a cancellation of a substantial portion of Pakistan’s debt at this particular juncture could go a long way towards rehabilitating the image of western governments and international aid agencies in the eyes of the Pakistani public. If working people in this country often express common cause with anti-American and anti-western protests it is because of the blatant hypocrisy and double standards on the part of these governments and agencies towards Pakistan (and other poor countries as well).

In the post 9/11 period, a wave of Islamophobia has swept through large parts of the western world. Pakistanis resent the fact that their society has become a staging ground for the US-led ‘war on terror’ and yet the vilification of Pakistanis (and Muslims more generally) continues unabated around the world. Indeed, it appear as if the proverbial ‘clash of civilizations’ thesis could well become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

This is particularly true because right-wing religio-political organizations are at the forefront of the flood relief effort and are likely to win the sympathies of at least some of the millions who have been devastated over the past few weeks. A similar situation existed after the October 2005 earthquake; if the international community is serious about countering radicalization in Pakistani society, the failed policies of employing military force against innocent populations and indebting the long-suffering people of Pakistan should be repealed at once.

More generally Pakistan’s fledgling democracy would benefit greatly from the cancellation of a portion of the country’s overwhelming external debt. The military establishment continues to wield power in the country and the elected government – for all of its failings, which are many – stands to be further weakened, economically and politically, by the floods. Engaging in flood relief efforts has provided an opportunity to the military to enhance its public image – through the explicit support of the media – while politicians and political parties have been subjected to a public battering. Given the dire economic fallout of the floods, the elected government could well be weakened further if it does not garner fiscal space through debt cancellation.[5]


Cancellation is the only option
It is argued that it is overly ambitious to call for debt cancellation and a more realistic demand is to push for rescheduling of debts. Crucially there have been numerous occasions in the past when Pakistan has been offered options to reschedule debt. Between 1999 and 2003 the so-called Paris Club of donors re-scheduled a reasonable amount of Pakistan’s debt. The ADB claimed that the various debt re-scheduling exercises reduced Pakistan’s debt servicing burden in the period 2002-04 by US$2.9 billion, while the Ministry of Finance projected a subsequent reduction of US$8-11 billion over the following 15 years.[6]

As is underlined by the spectacular increase in the total external debt burden through the course of the Musharraf years, debt re-scheduling simply delays the inevitable, and in many cases, makes debt repayments more onerous due to the accruing of interest over time. Upon coming to power following the February 2008 election, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) faced an untenable fiscal crisis. The ‘successful’ policies of the Musharraf regime left the country on the verge of economic ruin. As a result, the elected government acquiesced to a new bail-out package from the IMF worth US$11.2 billion. The conditionalities accompanying this package have been expectedly harsh, the result of which is major price hikes in basic amenities, imposition of an even more regressive taxation regime, and an increase in debt repayments.

In fiscal year 2009-2010 alone Pakistan paid up to US$3.4 billion to its external debtors, the vast majority of which is interest being paid on long-standing loans. In less than three years since the demise of the Musharraf dictatorship, total external debt has increased from US$49 billion to US$55 billion. The re-scheduling of debt in the wake of 9/11, which was described as a major economic heist of the Musharraf regime, will actually result in a dramatic increase in debt repayments in years to come: by 2015-16, Pakistan’s external debt is projected to be US$73 billion. And this figure does not account for the prospects of new multi-billion dollar loans in the wake of the floods.

As such we believe that neither debt re-scheduling nor other similar piecemeal arrangements constitute a meaningful solution to Pakistan’s debt crisis. There is only one option: debt write-offs, the precedents for which have been outlined above. In the final analysis, the political will to demand a debt write-off is arguably what this country lacks. If it can be generated in the days, weeks and months to come, the IFIs and private commercial creditors can be forced onto the back foot, and the people of this country given some much needed respite.


[1] QAZI MASOOD AHMED, MOHAMMAD SABIHUDDIN BUTT, and SHAISTA ALAM, 2000, “Economic Growth, Export, and External Debt Causality: The Case of Asian Countries,” Pakistan Development Review 39(4): 591-608.
[2] Asian Development Bank, 2002, “Escaping the Debt Trap: An Assessment of Pakistan’s External Debt Sustainability,” Working Paper No. 1, Islamabad: Pakistan Resident Mission Working Paper Series
[3] Irving Brecher and S.A. Abbas, 1972, Foreign aid and industrial development in Pakistan. London: Cambridge University Press
[4] Mohammad Waseem, 1994, Politics and State in Pakistan, Islamabad: National Institute of Historical and Cultural Research.
[5] This threat has been underlined by Altaf Hussain’s recent statement calling for ‘patriotic generals’ to save the country from ‘corrupt politicians’.
[6] Asian Development Bank, 2002, “Escaping the Debt Trap: An Assessment of Pakistan’s External Debt Sustainability,” Working Paper No. 1, Islamabad: Pakistan Resident Mission Working Paper Series

Saturday, September 4, 2010

LHC Bar Association urges govt not to pay foreign loans

Published in The News, the 3rd of September 2010

THE Lahore High Court Bar Association through a resolution has demanded the government to stop paying back foreign loans of 63 billion dollars and spend this money on help and rehabilitation of flood affectees.
The Bar also called upon the National Assembly and Senate to pass resolutions urging foreign countries to write off Pakistan’s loan in the wake of deadly flood that displaced 20 million people across the country.
The Bar also condemned suicide attacks on a procession taken out to mark anniversary of martyrdom of Hazrat Ali (RA).
The mover of the resolution, Mrs Rabbiya Bajwa advocate, said flood had completely destroyed infrastructure in affected areas as roads, bridges, schools and hospitals were razed by floodwater. She said the magnitude of this natural calamity was so huge that Pakistan, being a poor country, was unable to cope with it. Foreign aid is also too small to handle the situation. Foreign loans have already surged to the tune of 63 billion dollars and Pakistan’s government has to pay three billion dollar interest every year against these loans. 

Friday, September 3, 2010

Demonstration outside World Bank HQ, Islo.

Protestors demanding cancellation of Pakistan's debt.

The first month of Labour Relief Campaign Pakistan

The first month of Labour Relief Campaign Pakistan

The Labour Relief Camp first camp was organized in Lahore on 1st August 2010 at Regal Chouck Lahore. Earlier on 25th July 2010, we decided to launch a Baluchistan appeal.  

It stated, “Torrential rains have unleashed flash floods in different parts of Baluchistan over the few days.  Water levies broke leaving the people exposed to flood water. At least three villages in district Sibi have been destroyed.Houses, live-stock such as cattle’s and goats, household goods, clothes, shoes and other items have been destroyed.Residents of villages are currently without drinkable water, food, shelter and in need of clothes. In particular, the situation is dire for children and women and they are in desperate need of food and clothing. Disease is spreading fast in the areas affected due to lack of drinkable water. In particular, flu, fever, diarrhea, cholera have been noted and are spreading.  The government’s response has made matters worse. They failed to act immediately, leaving tens of thousands of people unaided.  They came after twenty four hours to the make-shift camps with paltry amount of food bags to distribute.The gap between the food being distributed and the large number of people desperate to eat led to fighting breaking out making matters even worse for these desperate people. RubinaBaluch, Women Secretary LPP Baluchistan, who is a resident of one of the affected villages said, ‘there is absolutely nothing left here – food, water, and clothing – and we are in desperate need of these’.  At least, 10, 000 people are said to be in suffering in these grave conditions.  
Perhaps this was the first appeal by any political group in Pakistan to ask people to help the victims of torrential rains in Baluchistan.  

After an informal consultation with several social and political groups in Lahore, we decided to set up the first camp. Already a group of 42 activists including 35 women belonging to Labour Education Foundation were trapped in Kalam, Swat valley. The flood in river Swat had flooded away all the bridges and the road links were delinked from the rest of the country. They were eventually evacuated by a military helicopter after 8 days of ordeal.  
The camp in Lahore was supported by many activists and on the first day, we collected nearly 18,000 Rupees within two hours. Next day, it went up to nearly 50,000.  

A LRC committee was reestablished with 8 members from eight different organizations. They included, Cindy Kariaper, Pakistan For Palestine, Farooq Tariq Pakistan Kissan Rabita Committee, Qalandar Memon Labour Party Pakistan, BushraKhaliq Women Workers Help Line, Khalid Malik Labour Education Foundation, AmmarJan Progressive Youth Front, Khaliq Shah CADTM Pakistan and Niaz Khan National Trade Union Federation. The committee decided to meet at least twice in a week to discuss all aspect of the campaign.  

The LRC committee agreed to campaign on two fronts, collecting funds for the immediate relief and to change the priorities of the national budget demanding a total no to repayment of foreign debts and reduce the military budget, no cuts in development budget and no new taxes, no new loan, but grants and aid.   

On 7th August, we issued a new appeal and here is a part that we wrote,  
Please donate to Labour Relief Campaign to help people of Pakistan is facing worst ever floods of its history. Torrential rains have unleashed flash floods in different parts of the country since last three weeks. Water levies broke leaving the people exposed to flood water.More than 12 million people have suffered due to these floods. More than 650,000 houses have collapsed, mainly in villages.Thousands of acres of crops have been destroyed due to flood water. Houses, live-stock such as cattle’s and goats, household goods, clothes, shoes and other items have been destroyed.  Residents of villages are currently without drinkable water, food, shelter and in need of clothes”.  
Five days later, the situation has even more worsened and it was estimated that over 20 million people are affected by the flood by then, 

We wrote on 12 August,  
The flood is still on dangerous levels in several parts of Pakistan. The numbers of people affected by the flood have crossed 20 million. More torrential rains are forecast by the weather department. This is been considered one of the most devastating flood in world history. The UN has once again appealed for donations for Pakistan. But there has been a very slow response internationally to help Pakistan in this period of great devastation. After destroying most of KhaiberPukhtoonkhawa and Southern Punjab, the water has now washed down the Indus River Valley, causing a deluge in Sindh. The water has been powered by unusually fierce monsoon rains that began in country’s northern areas some three weeks ago.Roads, bridges and other infrastructure have given way, overwhelming the government's ability to cope. At this point an estimated 1,600 have been killed with another 5 million left homeless. 
Camps were set up in different parts of Pakistan including Rawalpindi, Mardan, Hyderabad, Moro, Karachi, SangharLayya and Sibbi.  

We send the appeal to all our international friends and by then, the world was awakening to the most catastrophic incident of Pakistan history.  

In one month, we have raised the following 
Lahore                                                       Rs. 654587 (cash) 
Lahore                                                       Rs. 45000   (goods) 
Rawalpindi                                                 Rs.   5000   (cash) 
Hyderabad                                                 Rs. 184100 (cash) 
Hyderabad                                                 Rs. 299550 Goods and medicine 
Moro                                                         Rs. 766,190 (cash)
Karachi                                                      Rs. 450,000 (cash) 
Karachi                                                      Rs. 250,000 (goods) 
Mardan                                                      Rs. 70,000   (cash)
Sibbi                                                         did not have information 
Sanghar                                                    no information yet 
Layya                                                        no information yet 
International appeal                                   Rs. 371784 

Confirmed commitments and information received   
SAP Netherlands                                        Euro 5000 (Rs. 550,000) 
Olof Palme International Center Sweden      SEK 50,000 (Rs. 589,500) 
Cultural Life Buoy campaign NOK 10,000     (Rs. 138,000) 
Yasmeen USA                                            US$ 2000 (Rs.172,000) 
Pakistanies in Denmark                              US $ 1000 (Rs. 85000) 

A total in cash raised from Pakistan:           Rs.  2,129,877 
International                                            Rs.     371,784 
Commitments                                          Rs.   1,534,500 
Goods:                                                    Rs.       594550 

Total cash, goods and commitments on 3 September 2010, 4,630,711 (US$ 54478) 

Apart from the relief campaign, we have also launched a political campaign for non payment of foreign debts of Pakistan. We held our first press conference in first week of August in Lahore and we said, "Pakistan must refuse to pay the foreign debts and divert the amount into the relief and rehabilitation of the flood affectees. It is high time to change the priorities of the national budget and all those suggestions to cut the development budget and spend on flood affectees be stopped. There is an easy way out. Stop paying the debts owed to International Finance Institutions. donor countries and clubs.  

The press conference was the first voice in Pakistan on the issue. we contacted like minded groups and parties to raise the issue and the idea was well received. Social and political groups in Islamabad met and decided to take on the issue. In Lahore, on 29th August, LRC organized a multi party conference to oppose the debt retirement and 28 political parties, trade unions and social movements agreed to participate in this campaign. on second September several hundreds marched to Islamabad to demand non payment of foreign debts. One of the largest private television channel Dunia took up the issue on a prime time talk show, "Dunia Mery Aaghey" and invited one of the organizer of the demonstration to put up the case. There is now a beginning of the awakening of some main stream political parties to take up the isse.  

Three more rallies will be organized to press for this demand. One such rally will be held in Lahore on 19th September from GPO Chouck to Punjab Assembly demanding an end of payments of debts while people are in danger of dying in the aftermath of the flood.  In this campaign, we have got the material support of OXFAM. 

Where the money spent? 

We  had decided to spend the amount on flood victims on selected areas where we have local teams to deal the question of distribution in more organsied manner and also to the most needy ones. The initial three areas selected were Union Council Tully in Sibbi district of Baluchistan, Pir Sabaq union council of district Noshehra of Khaber Pukhtoonkhawa and Southern part of Punjab. We held in food items, kitchen items and construction material in two areas, while we were unable to do anything in Saraiki area. Lately, LRC has send amount to Hyderabad jamshoro, Moro and Thatha area of Sindh through Sindh Labour Relief Committee. The local teams in Baluchistan reported wide spread disruption in food item distribution and they had to take special measures to avoid that. they issue tokens of particular food basket after conducting surveys of three villages and then asked them to collect food from a special place designated for collection the food items. Same process was carried out in Pir Sabaq area where distribution of food items and construction material was done with a very disciplined manner. The main reason of smooth distribution was our local committees which included political and trade unions activists.  

In Hyderabad jamshoro, we set up medical camps and distributed medicines through our doctors association. Here in Hyderabad, we were jointly working with Communist Party Pakistan, Aadersh, A Sindhi literary magazine. In Moro, our local relief committee was formed in association with local traders and trade unions. There were the most successful in collecting amount and good from an area which was itself effected. Through joint effort, they have won the sympathies of many in the city and are the main distribution group of the area. Several other organizations have contacted and asked help in distribution to the flood affectees of Moro and Dadu district.  In Karachi, SRLC set up four camps and sent four trucks of good to Moro and at present busy in Thatha district to help the flood victims who are sleeping on roads and schools.  

The International Response to LRC appeal 

This was to give you some idea of our activity during the first month of our relief work. Most of the amount collected in Pakistan are from ordinary people. They have donated us generously. BY setting up camps and distributing aid to flood victims in some selected areas, we have tried to counter the influence of the right wing forces particularly the religious fundamentalists groups. Several hundreds activists of LRC are busy in collecting funds locally and we are also encouraged by different responses from abroad. Political groups associated with Fourth International in several countries particularly in Netherlands and England have send us amount already, while several individual and Left groups efforts in US have brought some cash to the relief. From Sweden, we have already received information of 50,000 Swedish SKR and in Norway, an initiative by actor Toni Usman for a theater show on 19 September has already won support of Norway artist association with leading actors of Norway taking part voluntarily to help the campaign. In Australia, Socialist Alliance is helping to collect funds and APHEDA, the official Australian trade unions international assistance is collecting funds for LRC.  

We had the great arrival of South Asians at Lahore relief camp to collect funds from Pakistanis. Social and peace activists from India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka came to Lahore and brought some amount from their own countries and contributed to LRC funds. They have brought with this a consciousness of South Asian solidarity in real terms. 

We appeal to all our international friends to continue collecting funds for our future planned  aid and political activities. Apart from the campaign on debts, we have decided to organize peasant rallies in Sindh and Punjab to demand land rights and end of feudalism.      



Farooq Tariq
spokesperson
Labour Party Pakistan
40-Abbot Road Lahore, Pakistan
Tel: 92 42 6315162 Fax: 92 42 6271149  Mobile: 92 300 8411945