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The venality in our midst 
 By Ardeshir Cowasjee 
Sunday, 22 Nov, 2009 
 

Afghan President Hamid Karzai (L) shakes hands with Pakistan President Asif Ali 
Zardari at the presidential palace in Kabul.- Photo from Reuters/File 


SO, the famed prosthodontic smile emerged from its plush Islamabad dugout and 
took itself off to corruption-ridden Afghanistan last Thursday, where in Kabul 
it mingled and met with the world's brightest foreign secretaries, and the Aga 
Khan. 

Our besieged president travelled to that dangerous city presumably at the 
behest of the US State Department in a tit-for-tat gesture politely 
acknowledging Afghan President Hamid Karzai's presence (House Speaker Nancy 
Pelosi's 'unworthy ally') at his own swearing-in ceremony when the two Afpak 
head honchos sat side by side. 

As Asif Zardari braved Kabul, back in his own homeland his 
freed-by-his-predecessor media was concentrating on the corruption scenario 
presented under his government. The fact that Transparency International has 
downgraded Pakistan in the ranks of the world's corrupt countries is not as 
damaging as the perception of corruption that permeates the ranks of his 
country's citizens and of those citizens of the world who seek safe investment 
havens. 

Excuses have been made in the press by certain commentators that though 
corruption impedes growth and economic development, in the initial stages of 
nation-building and economic take-off eliminating corruption could cause 
greater stagnation. Our power sector has been cited as one example. A 
convoluted explanation is that we now suffer from a power deficit because in 
the 1990s, during the second Benazir Bhutto government, we scrapped too many 
IPP deals on corruption charges. We would have been better off, it is mooted, 
with available electricity even if it came with tainted deals. 

Amongst others, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan are cited as examples of 
countries that have had highly corrupt take-offs, followed by clean-ups and 
structured accountability. China is massively corrupt, but is flourishing 
economically as is Thailand, and India has taken off to some extent and must 
now clean up corruption. This defence does not wash in our case. Corruption has 
eaten into the vitals of this country to the extent that it lies crippled. It 
is nowhere near take-off point. 

Another excuse made by this government's feeble defenders is that it is unable 
to tackle the many problems that beset the people as it is under constant 
attack over corruption charges. This again does not wash. Corruption there has 
to be, in all countries democratic or otherwise, as that is the nature of man. 
But corruption must be limited, it must not be allowed to impede growth, 
governance and negate law and order. 

A 'competent' government can be forgiven to a certain extent for controlled 
corruption as long as it delivers and gives to the country what it is supposed 
to give in return for having been voted in. Our governments apart from not 
delivering rob to the hilt, plunging us downwards with nary a care as most of 
their members have no stake in this country. 

Some of us might be willing to put up with a certain amount of corruption were 
we satisfied that the taxes we are paying are being put to our use and benefit 
and not simply being delivered into a bottomless cavern into which plunge the 
fingers of the non-tax-paying politicians who have a free run of the country 
and its assets. 

The most hideous example of corruption has been the NRO, bequeathed to us by a 
blend of past president, Pervez Musharraf, and the USA. This expedient bit of 
legislation has stripped the country of thousands of millions (or is it 
billions?) of needed rupees. It ends its life on the auspicious occasion of the 
national cattle cull, November 28. Can any amounts be recovered, we must ask 
our government and our courts, or are they lost and gone forever? The list of 
the beneficiaries is awesome. 

Corruption takes many forms - moral corruption is as rampant as is the material 
corruption we live with, and moral corruption with its hypocrisy and bigotry is 
as highly insidious, eating not into the national exchequer and the country's 
assets but into the national mindset. Corruption, material and moral, also 
kills. 

Material corruption in this city of Karachi, the largest of the land, has been 
responsible this year alone for the death of 266 so-called political activists 
of the main political parties that make up the deplorable Sindh government, all 
of whom it can safely be said were involved in scams mostly concerning the 
grabbing of land or the division of spoils extorted from the public. 

Corruption and venality have almost put paid to the environment of this 
country, from the stripped hills of the northern areas, down through the NWFP 
and the hills of Murree, over the plains of the Punjab, swirling into barren 
Sindh and debased Karachi. Our cities are amongst the most polluted and most 
environmentally degraded in the world, merely because our governments and 
administrations are adept at making money by ensuring that measures to prevent 
pollution and degradation are never undertaken. 

On the moral corruption front, we have the blasphemy laws, an open invitation 
to the amoral to settle scores or to misappropriate properties with the 
greatest of ease. The Hudood ordinances are an equally open invitation to those 
who believe that women are expendable - in the cabinet of 80-odd, in itself a 
form of corruption, we have two sitting ministers who subscribe to this view. 

Again and always, back to the Founder-Maker of this country which has staggered 
along for 62 years under unbelievably inept and corrupt leaderships. Three days 
prior to its birth, Mr Jinnah called corruption and its attendant bribery 'one 
of the biggest curses' afflicting the subcontinent and firmly told his future 
legislators that 'it must be put down with an iron hand.' The opposite 
happened. The flabby fist ensured that corruption flourished.

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