With the advent of the holy month of Ramazan comes the inevitable rise in prices of essential commodities, particularly edibles, despite official claims that no such increases will be allowed.
Prices of many items across the country have registered increase in anticipation of higher demand in the coming days. This is a clear case of profiteering at the expense of the consumer.
The government has tried to lessen the burden by supplying 200,000 tons of sugar in the market and also further slashing prices of consumer items at the utility stores. However, the bulk of trade is conducted through retail markets and it is here that the government has failed to make any regulatory impact.
A meeting between retailers and government officials this week in Karachi did not result in any understanding, so that there would be no official price list on display, as has been the practice in the past, for the guidance of customers.
The inability of the government to ensure that prices stay at normal levels can also be blamed on the lack of consumer resistance to over-pricing for reasons of profiteering. One hopes that the proposal to set up a consumer rights council in Karachi will raise consumer awareness and inculcate in citizens a spirit of active resistance to profiteering by some retailers and wholesalers.
If successful, this experiment can then be replicated in other cities across the country. At the same time, the government cannot be absolved of its responsibility to ensure that prices remain in check.
Senior officials and magistrates should regularly visit markets and act on complaints made by consumers so that there is some form of discipline in place to check unbridled price manipulation during the month of Ramazan.
Reducing child mortality
UNICEF recently released a report on the progress so far achieved on the fourth millennium development goal (MDG-4) that seeks to reduce by two-thirds the global, under-five mortality rate by the year 2015.
While Pakistan ranks among countries that are advancing - it might be more appropriate to say inching - towards the goal, there are clear indicators that much remains to be done if it is to meet UN targets.
This observation is reinforced by the fact that in the region classified as South Asia, Pakistan is just ahead of Afghanistan in its efforts to meet the MDG-4 target.
To be on track, the country will have to speed up the pace of work in the health sector and reduce child mortality by seven per cent. This, no doubt, is a gargantuan task considering the poor access to medical facilities available to the bulk of the people, including a huge population of children, and the fact that Pakistan's under-five mortality rate was 107 (per 1,000 live births) just two years ago.
The alarming statistics cited by the report should propel health authorities towards greater action in an area where very little progress has been achieved over the years.
This is unfortunate for most of the causes of death - poor perinatal care, acute respiratory infections and diarrhoea - in young children under five can either be prevented or treated, or both.
However, poor public awareness and the acute scarcity of proper medical facilities, especially in the rural areas, have contributed to a situation where families either turn to quacks for help or run from pillar to post in search of a cure for their afflicted young ones.
Positive results can be achieved by reviving the health units in rural areas, equipping them with essential medical staff and trained midwives, and by fulfilling the requirements of the Expanded Programme on Immunization that seeks to protect children against a host of childhood diseases.
In addition, providing people with tips such as boiling drinking water, and using oral rehydration in times of gastrointestinal upsets in children would be a good beginning for any public awareness campaign aimed at reducing child mortality. Provision of safe drinking water across the country must also be given the priority it deserves.