FATF setback - Pakistan is a victim of its own
inaction
Imtiaz Gul March 3, 2018
Pakistan
currently resembles the biblical Goliath; big and armed to teeth but stymied by
a myriad of factors such as inaction, inefficiency, institutional paralysis,
inter-institutional tug of war, ill-preparedness, insufficient vision on top
and behavioral intransigence on issues that are virtually existential threats
to the country.
The
embarrassment suffered at the Paris meeting of the Financial Action Task Force
(FATF), which decided to put Pakistan back in the ‘grey’ watch list from June
for insufficient compliance with the globally practiced counter-terror
financing framework, was the latest manifestation of all the aforementioned
factors.
Both
the civilians and the military establishment knew this was coming, but no
credible measures for compliance were taken until a presidential decree allowed
authorities to symbolically seize all of Jamaatud Dawa related assets, only a
few days before the Paris meeting.
None
on the top expected China to blink. But it did. And that was pretty logical. If
key state institutions refuse to understand and admit Chinese global
aspirations and the reasons behind its meteoric economic rise, then issues such
as grey-listing would keep embarrassing the country, and no country would stand
by us.
So
far, the civil-military establishments have been in denial. Now they shall have
to work out a plan of action in consultation with the FATF to begin ‘compliance
to FATF protocols’. This also includes the primary driver of the ‘grey-listing’
– the Indian concerns. New Delhi has convinced Washington and even Beijing that
Pakistan’s compliance to FATF requirements will be credible only if it
conclusively acts against the ‘terrorist infrastructure’ (Jamaatud Dawa, Jaishe
Mohammad etc). All this is related to our infatuation with Kashmir.
And
withdrawal of support at FATF must also make the civil-military elites realise
that the policy of using non-state actors for foreign policy objectives (be it
the lashkar, the jaish or appeasement of Haqqanis) enjoys zero tolerance among
the international community.
In
retrospect, there is little doubt that the romance with the word K (read
Kashmir) has bled Pakistan profusely. It has generated a dynamic that has
become a financial noose around the country’s neck.
For
sure, this policy has outlived its utility and it is about time to bury it
before it hurts us like t has never before. For too long has the core of
decision-makers dragged its feet in drawing lessons from the UN Security
Council Resolutions No1,333 (sanctions on Taliban), and No1,267 (sanctions on
individuals and entities associated with Al-Qaeda).
Quite
tragic that as politicians and the military establishment slug it out on the
domestic front, they have blatantly ignored the battering that the country’s
image has taken abroad – primarily because of their short-term institutional or
personal interests.
Issues
such as at least nine closures of the Torkham border within 12 months has also
fed into this image as well as into the Indo-US narrative on Pakistan’s
‘mindless actions’ that keep hurting Indian and Afghan interests.
These
border closures have not only hurt individual Pakistani and Afghan businessmen
but also jeopardised tens of thousands of jobs, directly caused decline in
Pakistani exports to Afghanistan, and retaliatory measures by President Ghani (barring
Pakistani trucks from entering Afghanistan).
Even
on normal days, the chaos on Pakistan’s Torkham and Chamman borders presents a
view that reminds you of a border of an under-developed country suffering
perpetual bouts of conflicts.
The
tug of war of interests among security institutions, customs authorities, and
other bureaucracies have all combined to prevent big progress on these critical
choke points.
Resultantly,
the bilateral trade has diminished from the high of $2.7 billion in 2013 to
$1.2 in 2017. Afghan traders have also shifted their trade to Iran and
Uzbekistan and China via Iran to avoid losses arising out of frequent border
closures.
Similarly,
despite hosting Afghan refugees, Pakistan has yet to devise an honourable
policy for those born here to Afghan families; expecting these Pakistan-born
youth to return to a country totally alien to them.
All
these years, officials – both military and civilian – have parroted a
stereotypical narrative on refugees, linking them all to crime and terrorism,
to make a case for their return. But recently, General Qadir Baloch, the
federal minister for SAFRON, told a visiting Afghan delegation that not a
single refugee was found involved in terrorism. Why bracket all of them all
with terrorism then, and make a case for their repatriation?
Gawadar
town represents another example of the cumulative institutional paralysis;
while all top-notches are singing the CPEC song, the town itself is struggling
with acute electricity and water shortages. Construction of the new airport,
for which the Chinese made $259 million available over a year ago, has not
started yet. Both provincial and federal authorities are trading allegations
and shifting blames for the multiple crises that Gawadar’s residents and
businesses are facing. It is an alarming situation that requires all
institutions to sit together for a coordinated, smarter and visionary way
forward to beat the odds that increasing by the day.
Published
in Daily Times, March 3rd 2018.
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