development through large and small NGOs were all established by different governments.
They have done better than the failed development projects in our history like the Social Action programmes etc which were funded by western government grants or the likes of the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, and were all housed in government departments, ministries or by setting up special project offices headed mostly by in-service civil servants. Unfortunately, the practice continues and neither have we seen the government nor the donors learning from their past mistakes. The aid architecture has to be revisited and it is not only the perks of people running these projects that is bothersome, unlike what most commentators think, but the ineffectiveness and inefficiency rooted in lopsided planning and poor monitoring of these initiatives.
Talking of charity, institutions like the Edhi Foundation, the Chippa Ambulance Service and the Fatimid Foundation serve the people of this country on a humanitarian basis. Do we expect them to close down in order to expedite the revolution as people would rise up and revolt if the relief they provide is withdrawn? This is what some of my old comrades would like to believe.
There is an altogether different type of organisations which are called rights-based and have not worked as extension arms of government projects and programmes. Evolved over the years, many organisations, including the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, the Aurat Foundation, the Justice and Peace Commission, Shirkatgah, Rozan, Shehri, etc, have provided a voice to the downtrodden, trained them in basic skills and highlighted the atrocities committed against women, religious minorities, children, peasants and labourers. It is they and the movements they created which kept the torch of struggle alight, be it asking for the repeal of discriminatory laws or for economic justice.
The writer is an Islamabad-based poet and rights campaigner. Email: harrisspopk.org