A little help goes a long way

Published April 17, 2012
A Pakistani woman carrying water on her head, is helped by her sister in a slum in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
A Pakistani woman carrying water on her head, is helped by her sister in a slum in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
Pakistani Naginah Sadiq, 5, who works at a brick factory and earns 250 Rupees ($2 .77 cents) per day according to her father, is seen arranging the bricks, on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
Pakistani Naginah Sadiq, 5, who works at a brick factory and earns 250 Rupees ($2 .77 cents) per day according to her father, is seen arranging the bricks, on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
A Pakistani child, right, looks back while running back to his home as another plays with a plastic bag  in a slum in Islamabad, Pakistan. –AP Photo.
A Pakistani child, right, looks back while running back to his home as another plays with a plastic bag in a slum in Islamabad, Pakistan. –AP Photo.
A Pakistani girl enters her home in a slum in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
A Pakistani girl enters her home in a slum in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
Pakistani women use a fire to prepare food for their families outside their homes in a slum area in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo..
Pakistani women use a fire to prepare food for their families outside their homes in a slum area in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo..
A Pakistani woman holds her identification card while waiting her turn to claim money at the Benazir Income Support Scheme Center, in Kallar Kahar, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
A Pakistani woman holds her identification card while waiting her turn to claim money at the Benazir Income Support Scheme Center, in Kallar Kahar, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
Pakistani women and children struggle to get rice donated by rich people, at the Beri Iman, a shrine of famous Sufi Saint Beri Imam, in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
Pakistani women and children struggle to get rice donated by rich people, at the Beri Iman, a shrine of famous Sufi Saint Beri Imam, in Islamabad, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
Pakistani Khulsoom Bibi, center, holds her daughter Shaziyya, while standing with her family in front of her home in a slum in Kallar Kahar, Pakistan. – AP Photo.
Pakistani Khulsoom Bibi, center, holds her daughter Shaziyya, while standing with her family in front of her home in a slum in Kallar Kahar, Pakistan. – AP Photo.

Pakistan’s poorest women sit on gray plastic chairs and wait in silence for something many have never experienced: a little bit of help from the government.

It comes in the form of a debit card that is topped up with the equivalent of $30 every three months, enough to put an extra daily meal on the table, buy a school uniform or pay for medical treatment in a country where soaring food and fuel costs are hurting millions who already live hand-to-mouth.

When a woman is called, she goes to a room where her identity is checked against an electronic database and her thumb print taken electronically. A bank employee then gives her the card, and a crash course in how to use it, before she returns to her village.

Recognizing that giving money doesn’t address the underlying cause of poverty, many schemes make the money conditional on certain actions by the recipient, such as sending one or more children to school or getting them vaccinated. The Pakistani program, which has so far handed out $1.3 billion to 5.2 million people, doesn’t do that, but plans to make some of the money conditional on school attendance. – Text and photos by AP.

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