April 25, 2010
Electricity Nightmare and the Laughing Minister of Power 
By Saeed Qureshi
Have you seen Pakistan’s minister of water and power in a jolly, upbeat mood 
during the Energy Conference? In his once in a century sermon, while absolving 
the government of overcoming the acute energy shortage, he instead has exhorted 
the hard pressed Pakistani to use electricity for fewer hours. Already the 
people can barely get electricity for 6 hours. The chaos resulting from power 
shortage is unrelenting and assuming horrendous proportions. The kind of 
measures announced by the freakish Minister of Water and Power are childish and 
ruinous for the society especially for the business and industry that are 
already in deep trouble.
 
It is like putting the cart before the horse. The government’s approach towards 
resolving this vital problem is cosmetic and would aggravate the chaos and 
turmoil that is driving the people to the level of insanity. Electricity is an 
indispensible necessity for human beings. From cooking to running a huge mill 
it is the electricity that is needed. If the government asks people to close 
their businesses by the sunset and go home which are also dark due to incessant 
power outrages and shaky voltage, the mayhem is bound to take place.
The minister of power should stop combing his creamy, shampooed black colored 
hair, discard wearing custom tailored suites and abandon putting up a smile on 
his face as if all was well with the state of Pakistan. Instead he should dress 
himself in rags as a token of lamentation for the woes of the dispossessed 
people. Is he unmindful that the citizens of Pakistan are in a state of 
complete paralysis and undergoing unspeakable suffering due to the short supply 
of electricity?
Instead that the government should tackle this challenge on war footing, it is 
demanding of the people to bear with the devastating, debilitating and 
crippling load shedding that has taken away their peace of mind. The whole 
Pakistan is in a state of protest and crowds of bedevelled citizens are 
expressing their anger and frustration by denouncing the government. It is a 
calamity that was never seen in Pakistan before.
 Even a conjurer or a moron knows that the real panacea of this festering 
problem is not to force less use of electricity upon people but to increase its 
output in the shortest possible time. The problem is that the ruling junta 
views all nations building project from the angle of self profiteering out of 
the deals that they would enter into with power producers. The pressure or the 
urgency that is evident from the woeful plight of the Pakistanis necessitates 
the generation of power within weeks if not days. The situation is being 
allowed to slip from bad to worse so that the rental power houses are accepted 
by the people without any uproar. 
Like rubbing salt to injury, the government stalwarts make contrdictaory, 
confusing and false claims to rid country of load shedding in a specified 
period of time which never happens. They tag more power in grid stations with 
the flow of water into dams. Now this is an argument and a hope that is 
outright sham and nonsensical. By the time the dams are filled up to the 
required level of water, the harried people should keep suffering, the 
industrial units should work by intervals and the commercial activities should 
be curtailed.
To survive without electricity for 18-20 hours in this sizzling season is 
nothing short of a rigorous punishment for the people for no crime. Can one 
think of living even one minute without electricity in these times when several 
countries are surplus in electric power production? 
Now the argument is valid that those who opposed Kalabagh Dam did it with mala 
fide intentions knowing well in advance that the country was going to suffer 
from power shortage in the future. These are the same people who got their 
piece of humble pie via 18th amendment. They are gloating over their triumph 
for getting an ethnic name of the province but would sleep over the anguish of 
the people without electricity for better part of the day. Had they been 
favorably disposed towards larger interest of the country, they should not have 
opposed the Kalabagh Dam  in the first instance. Secondly if the government in 
power wanted to meet their long standing demand by renaming the NWFP province, 
these guys in return should have been asked to agree to the construction of 
Kalabagh Dam. The provincial grudge and the hidden rancor against Pakistan came 
in the way of completing this vital dam that would have saved the people from 
this ongoing malady and affliction
 of colossal order.
 I have been personally concerned with the appalling civic situation in 
Pakistan. I have voluminously written to various successive governments in 
Pakistan to devise a compressive and long term plan for modernizing the 
deteriorating and antiquated civic system in Pakistan. There has been no marked 
improvement over the municipal system established by the British before the 
partition: the same open drains and manual system of cleaning the toilets and 
streets. The working of the local bodies and municipalities is infested with 
corruption and inefficacies and lack of vision to solve such human problems as 
providing water, disposing of sewerage, building roads, running public 
transportation and adopting modern techniques to sweep roads and public places. 
This is called bad governance.
At the same time I have been impressing upon the governments both at center and 
in provinces to foresee and preempt the crisis that would erupt due to water 
and power shortage. I have sent to them concrete and well researched plans how 
to conserve water and generate electricity without much hassle and expense. The 
response has been formal, lukewarm and evasive to such well meaning offers. I 
came to the conclusion that the leaders, who come to power through a flawed and 
easy to manipulate system, either do not possess the perception to modernize 
Pakistan by way of latest and abundant utilities and social services or 
intentionally ignore their responsibilities to serve the country. Whatever the 
reasons, the abysmal state of affairs is before us. The whole country is 
debilitated and the people going hysterical.
For a change the offer to streamline the civic mess is being renewed once again 
from this forum. Those of my readers who can read through this column must 
convey it to the higher authorities,  that there is person from Pakistan now 
residing in America who has a profound pain and concern for his countrymen and 
has some very viable plans to harness the energy and water resources, without 
much cost and labor. Pakistan needs to radicalize, from top to bottom, the 
governance of cities and provinces. The western countries and specifically 
American during its early stages after independence faced the similar soci- 
civic problems. They solved these problems with prudence and diligence and by 
adopting such city management systems that changed the complexion of urban and 
rural life now bustling with comforts and bounteous civic services. 
The governments in Pakistan must be mindful about the rapidly growing 
population and further breakdown of the facilities that are already fast 
depleting. If cities are not governed with farsightednss and far reaching civic 
plans and if the institutions like railways are not modernized and systemized, 
the society would plunge into a complete civic anarchy. A gubernatorial 
national reconstruction effort is imperative to arrest the population explosion 
that is outpacing and devouring the existing facilities at a much faster pace 
than at what these are being created.
Pakistan is fast turning into a slum due to blind, myopic, incoherent and 
haphazard plans and policies in regard to governance. Pakistan can take a cue 
from the western countries as to how they embarked upon civic order and 
injected sanity, established respect for law and created a city system that 
runs so efficiently and smoothly. If we can implement, let us say, the American 
city and county system by a fraction we can make a big breakthrough in easing 
the lives of citizens in Pakistan. Who is going to take up this cudgel? And if 
someone like me offers his services would the myopic bureaucrats, fond of 
cumbersome rules, listen to such calls coming out of sheer concern and 
patriotism for one’s own people and country of origin? 
 
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Saeed Qureshi

Website: http://www.uprightopinion.com

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