WHY BANGLA DESH
(By a group of Scholars in
The
Bengalis' demand for independence had been forced upon the people of
AVERAGE ANNUAL
BUDGET
Total
Revenue Rs.
6,000 million W.P.
E.P.
Expenditure on Defence Total 60 % 50% 10 %
Civil Expenditure Total 40 % 25% 15%
While
E.P. provides 60% of the total revenue, it receives only about 25% for its
expenditure and
FOREIGN TRADE
& EXCHANGE EARNINGS
West Pakistan
Export
Import Export Import
During
10 year period 1958-68 £820
m £2,315 m £1,153 m
£1,000 m
41% 70 % 59% 30%
In
foreign trade
INTER ZONAL
TRADE
1964-1969 Exports
from West to East Pakistan Exports from East to
5,292
million Rs. 3,174
million
This
is an example of continuous drain of East Pakistani capital to
Let
us look at typical Export items for the year 1964-65:
Jute
and jute products (all from
Cotton
& cotton manufactures (many from W.P.): „ 51,880 m
Hides
& Skins (mainly from
Tea
(all from
Wool
(all from
Others
(East & West together): „ 56,200 m
PERCENTAGE OF
ALLOCATION OF FUNDS FOR
DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
Item West Pakistan
Foreign
Exchange for various developments:
80 % 20%
Foreign
Aid (excluding U.S. AID): 96% 4%
Pakistan
Industrial Development Corporation:
58% 42%
Corporation: 80% 20%
Industrial
Development Bank: 76% 24%
77 % 23%
Above
figures are clearly indicative for the tremendous industrial growth in
FOREIGN AID TO
Chinese
loan to Pakistan U.S. $ 60 m in 1965 mostly spent in West Pakistan including a Heavy
Machinery Complex costing U.S. $ 9 m, but only U.S. $ 125,000 for East Pakistan
Water & Power Development. But the loan is to be repaid by exporting jute
and jute products.
World
Bank credits in 1954 $ 14 m and in 1965 $ 15 m for Sui Gas Project in
Russian
Aid of £ 11 m to £ 18 m was given to
U.K.
Loan during the period 1947-1965 amounted to £ 64 m has been spent mostly in
U.S.
Aid of $ 3.6 billion-$ 2.7 billion spent for Mangla Dam & Tarbela Dam in
West Pakistan and only $ 0.9 billion for control of flood in
COMPARATIVE
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
West Pakistan
Established
INDUSTRIAL in both wings 1947-48 1966-67
1947-48 1966-67
Cot-.on
Textile production in million 350 6,836
508 550
yards
1,853% increase 8.26% increase
Sugar
production in ' 000 tons 10 304 25 112
2,940
% increase 348 % increase
Cement
production in '000 tons 305 1,934 46 75
534% increase
63 % increase
Above
tables clearly show how the established industries in
In
the field of new industries, the percentage of investments in West and
Steel-the
basic item required for any development-is now being produced in two mills in
West & East Pakistan. Funds provided for these mills were £ 56 million for
West Pakistan and £ 11 million for
AGRICULTURAL
DEVELOPMENT
West Pakistan
Fertiliser
distribution during 1964-68,
in
' 000 nutrient tons
739 66 % 371 33%
Improved
seed distribution during
1964-69,
in ' 000 tons 342 89 % 40 11 %
1951-52 1966-67 1951-52
1966-67
Increase
in fish production in ' 000
metric
tons 56 153
175 259
273 % increase 48 %
increase
Distribution
of tractors
Wheel
type (numbers, 20,069 1,825
Other
large (numbers)
2,000 350
91% 9%
Needless
to mention that the agricultural land in
In
agriculture finance, the Pakistan Agricultural Development Bank has lent over
Rs. 600 million, but most of these went to West Pakistani farmers. Most of the
large irrigation projects have been treated as federal projects and financed by
the Central Government and has been completed in
POWER
DEVELOPMENT
Another
criterion to measure progress is the consumption of electric power per head of
the population. In
EDUCATION:
Progress in 20 years
Area West
Pakistan
1947-48
1968-69 1947-48 1968-69
Primary
Schools 8,413
39,418 29,663 28,308
Number increase Number decreases in spite
4 times of increased children
1947-48 1965-66 1947-48 1965-66
Secondary
Schools 2,598
4,472 3,481 3,964
176% 114%
increase increase
1947-48 1968-69 1947-48 1968-69
Colleges-various
Types 40 271 50 162
675% 320%
increase increase
Medical/Engineering/
Agricultural
colleges 4 17 3 9
425% 300%
increase increase
Universities 2 1
(654 scholars) (1620 scholars)
6 4
(18.708 scholars) (8,831 scholars)
Increase
in scholars 30 times 5 times
It is
interesting to note that although the school going population increased in East
Pakistan the number of schools decreased through deliberate policy of neglect,
whereas during the same period the Pakistan government spent vast sums of money
and increased the number of schools in West Pakistan by 4} times. Was not that
a systematic plan for giving the West Pakistani children a better academic
start so that their future career was firmly assured? The natural result was
the vast increase in the number of colleges of all kinds and universities. This
is a clear evidence of Government policy aiming at keeping the East Pakistani
children intellectually inferior by not providing the facilities they deserve.
The end product that we see is in the number of University scholars. In East
Pakistan, which had double the number of scholars in 1947, the number only
increased by five times in 20 years and in
If
we consider the question of employment, we can see the repetition of the same
injustice. While the state policy on education had kept the East Pakistanis
less developed, in the case of recruitment in civil, military and other
services the same policy of depriving the Bengalis had been effectively carried
out. Having most of the recruitment centres, they have the most advantage.
Headquarters of the army, navy, air force and all central government services
as well as private employees of all kind are located in West Pakistan. Most of
the vacancies are either not advertised in the East Pakistani press or the
practical difficulty of being interviewed is present. Moreover, the various
recruitment boards consisting mostly of West Pakistanis are not so well
disposed to accept an East Pakistani. In the armed forces, by making a physical
standard far too high for an average Bengali, the system of eliminating the
Bengali candidates had been very easy and successful. The following figures
show some examples of disparity in this field:
West Pakistan
Central
Civil Service 84% 16%
Foreign
Service 85% 15%
Foreign
Head of Missions (numbers) 60
9
Army
95% 5%
Army:
Officers of General
Rank
(Numbers) 16
1
Navy
Technical
81%
19%
Navy-non
technical
91%
9%
Air
Force Pilots 89% 11%
Armed
Forces (Numbers) 500,000 20,000
P.I.A.
Directors ,, 9 1
P.I.A.
Area Managers ,, 5 none
Railway
Board Directors „ 7 1
ORGANISATIONAL
IMBALANCE
The
selection of the capital of
All
the offices of the central government are located in the West including the headquarters
of the army, navy and airforce and all the military academies. It is important
to note that 60% of
Head
offices of all the public and private establishments, e.g., State Bank of
Pakistan, Pakistan International Airlines, National Bank of Pakistan and other
banks, Insurance companies, Pakistan Industrial Development Corporation,
National Shipping Corporation, Foreign Missions and hundred other Pakistani and
foreign agencies have their head offices in West Pakistan and with their West
Pakistani bosses and West Pakistani connections made sure that the policies of
those organisations favour West Pakistanis.
SOCIAL WELFARE
In
the field of social welfare, the same pattern is reflected. Let us look at some
of the statistics comparing the two wings.
West Pakistan
Population
55 million 75
million
Total
number of doctors 12,400 7,600
Total
number of Hospital beds 26,000 6,000
Rural
Health Centres 325 88
Urban
Community Development Centres 81 52
West Pakistan
Rural Urban Rural Urban
Employment
of civil labour force 59 % 41 % 86%
14%
In
West Pakistan
1960 1970 1960 1970
Per
Capita income in Pakistan Rupees 355 492 269 308
The
difference in per capita income between East and
West Pakistan
1959-60 1964-65
1959-60 1964-65
Gross
domestic product per capital 312 391
242 297
Staple
food of East Pakistani is rice and of West Pakistani is wheat. Let us compare
the market price of the two.
West
Pakistan
Rice
per mound (82 lbs) Rs. 18 Rs. 50
Wheat
per mound (82 Ibs) Rs. 10
Rs. 35
How
could one expect a better health standard when the East Pakistani has to pay a
far higher price for his food when his income is far below that of his
compatriot in the West? The picture becomes clearer when we compare the average
calories intake in rural areas.
West Pakistan
Calorie
intake in rural areas in 1960-65 per
head
per day 1,625 1,556
In
the urban areas the disparity is even greater. (Calorie intake in
These facts and figures,
backed by current available statistics, prove that
Above all, the injustice
meted out to her, the social and economic neglect that was her share over the
past two decades, justifies in all fairness that she be given the right to
govern herself.
All these statistics have
been taken from official and other reliable sources which include : National
Planning Commission, 20 Years of Pakistan, Central Bureau of Education, Department
of Investment Promotion, Central Board of Revenue, Central Statistical Office,
Pakistan Year Book, 1970, Marine Fisheries Department, Pakistan Economic
Survey, Government of Pakistan Budgets, Keesing's Contemporary Archives,
Financial Times, The Economist, Developponent Prospects of Pakistan (by a
Norwegian Economist).
Source: