Foreign Policy Blogs

Water & electricity shortage

Despite my positive outlook about life, I get extremely depressed when I look at Pakistan as an observer from outside. At times, I just don’t know how can the country deal with serious issues threatening Pakistan’s very existence. For me, one way is to stick my head in sand and keep pretending that all is well and all the bad stuff is ‘enemy’s propaganda to weaken Pakistan’, or I can be realistic and honest about Pakistan’s problem. I have opted to be honest!

For example, in case you didn’t know, Pakistan is experiencing tremendous water and electricity shortage. Dawn has a brilliant piece in today’s paper titled Power protests. Regretfully, there is no end in sight as for as electricity and water shortages in Pakistan are concerned. The government is engulfed in so many other controversies that it seems highly unlikely that Islamabad would be able to do anything about the worsening electricity and water crisis anytime soon. Even if any leader or any government manages to come up with a solution, it will still take years (hopefully not decades) to complete the projects and by the time the project is about to begin, the demand would have caught up with supply. So, it is a lose lose situation given Pakistan’s current and future program is concerned.

By the way, even if the current government is removed, there is no guarantee that the new and incoming government would have any solution to the colossal challenges that are about to swallow Pakistan. First, it is impossible to unite the country about anything. Even about the Taliban, it is impossible to find the nation united against the nihilists who were threatening to take Pakistan into Stone Age by taking over the country. Second, there is a new challenge in the country every single day that forces the focus to shift and in the process, all efforts are lost as the country moves on. Third and final, the county has no money, no resources, and now, no one to turn to for help. Mind, you, I am taking about the country and it should not be confused with the current government.

I wish all the problems just vanish, the mountains of troubles just melt away, but obviously, it won’t happen. The country and the nation will have to work very hard to get comfortable. Let’s see what happens in the process.

 

Author

Bilal Qureshi

Bilal Qureshi is a resident of Washington, DC, so it is only natural that he is tremendously interested in politics. He is also fascinated by the relationship between Pakistan, the country of his birth, and the United States of America, his adopted homeland. Therefore, he makes every effort to read major newspapers in Pakistan and what is being said about Washington, while staying fully alert to the analysis and the news being reported in the American press about Pakistan. After finishing graduate school, he started using his free time to write to various papers in Pakistan in an effort to clarify whatever misconceptions he noticed in the press, especially about the United States. This pastime became a passion after his letters were published in Vanity Fair and The New Yorker and his writing became more frequent and longer. Now, he is here, writing a blog about Pakistan managed by Foreign Policy Association.

Areas of Focus:
Taliban; US-Pakistan Relations; Culture and Society

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