Saturday, September 24, 2022

WHEN PARACETAMOL AUGMENTS YOUR PAIN!

Perhaps, the most useful medicine in flood-hit areas is paracetamol. Though it is primarily used as a cold or flu medicine, it is also useful in cases of dengue and other viral infections, because it is an anti-pyretic, which controls symptoms and thus allows the patient to recover without the danger that high-grade fever can bring.

Unfortunately, the floods coincided with the most popular formulation, Panadol, going off the market, after a pricing dispute with the government ending with the manufacturers deciding to stop making it, as it did not make economic sense to keep making it at the price the government allowed.

True, paracetamol has not disappeared off the shelves, being available in other formulations manufactured by other pharmaceutical firms, but the facilities available for the manufacture of these pills cannot be ramped up to meet the suddenly increased demand, which will be pushed up further by the coming winter.

This is not the first time the government has failed to ensure the supply of an essential. Every Ramazan and Eid, prices of foodstuffs go up. The example of petrol prices is to hand, with an increase coming at a time when international prices are falling, so that the government can get the difference.

Federal Health Minister Abdul Qadir Patel

The government should have ensured the availability of Panadol, either by subsidizing its manufacture, or by obtaining supplies at least for itself, at an economic price for the manufacturer. There is too disturbing a trend of official neglect of citizen’s needs to be ignored.

The assumption by the constituents of the government machinery, both elected and permanent, that the citizenry exists to provide them with their perks, must come to an end, and be placed by the view that they exist to provide that citizenry a better life.

Courtesy: Pakistan Today, September 23, 2022

Saturday, September 17, 2022

FLOODS IN PAKISTAN: NATURAL CALAMITY OR BAD GOVERNANCE?

Only one Nero was enough to push a thriving city into the deadly flames. The notorious Queen of France’s shameless suggestion to her starving peasant subject during the days of the French Revolution to eat cake continues a blot on her legacy to this day. But what to do when there’s a Nero–ready to fiddle at the expense of hapless millions–lurking in every corner in this star-crossed country, no matter how dire the circumstances may be.

For quite some time, people in the flood-impacted regions have started raising their heads; daring to ask their feudal landlords about their due share of the relief goods. But nothing can trump what transpired in the town of Nasirabad where none other than a district judge led a sting operation against an influential councillor in a bid to recover as many as 500 tents and ration packages.

 

The same judge had similarly conducted another raid to find 200 tents stuffed inside a local authority’s office. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands continue to bear the brunt of rains under open skies, desperate for a single morsel of grain or a sip of clean water.

 

That Pakistan does not need the help of any enemies to plot against it has long been written on the wall. The neverending greed and obsession with misusing whatever power one has is now a part and parcel of our national character. At a time when the entire nation should have joined hands and unitedly stepped forward to take care of as many as 33 million brothers and sisters, those sitting on seats that actually matter are either jacking for their own gains, smearing mud on others trying to make a difference of peddling a political narrative.

 

Such tight is the Machiavellianistic grip on our societal mindset that the pleas of the hungry, thirsty and homeless continue to fall on deaf ears. The government is constantly sounding the alarm over the virtually incomprehensible extent of the devastation but its requests for an immediate lifeline have not yet warranted a response from the developed countries. The stunning statistics, the saddening stories and above all, a negligible share of the egregious climatic damages, all seem to have failed in gaining their empathy.

Thinking again, why should they? When heated propaganda over the black market sale of international relief items and media reports about such reprehensible actions become the order of the day, those sitting outside the stadium are bound to pull back their hands. Why bother wasting their precious resources on a country that is itself not interested in helping its own? 

Courtesy: Daily Times, Septemeber 17, 2022

POWER & GREED OF THE ELITE (the 1%), & SCARCITY & COERCION OF AAM AADMI (the 99%) FUEL CORRUPTION IN PAKISTAN?

MAHTAB BASHIR mahtabbashir@gmail.com 0333 53 63 248 ISLAMABAD In my exploration of the socio-political landscape, I have come to a rather s...