New Provinces in Punjab and Beyond: Why Not?

Posted on April 28, 2011
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Economy & Development, Politics, Society
78 Comments
Total Views: 129025

Adil Najam

For as long as I can remember, I have heard passionate arguments about whether the four provinces of Pakistan should be divided into multiple smaller provinces. The discussion has, once again, gained momentum. This time its the issue of Karachi as a separate province and the the re-focus on converting Southern Punjab into a separate province (a ‘Saraiki sooba‘).

The political optics of the situation remain in flux, but there seems to be a growing sense that eventually some reordering of the provinces is on the cards. The constitutional changes under the 18th Ammendment also has a lot to do with this and as provinces take on new roles there is a sense of change and politicians are hedging their bets. I think all of this may be for the good – if, and only if, the decisions are taken sensibly and for overall administrative and policy improvement rather than just for political expediency. My question for our readers today is whether — irrespective of political motives — creating a new provinces is a good idea, including in Southern Punjab? And what this may mean, if anything, for other provinces?

First, let me put my own cards on the table. The first time I wrote about this subject was back in the 1980s – in an op-ed in The Muslim I argued for a total of 6 to 8 provinces (each of the current four provinces being redrawn along lines consistent with historic, linguistic and cultural affinities). My most radical idea, then, was to reconsider the provinces not just along the lines of existing provinces but across existing lines (to use language as an example, Hindko, Sindhi, Seraiki, and Pushto speakers all straddle across current provincial lines). My motivation then, and now, stemmed from demographic concerns of concentration of populations, resources and, therefore, power in one province and the attendant feelings of peripheralization felt by other provinces. Importantly, this can – and has – led to a politics of fragmentation and distrust where it becomes too easy to evoke distrust and disdain through legitimate as well as exaggerated fears. There is also the concern about fewer provinces strengthening a provincial group identity at the expense of a national identity as well as of more local identities. Importantly, in the case of the Saraiki belt, the local identity sentiment for a separate province is the strongest reason to support such an initiative.

After writing that piece I remember having protracted conversations on this with the late Dr. Mahbub-ul-Haq who had been arguing for a much more elaborate scheme that would end with there being 16-25 different provinces. Over the years I have become more and more sympathetic to his developmental argument: that creating smaller provinces will also de-centralize power and localize opportunities – each provincial capital requires a provincial capital infrastructure and create local employment and opportunities and therefore development opportunities get spread around the country rather than being centralized in a few locations.

I tend, therefore, to lean towards this idea. However, practical realities have tended to mute my enthusiasm somewhat. But, only somewhat. I realize, of course, the fractious politics that will be unleashed in the process of redrawing provincial lines, even though my hope has been that the coalitional politics that will emerge for having more units will be, in fact, less fractious than our current provincial frictions. There is also the practical matter that while in most of the country the affinities have long historical and cultural roots the demographics in urban Sindh are ‘modern’ and constructed through the traumas of sudden migration patterns. Not surprisingly, the resultant identity politics also tends to be more traumatic.

So, my own leanings on this are clear and I would support a Seraiki province, even if a more elaborate redrawing of provincial units across the country were not possible at this time. Three reasons would make me support such a move: (a) it is a deep demand of the area itself and (b) it begins to balance out provincial distributions and (c) amongst the various cases for provincial redrawings this is clearly the strongest case for the clear cultural and historic affinities and this could serve as an important first step.

I have been in this debate long enough to know that there can, and will, be many arguments against mine. So, lets please hear them. Is there a logic to redrawing provincial units? If so, why? If not, why not? I suspect it will not be so, but I hope people will focus especially on the longer-term national logic of such a move rather than whatever short-term political gains or losses this might mean to particular political operatives.

P.S. This post is an updated version of an earlier post published on July 3, 2009. It has been updated to reflect the current issues around this topic.

78 responses to “New Provinces in Punjab and Beyond: Why Not?”

  1. Usman says:

    The issue is NFC awards. Punjab will get more if it is divided and PML-N will ensure it always has a government in one province, altho directly denying they have influenced the people asking for it.
    We have ditricts for management, if population or cities in a district grow out of control then it should be subdivided into two districts but dividing provinces is such a ridiculous idea.
    What are politicians upto!, today divide the provinces tomorow divide the country, what the hell!, this is high terrision and anyone with such ideas should be hanged because I want to see a united Pakistan.

  2. Dr. Qureshi says:

    I think breaking up the provinces in to smaller units (maybe a total of around 10-12) is urgently needed for administrative reasons alone. The political benefits just add to that.

    Most important is the FATA question. We will have to integrate them fully into Pakistan and now is the time. That will mean a FATA province of some sort. That will be the opening for also dealing with other provinces.

  3. Aqil says:

    I am in favour of smaller provinces (though not on ethnic lines) but I also agree with the comments that improving the district govt system is part of the solution. The danger is that the politicians are generally against devolution and want to roll it back or scale it down badly. We need to write letters to politicians and the media to demand that devolution should not be reversed. it would be a big tragedy if they were allowed to abolish the system without any opposition from the media and civil society

  4. rta2001in says:

    Since independence India has always been rather generous about conceding new states whether these are along language or ethnic lines. Has it worked. Its a mixed bag. Vigorous agitations for seperate state die down once the demand is conceded. There is hardly any change for the better. For one the same bureaucracy is now multiplied. If there is no strong political leadership the state fares miserably. What matters is better governance. You can devolve power to the grassroots in several other ways.

  5. Mateen says:

    NO THANKS!!! I am a Potohari Punjabi and I for one do not want a separate province and am happy to be part of Punjab. This is just ridiculous to divide Punjabis and Pakistanis especially when we have so many other issues at hand.

    The people who thought this may mean well but I think it is a very very bad idea. You can create districts instead and give districts more power on the lines that we already have why create more provinces?? Instead of developing concepts that we already have we always create nonsensical new ideas and will abandon them as well after some time. One of the Pakistani nation’s biggest problem is that we never focus or develop on what we have but always have a new idea or “oh look India did this so we should do it as well”. Who cares about what India did or did not do – you people need to partition your minds from India now as well!!!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*