DEVELOPMENT: FAILURE TO LAUNCH
Concrete skeletons litter northern Pakistan — monuments to the government’s failure to rebuild thousands of schools destroyed by the massive 2005 earthquake. About 67 percent of the schools in the region were destroyed or damaged by the calamity.
Only around half of the schools have been rebuilt, which numbered “no less than 6,000” according to early estimates. Thousands are in various stages of construction, abandoned by contractors for years at a time, or with their construction “yet to be started” according to the latest official figures.
Two schools in the tiny mountain village of Pehlwan, above Abbottabad, have been under construction for 10 years. A school in the neighbouring village is missing a roof.
How ERRA became a white elephant while children waited for schools to be rebuilt
“Everywhere there’s ERRA, there’s a Pehlwan,” says an education official in Abbottabad, referring to Pakistan’s Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority (ERRA), the federal government agency in charge of reconstruction.
***
When it was created in the aftermath of the October 2005 earthquake, donor-funded ERRA touted the slogan “Build Back Better”. Donors pledged 6.3 billion dollars — a billion more than needed. ERRA resolved to take on extra duties like student enrolment, teacher training and establishing parent-teacher committees. But the organisation struggled to simply build back what was destroyed.
“The government didn’t know what to do. They were completely lost,” recounts Taimur Sarwar, a former technical expert with UN Habitat.
Today, Lieutenant-General Nadeem Ahmed who set up ERRA and his UN counterpart Andrew MacLeod admit that it took time to figure out a viable plan. The scale of the crisis was simply unprecedented.
“People overestimate the ability of any government to respond. There are unreal expectations about the speed at which they can reconstruct,” says MacLeod.
The challenges started with setting up a new government authority in the midst of a crisis. ERRA’s second annual report describes a “hurriedly put together organisation … suffering from an acute identity crisis” for the first year and a half of its existence.