The decision by the European Commission to impose a 13.1 per cent definitive anti-dumping duty on bed linen imports from Pakistan with immediate effect is unfair. The proper investigations that should have been carried out as part of the anti-dumping proceedings by the relevant EU team were never completed. The decision has been taken on the basis of an incomplete investigation and punishes Pakistani exporters for no fault of their own. The EU initiated anti-dumping proceedings in 2002 against Pakistani exporters after a complaint was lodged.
Soon after, an EU team arrived in Pakistan and decided to inspect six out of a total of 178 companies that offered to be checked. In the midst of this inspection, the EU team members received an anonymous life: threatening letter, based on which the team left Pakistan. Now, the EU has decided to go ahead and impose the anti-dumping duty without concluding its investigations.
The ball is now in Pakistan's court, and it should act fast to protect the interests of its exporters. Islamabad needs to take this issue to the World Trade Organization so that an appeal can be lodged. The process takes two to three years to complete, so there should be no delay on our part. When the EU imposed similar penalties on Pakistan, India and Egypt in 1996, it was India that challenged this decision in the WTO and received a verdict in its favour in 2000.
Pakistan was able to benefit by default from this. This inaction cannot be repeated. The EU decision is also a good opportunity for Pakistan to study its strategy in protecting its economic interests abroad. The post of economic minister at the Pakistan Embassy in Brussels which has been lying vacant should be filled by an experienced and knowledgeable person. Also, both the government and Pakistani exporters need to enhance their representation at EU forums.
Combating polio in NWFP
Despite undertaking an aggressive campaign to immunize children against polio, the NWFP government, it appears, has to make a more strenuous effort to meet WHO's December deadline for the eradication of this crippling disease. Provincial health officials have complained that the lack of coordination between WHO and the health directorate is obstructing the drive to eliminate the disease.
They have also said that more facilities and funds are needed to ensure that children in remote areas are vaccinated. While the health authorities in the NWFP may have a valid point, it is equally important to spread awareness about the disease among people living in the most inaccessible areas of the NWFP and FATA. Many households in these areas do not welcome the presence of men on the immunization teams, while some families view polio drops with suspicion.
In a social set-up that actively discourages women from taking part in outdoor activities and where even the mainstream political parties feel compelled to advise women not to cast votes on election day, inclusion of fewer women on mobile health teams administering polio drops in far-off villages is perhaps understandable. Provincial laws, such as the one barring female patients from receiving medical aid from a male doctor, do not help matters either. It is legal and social anomalies like these regarding women's role in society that need to be removed. Polio is a viral disease.
Its possible outbreak in a high-risk community will not distinguish between striking a girl child and a boy. There is a need for evolving a public awareness strategy whereby these basic facts must be driven home to the masses so as to ensure their active participation in the drive against polio. Even though they face the prospect of team fatigue in accessing remote areas, the local health authorities must not slacken their efforts to immunize every child in every village. It would also be worthwhile to invest in the services of local women who would be able to explain to mothers the importance of administering the polio vaccine to their children.