Roti in Pakistan

Posted on January 11, 2008
Filed Under >Wasim Arif, Food, Society
23 Comments
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Wasim Arif

azal se Adam-o-gandum meiN ae dost
ajab andaaz ki khat-pat rahi hai
barabar baRh raha hai narkh-i-gandum
bani Adam ki qeemat ghat rahi hai

The classic movie Roti starring the legendary Rajesh Khanna begins with his character Mangal stealing roti as a child from a restaurant to fill his empty stomach. This event transforms him for life because he is punished for this ‘heinous sin’ and from here on in his life of crime begins.

In another classic Bollywood film Deewar starring the legendary Shashi Kapoor and Amitabh Bachchan, one scene stands out where Shashi Kapoor’s character fires on a boy who is stealing roti for his family. Later he realises his mistake and offers the family food which is rejected by the boy’s mother who cries and throws the roti away upon hearing her son was shot only because he stole roti. The moral behind the stories and their relevance today to a Pakistan crying out for roti is so obvious it need not even be stated.

Yesterday I nearly fell of my chair in bewilderment and anger when Geo TV reported that roti was now selling at a staggering 5 rupees in Karachi. At times of such gloom I then add to my woes by reflecting on the founding vision of Pakistan as a land of the pure. This nation was after all, envisaged as the solution to the problem of bread for the Muslim masses by the great Allama Iqbal. How we have failed!

However the current atta crisis is a crisis like no other having no parallel even for this crisis prone government. Yet its effects on the poor toiling masses cannot be imagined who are literally in agony today thanks to this departing present from a failed Musharraf regime. The price of a bag of atta has increased tenfold with millions of Pakistanis unable to enjoy their most basic of fundamental rights – food. And yes the ‘Supreme Court’ should take suo moto notice of this breach of our rights (we are waiting with bated breath Justice Dogar!) but more importantly one must wonder whether the government will take notice itself?


The government’s worst crime during the atta crisis has been its indifference by design or default in looking the other way. Just like the sugar scandal and others before it, the government has sat idly by and enjoyed the view as the masses suffer thanks in this instance to the illegal and immoral hoarding of wheat by the powerful atta mafia. Such an act is unforgivable and it is tantamount to a war crime against our own people and it makes my blood boil.

The right to food is a universal human right. Yet it is a right alien to most Pakistanis collectively known as the masses whom live a life of squalor and degradation. Food was first declared a right in the UN’s 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. By 2004 the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization Council had adopted “voluntary guidelines for the progressive realisation of the right to adequate food,” with 187 governments as signatories.

Furthermore twenty-two countries have enshrined the right to food in their constitutions, either for all citizens or specifically for children including Pakistan with Article 38 Section D of the Constitution of Pakistan stating that:

‘ The State shall provide basic necessities of life such as food, clothing, housing, education, and medical relief for all such citizens, irrespective of sex, caste, creed or race, as are permanently or temporarily unable to earn their livelihood on account of infirmity, sickness or unemployment’

On 16 October 2007, the United Nations celebrated World Food Day with the theme ‘The Right to Food’ reminding us all that it is the right of every person to have regular access to sufficient, nutritionally adequate and culturally acceptable food for an active, healthy life. That it is the right to feed oneself in dignity, rather than the right to be fed. That with more than 850 million people in the world still deprived of enough food, the right to food is not just economically, morally and politically imperative – it is also a legal obligation.

Pakistan too celebrated the day with messages of support from luminaries no less than the ‘President’ and ‘Prime Minister’. Most notably the ‘Federal Minister’ for Food, Agriculture and Livestock Sikandar Hayat Khan Bosan chose to shout from the rooftops in his address on the day that:

The right to food has been accorded universal recognition. It is a binding obligation which is well established under international law. And the right to food has also been well recognized in numerous national constitutions’.

However actions speak louder than words for only a few weeks earlier the same Mr. Bosan and his cabinet colleagues chose to look away at illegal wheat hoarding by the powerful atta mafia. Consequently the atta shortage and rocketing roti prices prevalent today all over Pakistan are the sole responsibility of men like Bosan in the Musharraf regime. The following newspaper extracts from September and October 2007 provide ample proof of criminal negligence and even complicity and serve as an open charge and a damning indictment against the Musharraf/Aziz regime:

Federal ministers are divided over a proposal to crack down on individuals hoarding wheat as they feel that action against “some influential people” could create problems for the ruling party in the general election. According to a report submitted by intelligence agencies a few weeks ago, a number of “major players” are stockpiling wheat. But the government is hesitant to attach “top priority” to the scandal because of the election factor.

The revelation prompted another minister, from Punjab, to advise the government to avoid launching such an operation ‘for the time being’. He said it might ‘upset influential people’, creating ‘problems’ for the government in an election season. It has been learnt that black market operators have now decided to make windfall profits by hoarding non-perishable farm produce, e.g. wheat, rice and sugar, because the stock and real estate markets had failed to yield high returns. The average price of locally-produced wheat was 200 dollars per ton against the landed cost of the imported variety, which amounted to $415 a ton in September, leaving a profit margin of more than 50 per cent to the hoarders.

Towering political figures, both on the treasury and the opposition benches, have been found involved in the ongoing wheat and flour crisis, having managed to swindle around over Rs 6 billion by hoarding and then smuggling the commodity to the neighboring countries, top official sources in the finance ministry told The News. The sources said that the opposition parties had more or less also joined the government’s ‘unscrupulous figures’ in this loot as they had not come out with any protest worth the name against the crisis. Rather, political parties have left the masses in the lurch to bear the bite of inflation.

They hoarded wheat and with the connivance of ministers, both in the federal and provincial governments, they managed to smuggle the commodity, as the said ministers are also landlords, big growers and also possess flour and rice mills. It is pertinent to mention here that the government has decided not to constitute a commission to launch a probe into the wheat scam, as major chunk of ministers and politicians with agriculture background are not in favour of such a move.

Today the poor caretaker government is bearing the brunt of criticism when the real blame lies with Pervez Musharraf and Shaukat Aziz and their respective fan clubs which pass for political parties. The News editorial of 8th January hits the nail on the head by reminding us:

The ‘atta’ crisis is adding to the sense of unease and uncertainty currently prevailing in the country. An inability to readily obtain vital items of food will, after all, inevitably breed insecurity. There is thus an urgent need to ensure that supplies swiftly reach the worst-hit areas, to regulate prices and to act against all those engaged in pocketing large profits, so that the misery of desperate people can be brought to an immediate end’

I echo those sentiments and pray for rapid improvement on the ground so that the masses can get respite. I pray above all that roti is made affordable for the poor and wretched of Pakistan for whom my words of solace are not enough. In the words of the Quaid

‘we must concentrate wholly on improving conditions for the great masses of the poor’.

We must do better as a nation, we must build a better Pakistan, a more just Pakistan, an ‘other’ Pakistan.

Wasim Arif blogs at Other Pakistan. He can reached at wasim@otherpakistan.org

23 responses to “Roti in Pakistan”

  1. Pervaiz Munir Alvi says:

    According to BBC: South Asia hit by food shortages

    People across South Asia are struggling to cope with a severe shortage of affordable wheat and rice. There have been queues outside Pakistani shops in towns around the country, and flour prices have shot up. Wheat flour is a staple foodstuff in Pakistan, where rotis or unleavened bread are eaten with almost every meal.

    Last week Afghanistan appealed for foreign help to combat a wheat shortage while Bangladesh recently warned it faced a crisis over rice supplies. Global wheat prices are at record highs. Problems have been compounded by crop failures in the northern hemisphere and an increase in demand from developing countries. Afghan Commerce Minister Mohammad Amin Farhang said wheat shortages could lead to serious problems during the winter. His call came amid rising discontent inside Afghanistan at the spiralling cost of wheat and other basic foods. Afghanistan does not grow enough wheat to feed all its people and is partially dependent on imports.

    On Thursday, the chief of the Bangladesh army, Gen Moeen U Ahmed, said that he was “very concerned” about the problem of rice supplies which he said must be redressed immediately. Many people in the country have been hit hard by spiralling food prices, which in some cases have doubled over the last year, mostly because of damage caused by heavy monsoon rain. A delegation from Bangladesh is now in India to discuss importing rice to offset the shortages.

    Pakistan’s government says it has no lack of wheat supplies and blames distribution problems and hoarders, as well as smuggling by suppliers. Officials say the price is fixed in consultation with representatives of flour mill owners.
    The BBC ‘s M Ilyas Khan in Karachi says that the Pakistani government buys wheat in bulk at the time of harvesting, and then releases stocks to flour mills according to a predetermined quota. It now says it has increased the quota allocated to the mills, warning them of penalties if they are found selling flour at prices higher than fixed by the government.

    Pakistanis consume an estimated 22m tonnes of wheat annually, and last season’s yield was more than 23m tonnes.
    Officials accuse suppliers in Punjab, the breadbasket of Pakistan, of smuggling wheat intended for domestic use to Afghanistan and Central Asia to take advantage of price differences.

    Flour ran short in Pakistan when many areas saw rioting after the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto in late December. With the security situation in Pakistan now calmer, correspondents say it is not clear why apparent problems in distributing flour are persisting. One reason cited is frequent power cuts which have led to flour mills stopping work. “It’s not fair,” one retired worker, Younis, told Reuters news agency. “We are very angry.” He said he had waited for hours outside a government store in the southern city of Karachi, hoping to buy flour – but to no avail. Dozens of others went empty-handed, Reuters reported. Initially, flour shortages pushed up the price on the open market in Pakistan to as much as 60 rupees (about $1) per kilogram in some areas. The average day labourer earns only 100 rupees a day. The state-run Utility Stores Corporation has been selling flour at 18 rupees per kilogram, but it does not have enough outlets to serve the population of 160 million.

  2. Razi says:

    My recent trip to Karachi was a real eye opener….besides the post-BB assassination madness that is.

    Wanted to take a trip down memory lane so decided to drop into the neighborhood Pathan Chaiwala aka Rehmat Din from Zhob . Ordered 2 cups of Doodh Pati chai and 3 Parathas. The cost came to a shocking Rs.45. I guess my mind was still dwelling in the 90s.

    This brings me to the question as to how does the poor man

  3. Razi says:

    Deewana Aadmi ko banaati hae Rotian
    Khud naachti haen sub ko nachaati haen Rotian

  4. Asif Raza says:

    “BBC has reported that wheat is being smuggled to India and Afghanistan because of higher prices in those countries.”

    There it goes again!

    We will continue to blame India, West, East, Christians, Jews — pretty much everyone but ourselves! Reminds me of a line from a poem, “Whom do you condemn my brother? The sin is yours and mine.”

  5. TEE BEE says:

    Here’s how to make roti, incase someone doesnt know ;)

    http://www.vidpk.com/view_video.php?vid=5209

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