Agencies
Karachi, May 17:
Sukena, a middle-aged mother of two girls, argued with a shopkeeper as she reached her hands into the pockets of her burqa and counted money. All she had was Rs.25 (35 cents), barely enough to buy bread but no milk in the port city of Karachi.
'Just a year ago, I could easily afford roti (bread) and
some milk with this much money, but not anymore,' she said
with tears in her eyes. Sukena, a pregnant house cleaner whose
husband is a drug addict and an auto rickshaw driver, is among
the majority of 170 million Pakistanis living on the verge
of poverty, earning barely $2 a day. They are now also plagued
by the rampant scarcity of rice and wheat flour, which is
used to make the staple roti, a round, flat bread. In addition,
inflation hit its highest level in more than 30 years last
month as consumer prices rose 17.21 percent over the same
month a year earlier. Food prices rose 25.5 percent. 'The
food shortage is so severe that it could endanger our national
unity and federation,' warned Hari Ram Lohano, a leading food
economist at the Social Policy and Development Centre, a leading
think tank. Food riots and skirmishes have already become
a routine affair across Pakistan since the beginning of the
year. Among the worst-off areas are restive North-West Frontier
Province and western Balochistan province, where the price
of a 100-kg bag of wheat flour has now reached Rs.5,000 (about
$73), compared with 1,300 rupees last year, making it impossible
for many to buy the most basic food. 'In some areas, people
have been reduced to eating rotten bread crust after softening
it in water,' said Akram Shah, secretary general of Balochistan's
Pukhttonkwa Milli Awami Party.
'For that, too, they have to struggle to buy it. Believe
me our people are dying.' Thousands line up everyday in Peshawar,
the North-West Frontier Province capital, and on its outskirts
outside state-run grocery stores to buy cheaper wheat flour.
After hours of waiting, some people get only two scoops, barely
sufficient to meet a family's bread needs for one meal. Many
blame the previous government led by President Pervez Musharraf's
political allies for the food crisis. It miscalculated wheat
harvest estimates last year and permitted the export of 1.6
million tonnes of the staple, believing there would be a surplus
after the usual consumption of around 20 million tonnes. However,
a shortage resulted, causing the price spike. 'We exported
wheat at $200 a tonne and are now importing it at $400 a tonne,'
said Nawaz Sharif, a former prime minister and leader of the
Muslim League (Nawaz), which was part of the coalition that
routed Musharraf's supporters in the Feb 18 elections.
'Who made billions of rupees in commission in this export
and import of wheat?' he asked in a television interview this
week, indirectly accusing the former government of corruption.
Pakistan is currently harvesting wheat, but some surveys indicated
the crop would be poor because of a prolonged winter, delays
by the government in announcing subsidized prices and a water
shortage. 'If things continue like this, the country will
plunge into an uncontrollable situation,' Shah said. The new
government announced recently that it would import 2.5 million
tonnes of wheat to boost reserves, but the move does little
to help its people suffering now.
Humping a 5-kg sack of wheat in the higgledy-piggledy streets
of Karachi's Jodia Bazar, a labyrinth of narrow and open-front
shops where commodities are sold in bulk, Mohammad Tahir,
a taxi driver, said he could not afford to send his children
to school. 'My young one is very brilliant and a very good
student,' Tahir said. 'He just passed his grade two, but I
cannot afford his fees to send him to a school in grade three.
I have to make a choice between food and education.' For others,
options are even fewer. 'My husband has told me that if I
bear a third girl, he would sell her for 50,000 rupees,' Sukena
said. 'I don't want that to happen, but I have nothing in
my control,' she said