Journalism of Courage
Advertisement
Premium

Lifelines, borderlines

The trauma of the communities hit by the October 8 earthquake is immeasurable and unending. This tragedy that has hit Pakistan and India 1...

.

The trauma of the communities hit by the October 8 earthquake is immeasurable and unending. This tragedy that has hit Pakistan and India 8212; nations united by geography and divided by history 8212; reminds us of a common humanity and common sense of grief and loss. It should lead to a shared desire and purpose to mitigate the suffering being played out on a gigantic scale before our eyes. This is a South Asian tragedy. It requires a national response without doubt. But it also demands a South Asian response.

There is, of course, cruel irony in the fact that the region most affected by Saturday8217;s killer quake is also the area that has been most marked by political tensions between India and Pakistan. Kashmir, even while being visited by a calamity of such rare magnitude, continues to remain a victim of its geo-political location. The question really is this: can we rise above the limitations imposed by the past to urgently address a situation that is embedded in real time? There have been instances 8212; few and far between 8212; when India and Pakistan have been able to throw lifelines over borderlines. Take that moment in 2001, when Pakistan despatched tents and blankets for those affected in the Bhuj earthquake. Just a year earlier, the armies of the two nations were locked in an eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation. India has, from time to time, made available its medical expertise to Pakistani patients. These are examples that can and should be multiplied as tensions wind down 8212; and never more than today when whole villages have disappeared under rubble, when countless survivors have nothing but the sky as shelter.

That President Musharraf should respond to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh8217;s offer of help with great circumspection is not surprising. He is much more comfortable with western assistance and is frank enough to explain that there are 8220;sensitivities involved8221; in accepting aid from India for a region that is the source of conflict between the two nations. He doesn8217;t say it, but he is worried that the world would read this as a sign of Pakistani weakness, of its inability to administer to a region that it believes should rightly be its own. These are understandable concerns 8212; but for more normal times. Today, Pakistan is facing the biggest natural disaster in its history and India has a great deal to contribute, not just because of its proximity to the sites of devastation but it enormous experience in handling such calamities. Ways can always be worked out to address Pakistan8217;s sensitivities and protect its interests. Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, chairman of the Hurriyat Conference, spoke a good deal of sense when he appealed to both countries to 8220;come jointly to the rescue of thousands of people here8221;.

Curated For You

 

Tags:
Weather
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
Express OpinionUS mid-terms could be bellwether for next three years of Trump 2.0
X