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PAKISTAN
REELING UNDER WHEAT SHORTAGE
Islamabad, January 15, 2008 (DPA)
Many
observers had predicted that the assassination of former prime minister
Benazir Bhutto last month would have a lasting impact on Pakistani
politics, but the tragedy has been overshadowed, at least partly,
by a serious nationwide shortage of wheat. Pervez Musharraf has
even more explaining to do. His government has been accused of miscalculating
wheat harvest estimates, causing shortages that doubled the price
of wheat flour from 15 to 30 rupees ($0.24 to $0.48) per kg in less
than a week.
The
sudden price spike has aggravated the suffering of millions of families
whose daily income is only around 100 rupees, especially because
roti, a round, flat bread made of wheat flour, is part of every
meal.
"Benazir
Bhutto was a great leader, and I am mourning her death, but what
is important for me right now is to get the wheat flour that keeps
me and my seven family members alive," said housewife Yasmin
Bibi, 50. Like millions of low-income citizens across the country,
Bibi has been forced to queue for several hours every few days outside
a state-run grocery store in the garrison city of Rawalpindi that
provides cheap flour.
Thousands
of people took to the streets in several cities and towns across
the country in protest, and commentators have warned that such demonstrations
could increase if the wheat crisis is not overcome quickly.
"We
always hear the government claiming that the country is making huge
economic progress. Where is that economic progress?" carpenter
Amjad Hussain asked. "If there is, only the riches have benefited
from it. For us, there is only starvation. This man [Musharraf]
has even snatched roti from us."
Government
officials have blamed high international wheat prices, hoarding
by local traders and smuggling to Afghanistan, which is also in
the grip of a wheat shortage. But experts said the responsibility
lies with the government, whose estimates about the 2007 wheat crop
were hugely flawed.
"Pakistan
produces 90 percent of its wheat demand," economist Qaisar
Bengali said. "High international prices could only have an
effect on 10 percent of our 23 million tonnes of consumption. Mismanagement
on the part of the government is the sole reason for this shortage."
In
early 2007, the government allowed the export of 1.6 million tonnes
of wheat, saying Pakistan was going to have a surplus crop. However,
it realized only a few months later that the wheat crop would be
no more than the usually intake of around 20 million tonnes. By
then, there were indications that a shortage was eminent and traders
began holding onto their stocks, Bengali said.
In
the wake of Bhutto's assassination and the continuation of political
violence, including a suicide bombing Thursday that killed 23 people,
a wheat flour crisis was the last thing Musharraf and his political
backers wanted only a few weeks before the polls.
"The
shortage can multiply the public's resentment of Bhutto's murder,"
political analyst Hassan Askari Rizvi said. "If the situation
deteriorates further, wheat flour could play a decisive role on
election day."
If
Musharraf's government does not handle the crisis properly, it could
be the final blow for the president, whose popularity is already
at its lowest level since he seized power in a bloodless coup in
1999, Rizvi said.
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