By Stuart Biggs and Takashi Hirokawa
April 17 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan won pledges for $5.28 billion in aid from more than 20 countries to help shore up an ailing economy and combat al-Qaeda and Taliban militants along its border with Afghanistan.
“Today’s commitment will enhance Pakistan’s capacity to fight terrorism and give us an ability to strengthen civic institutions that have weakened over the years,” Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said after a donor conference in Tokyo today. “We will use force whenever required but we have to reach out to the people, give them development and cater to their social needs.”
While the aid is welcome, “it all boils down to how effectively the government is going to spend it,” said Habib ur-Rehman, chief executive officer of Atlas Asset Management in Karachi. The year-old civilian government led by President Asif Ali Zardari has “not been very effective so far” in solving problems of weak governance and a slumping economy, he said, noting it has been embroiled in months of political infighting.
“This government is not clean,” said Syed Adil Gilani, chairman of the Pakistan chapter of Transparency International, an anti-corruption lobby group. “We want to see what conditions and monitoring the donors will apply to ensure that the money is used for the purpose given.” Transparency International’s annual index lists Pakistan as the 46th most corrupt country of 180 surveyed.
‘Crucial Moment’
The funds, to be spread over two years, will help the South Asian nation at a “crucial moment,” Japan’s Prime Minister Taro Aso said. Donor nations ranging from the U.S. to Iran, Saudi Arabia and China also reaffirmed commitments of more than $15 billion for projects to reduce poverty and boost growth.
For more on this article, please click on the following link: Pakistan Gets $5.28 Billion for Economy, Security: Bloomberg
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