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Technical Assistance From the United Nations— as Seen in Pakistan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

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On an evening in the large, comfortable Circuit House (guest house for government officials on tour) in a city in the interior of West Pakistan, a dapper young Pakistani District Commissioner (our official host) burst in on a group of UN experts from Iceland, Norway, the United Kingdom, and the United States. After a few perfunctory salutations while we were unpacking our bags after a long day's drive from Karachi—my first visit up-country a few weeks after my arrival —we were subjected to a blunt attack on foreign aid to countries like Pakistan. The target was western aid in general—and the concluding blast of an hour's discussion over our scotch and soda was something like this: “Your aid is not of much importance. What the western nations are doing does not represent a ‘drop i n the bucket’ in relation to their wealth or to the needs and poverty of the East”. This was a rare experience in my two years’ duty as Resident Representative of the UN Technical Assistance Board (TAB) in Pakistan, as Pakistanis seldom show signs of temperament and are usually soft-spoken and very friendly. I should add that a few days later this young commissioner and his wife invited us to a nice dinner at his sumptuous official residence and carried through the formalities of the occasion in a very “correct” manner reminiscent of the days of the British regime.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1959

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References

1 “Pakistan 1957–1958”, Karachi, Pakistan Publications.

2 Document E/TAC/L/175. These figures include local costs paid by the Government of Pakistan.

3 Documents E/TAC/Rep/118 and E/TAC/Rep/140.

4 Document UN/TAA/PAK/15, “Water and Power Development in Pakistan”, Report of a United Nations Technical Assistance Mission, June 3, 1957.

5 Ibid..

6 Technical Assistance Newsletter, 0607 1959 (No 54), New York, United NationsGoogle Scholar.

7 “Pakistan 1957–1958”, Karachi, Pakistan Publications.

8 There is a basic question of pride here—emotionalism, if you will—one of the most powerful factors in the attitude of the Asian and the African, as with the American and the European for that matter. The point is pertinently illustrated by an incident which occurred when my wife and I sailed east from Karachi on the delightful Italian liner, MV “Victoria”, on the termination of my assignment. Some of my associates bad arranged with the captain to fly the UN flag, and, as we entered Bombay, and then Colombo, it was at the topmast alongside first the Indian and then the Ceylonese flag. When I inquired of the captain if he had received questions about this relatively unknown flag, he said, “Yes, and when I told them what it was, they replied. That's fine. We belong to that’”.