:
Welcome to meeting number 33 of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of June 23, 2022. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
I would like to make a few comments for the benefit of the witnesses and members before we commence.
Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. For those participating by video conference, click on the microphone icon to activate your mike. Please mute yourself when you are not speaking. Interpretation, for those on Zoom, is at the bottom of your screen. You have a choice of floor, English or French. For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel. As a reminder, all comments should be addressed through the chair.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Wednesday, September 21, 2022, the committee commences its study of the extreme flooding in Pakistan.
It is now my pleasure to welcome, from the Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development, Ms. Marie-Louise Hannan, director general, South Asia bureau; Mr. Christopher Gibbins, executive director, Afghanistan-Pakistan division; and Ms. Tara Carney, acting director general, international humanitarian assistance bureau.
You will each be provided five minutes for your remarks, after which we will turn to the members for any questions they may have.
If we could please start with—
Mr. Chair and members of the committee, thank you for the invitation to speak to you today about the devastation caused by the floods in Pakistan, Canada's engagement and Global Affairs Canada's response to the crisis in support of the people of Pakistan.
[Translation]
Canada has a more than 70-year history of productive cooperation with Pakistan. Our bilateral relationship with Pakistan is solid and is supported by extensive interpersonal connections. Together, we are tackling urgent global problems, such as the climate crisis and the economic recovery after the COVID-19 pandemic.
[English]
Pakistan is the eighth most climate change-affected country in the world and is at significant risk of extreme weather events. Temperatures are expected to rise by 3°C to 6°C in Pakistan by 2100, which is higher than the global average.
Rainfall is predicted to have greater annual variability, and low-lying coastal areas are at risk from rising sea levels. Pakistan is considered to be a high-stress country for water availability, since the Himalayan glaciers, Pakistan's largest freshwater source, are receding.
Since mid-June of this year, heavy monsoon rainfall and floods in Pakistan have affected over 33 million people, left more than 20.6 million people in need of humanitarian assistance and resulted in over 1,700 deaths.
Since the first week of August this year, unprecedented amounts of water accumulated due to the above-normal rainfall, especially in Balochistan and Sindh, which surpassed the records of the past 62 years with a colossal 450% increase.
While the flood waters have begun to recede, approximately 37,000 square kilometres of land remain flooded across Pakistan, down from 42,000 square kilometres at the end of September.
[Translation]
The department is committed to working alongside the global community to provide urgent and vital help to the most vulnerable people in Pakistan as well as support for rebuilding.
The extent of the damage caused by the floods has meant that Canada, with the international community, has had to make its contribution to meet the immediate and long-term needs.
The Minister of International Development, Mr. Sajjan, traveled to Pakistan in September 2022 and stayed there from September 12 to 14. He was accompanied by three members of Parliament: Iqra Khalid, Salma Zahid and Shafqat Ali. I want to note that my colleague Christopher Gibbins, who is with us today, also accompanied Mr. Sajjan on his trip to Pakistan in September.
The purpose of the visit was both to let the Pakistani people know that Canada was supporting them and to see how Canada could best play its role in the response to the crisis.
In his testimony next week, the Minister will undoubtedly provide you with the details of what he saw and heard.
[English]
On August 29, Canada initially responded by announcing $5 million in humanitarian assistance funding. Then, on September 13, Canada increased its total announced flood assistance to Pakistan to $33 million. This figure includes a matching fund of $7.5 million.
In addition, Canada also supported the deployment of a humanitarian expert to Pakistan through Canada's deployment of the humanitarian experts project within the Canadian Red Cross Society and the mobilization of essential non-food items from Canada's humanitarian stockpiles in Dubai and Mississauga.
On October 4, the Government of Pakistan and the United Nations jointly increased the Pakistan flood appeal from $160 million U.S. to $816 million U.S. This was in response to the rising needs and scale of destruction caused by the current disaster. Over two million homes have been destroyed or damaged, forcing people to live under open skies, exposed to threats of dengue, malaria and the impact of weather. More than 1,500 health and support facilities were badly damaged, as were 13,000 kilometres of roads, making it difficult and sometimes impossible to reach families and communities in need.
[Translation]
Recently, on October 14, Canadian representatives participated in a high-level round table in Washington organized by the World Bank, dealing with how to respond to the consequences of the catastrophic floods in Pakistan.
Regarding the next steps, the World Bank, the United Nations Development Program, the Asian Development Bank, the Government of Pakistan and the European Union have committed to preparing a needs assessment following the disaster in order to provide an initial assessment of the impact of the situation surrounding the 2022 floods, which continues to evolve.
[English]
This needs assessment, once available, will detail the physical damages, the economic losses and the costs of meeting the recovery needs of Pakistan.
Canada will continue to align our relief and recovery assistance with the identified needs of the most vulnerable in Pakistan. The department commends the work of local and international organizations in responding to the crisis, and we will continue to engage with civil society, other international donors, the Government of Pakistan and the United Nations on how best to support the vulnerable populations affected by the floods in Pakistan.
Thank you.
This is a very important issue—a very important study. I was pleased that our party was able to push for more hearings on this, because I think this is an issue we need to explore and ask some questions about.
I want to start by drilling into the issue of the matching programs the government operates for humanitarian assistance. This has been an issue that I've continually raised in response to other humanitarian crises: the fact that this government has made a pattern of introducing matching programs that only apply to certain charitable organizations and not others.
The effect of this—and I anticipate some of the testimony we're going to hear in the second hour—is that organizations that are present and active on the ground, and that have a high degree of capacity, are shut out from the benefits of the matching program and actually have a much harder time raising money, because their donors come to them and say, “How come the Government of Canada is matching these organizations and not these other organizations?” In other words, the policy of the government, in terms of arbitrarily matching some organizations and not others, causes potential reputational damage to these organizations, which are present and doing good work.
I've raised this before, on Lebanon and Ukraine. We spoke about it in the context of the matching program the government announced for Atlantic Canada. I don't know if those concerns, raised by parliamentarians and the community at large, are being heard at all. Again, we have a case where the government is selectively matching donations to some organizations and not others. That does a great deal of damage, especially to many small and diaspora community-led organizations.
What's going on here? Why hasn't there been a responsiveness to the concerns raised, and why is there persistence in matching contributions to some organizations and not others?
:
Mr. Chair, thank you for the question.
Matching funds is an important tool for Canada when it responds to a natural disaster, particularly in terms of engaging Canadians, which is why we pre-established matching fund mechanisms with select partners that are indeed experienced humanitarian partners that can directly implement on the ground. What a matching fund such as this one does...through the Canadian Humanitarian Coalition, which includes 12 key humanitarian partners, as well as the networks that fall behind them, such as the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, which has an extensive network of smaller organizations underneath its umbrella.
What a matching fund allows us to do—though there are some limitations to it—is respond very quickly and in a timely way, because the due diligence and back-end operations on these organizations have already been done. It also allows us to match Canadians' donations one-to-one, so they know that, if they give a dollar, we will equally give a dollar back to the organization that has raised the funds.
The matching fund mechanism is also an important piece that allows us to respond in a timely way, so we are not delayed as fundraising efforts continue across.
:
Mr. Chair, respectfully, the witness didn't really answer my question.
I agree with you that matching programs are wonderful in principle, but there's a specific problem when you exclude some organizations. I agree that the organizations that are beneficiaries of this program are doing great work, but if you offered a social program to people in one province and not another, or to people with one hair colour and not another, people would understandably object.
Why do you have a matching program that, by design, excludes other organizations that are doing good work? In many cases, these are small, diaspora-led organizations with a significant footprint on the ground being left out, in favour of established partners of the government—in effect, larger organizations that have pre-existing relations with the government, as opposed to some of the smaller organizations that are still very active and present.
Can you take another run at answering my question and explaining why the government isn't looking for alternatives to be more inclusive here?
Just to make sure I am clear, I did not in any way intend to suggest that there was a causal connection between the events. I simply wanted you to provide us with information as to the impacts of these floods on political instability and on the economic crisis or, vice versa, the impacts of the economic crisis and political instability on the country's reaction to this natural phenomenon. I do see that there is some understandable discomfort with the idea of taking you down this road.
According to the Global Climate Risk Index, Pakistan is one of ten countries in the world, as you noted, that were most affected by extreme weather events between 2000 and 2019. Mr. Sajjan's mandate letter states that he is to:
Work with the Minister of Environment and Climate Change to mobilize and provide climate finance in order to support developing country adaption, mitigation and resilience, including support for small island states at particular risk of climate-related emergencies.
Has action been taken on that aspect of the mandate letter?
If so, what action relates to Pakistan specifically?
I thank our guests for being with us today and for sharing this information with us.
I'm going to follow up on some of the questions with regard to the climate funding, because I do think that we all know this was a direct impact of climate change. This is not going to be the last time we see climate emergencies happening. Of course, as parliamentarians, as Canadians, we don't want to be on our heels in responding. We want to be more proactive on this.
Could you tell me about the climate funding? In particular, what I would like to know is, for example, how much of the $2.6 billion has been allocated and how much has been spent, and if you could you share with me the eligibility for applying for that. Also, what size of project is required for that? Just to add to that, could you also tell me how much of that is being spent for bilateral, multilateral, local or Canadian CSOs?
Thank you. That's like seven questions in one.
:
Yes, Mr. Chair, it's a multiphase question, so I will try to be as detailed as possible.
To start off, the $2.65-billion climate finance commitment that Canada has made is of course delivered in partnership with and through multilateral partners like the World Bank.
I'll try to address the questions about what Canada has done specifically.
The $2.65-billion climate finance commitment to developing countries has been delivered through regional and multilateral initiatives. I can give the example of $200 million to the second phase of the Canadian private sector fund at the Asian Development Bank, which aims to mobilize private sector support for climate action in Asian and Pacific countries that would not otherwise happen due to market barriers.
Pakistan is eligible to receive support through this fund in areas like renewable energy, energy efficiency, agriculture, water management—
The global impact is, of course, quite devastating. As I mentioned in the opening remarks, at the moment a study is being undertaken just to understand the extent of the damage overall, because this will be long-ranging. We're talking about 13,000 kilometres of roads and many crops that were lost at a time when food insecurity is heightened because of situations beyond Pakistan's borders—the Russia-Ukraine conflict chief among them.
Pakistan is one of the top 10 food-insecure nations in the world, so this is definitely a global impact that has not yet been measured because it's not yet possible to understand the extent of the damage.
In terms of the IMF bailout and the domino effect that this may have on Pakistan, I think it remains to be adequately studied whether Pakistan will have a more solid economic place from which to continue to negotiate. This is really part of the challenge facing Pakistan right now.
We are trying to focus on the humanitarian relief and the ongoing support that will help Pakistan come back to a place where they're able to engage with the international community and show that they are delivering on at least the commitments that they made already.
I wanted to pick up on some of the questions that were asked earlier in terms of the fact that we know climate change is going to keep impacting Pakistan. There will continue to be floods and problems at that level. What are we doing to look at resilience and at how we build structures that will not allow for this to happen? That's the first question.
The one that concerns me a lot is the fact that, as we know, when there's flooding, there are fecal-borne infections and mosquito-borne infections. We see dengue and cholera, etc. Is there any immunization program being rolled out to help immunize people in this part of the world?
Third, women tend to be impacted a great deal. In many countries, floods and the lack of infrastructure often do not allow people in the rainy season—never mind during a flood—to be able to access clinics, to access reproductive health care, to have babies and to get the kind of help that they need.
What are we going to do to look at resilience in that region? Do we have to wait every time until there is a flood or a problem to do this quick emergency mitigation, but not build infrastructure to prevent it in the future and to create resilience?
:
Mr. Chair, I believe the question illustrates a number of the multi-faceted impacts and the ways that it is extremely important to prevent and to act before things are at a crisis level.
In fact, Canada's overall bilateral assistance program for Pakistan, which has been in place for many years, aims to do just that, so thank you for the opportunity to highlight that the continuing challenges were there before the floods, and they are exacerbated by the floods, but they will continue to be a challenge.
Canada, in fact, does have specific bilateral assistance to address things like the challenge of polio. That is one program we support with financial assistance.
We recognize the particular impact of this crisis and some of the ongoing challenges associated with the development profile of Pakistan. We do recognize it has a higher impact on women, and there are multi-faceted approaches that are used in order to address those, including through the Canada fund for local initiatives—
Thanks to our witnesses and our officials for appearing before the committee today.
Pakistan is experiencing very challenging times. I was part of the delegation under the leadership of in September. I have seen first-hand the extent of the damage.
You mentioned that a needs assessment is being done. You also quoted a figure of $816 million...that some sort of assessment has been done.
There are still many parts of Pakistan where the water has not receded. When I travelled to the province of Sindh, especially the Dadu district, it was all under water. People are living in schools. Kids are not going to school. Most families are dependent on farming. This year they have not been able to plant crops. The seeds were supposed to go in in late September, early October. Winter is approaching. People have lost their houses.
What role can Canada play to make sure the needs assessment gets done? Can we provide some sort of technological help to Pakistan, to see if there is any technique that we can help them with to help recede the water? In parts of KPK, the water has receded. It did damage, but it's not there. But especially in Sindh, where the water is not receding, what can be done? Has someone looked into it? What can be done to provide help to Pakistan to make sure the water can recede so that at least the redevelopment process can start to happen?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I will absolutely be brief, because I think we'll get lots of insight from my colleagues who are online as well.
Let me just thank the committee, first of all, for turning their attention to this really serious crisis. I won't spend any time now rehashing the scope and scale of it here. I think you've heard from officials, and I think you know even from the press reports what an unprecedented crisis this is for Pakistan.
Let me just say a word about the Aga Khan Foundation Canada and its response so far. The foundation is part of a global family of institutions known as the Aga Khan Development Network, and we have had a very long presence in Pakistan. In fact, I would characterize our response as deeply locally rooted and globally connected, and I think that's part of the strength that we bring to the response.
We have been working very closely with the Government of Pakistan and with the governments of the various provinces affected to respond to the crisis in a variety of ways. Let me give you just a couple of examples.
The Aga Khan University, which is the country's top health sciences university, has been responding to the extensive health needs emerging from the flooding. Dr. Fry talked about this in the previous session. It has served over 300,000 patients across Sindh, Balochistan, Punjab, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
The Aga Khan Agency for Habitat has been working with hundreds of teams of volunteers to respond from a community basis to evacuate 10,000 people, supporting thousands of households with food assistance and dewatering across Sindh, Chitral and Gilgit-Baltistan. The response has tried to harness every capacity we have in the country. That has been necessary.
I want to express our gratitude to , who made it an early priority to travel to Pakistan to see first-hand the effects of the flood, not only in the very significantly affected populated areas but also in some of the more remote areas, which he made time to visit to see the effect of the floods and to really understand their national scope and their impact.
I might very briefly now just offer three thoughts about how donors might respond and what kinds of design principles the situation demands.
The first principle I would offer is that there needs to be a lot of flexibility in the framework of our assistance. I say that because what we are likely to see and what we are seeing is a multi-dimensional crisis. On the one hand, we'll see urgent humanitarian assistance, early recovery and reconstruction needs occurring simultaneously, because, as you know, parts of the country are still under water. There are some parts of the country in which just recently the water has receded, and there are other parts of the country where, in fact, some reconstruction work is now possible. These situations are going to exist simultaneously, and we're going to need to be able to respond to them simultaneously.
It's also multi-dimensional in the sense that, as I think you heard in the discussions you had in the previous session, there's a massive agricultural impact; the health system is under massive stress at a time when the needs are very severe; we have an educational crisis that has been compounded now since the crisis with COVID; and, as is the case in all crisis situations, we have a gender equality crisis because the situation of women and girls in a humanitarian crisis like the one we are witnessing is going to be, of course, the most vulnerable.
So we're going to need to have a lot of flexibility with respect to both the stages of recovery we're responding to simultaneously and the dimensions and sectors in which we're ready to respond.
The second principle is that we're going to need to take a truly inclusive approach in our response and take into account the differing needs of different parts of the country.
This has been a national disaster. We have been witnessing the scale of the disaster in the populated parts of the country: Sindh, Punjab and Balochistan. That's been very severe. We also shouldn't forget that more remote and sparsely populated parts of the country have also been affected and they will have their own needs. A truly inclusive response is going to require us to take into account the differing needs across the country. Winter, I think, was raised in the previous session. In the north, obviously winterization has to be a massive priority because that is already now with us. If you are in a remote and isolated part of the country, there's been massive damage to infrastructure. Connective infrastructure, such as roads, bridges, etc., is going to have to be a very significant priority.
I have a third principle. Again, you've talked about this in the previous session, but as we look to the future, we really need to think about how we invest in preparedness and disaster risk reduction. The plea I want to make is that we think about this also at a community level. The first responders in every crisis situation in every part of the world are the communities that are affected themselves. They are always the first people who are there. With the capacity of those communities for training, infrastructure investments, stockpiling and early warning systems, the things we can put into the hands of the communities themselves as a result of this crisis will help equip them to deal with the crises that are invariably in front of us.
I will stop there, Mr. Chair, with those three principles. I look forward to the discussion with the committee.
The crisis unfolding in Pakistan is a humanitarian catastrophe. GlobalMedic has teams on the ground installing water purification systems in villages, providing essential medicines to field hospitals to treat patients, distributing food rations, and providing thousands of families with family emergency kits that include a point-of-use water purification unit to ensure those families have access to clean drinking water.
Unfortunately, the Government of Canada has implemented a policy that actually hurts the humanitarian sector and, by default, it hurts the very people we as a sector are trying to help. The government has a policy of matching funds raised by humanitarian charities. The idea is to encourage Canadians to give by doubling their impact. Historically, the policy matched the funds raised by all responding agencies and created a pool of those funds, which the government then programmed.
A few years ago, the government changed course and started appointing only one charity to be the matched partner. Matching funds given to only one entity actually come at the expense of the other charities in the sector. We know this because we receive calls and emails from donors who do not donate to us when they hear that the funds will not be matched. These are individuals who have previously donated to us and our organization, and because of this policy we lose their support.
The crisis in Pakistan is so large that we need a widespread approach. The policy hurts the broader sector that is responding and trying to help, and thereby hurts the very people who have been affected by the floods. This policy needs to be changed. It also leads to a few questions that should be answered.
First, to a charity, a donor is like a customer. In this scenario, the government is using the force of its power to incentivize donors to give to certain charities at the expense of others. Would the government ever provide a free matching airline ticket to customers buying on Air Canada but not WestJet? Would they provide a free cellphone to someone who bought a cellphone from Bell but not Telus or Rogers? Of course not. The policy actually creates an uneven playing field. The government's job is not to create monopolies.
Second, it's a very difficult time for the charitable sector, and a policy like this hurts smaller charities. Thus far, only three entities have been given the matched funding: the Red Cross, UNICEF and the Humanitarian Coalition. To be clear, I am not disparaging the agencies. I'm calling out a bad policy.
These entities are all large and have lobbyists. The public needs to understand if lobbying occurred to make this policy change. If it did, was the lobbying done fairly and appropriately? Was it declared? Was there broader sector consultation? You should know that $157 million of funding has moved towards these three agencies in the past five years because of this policy. Now listen, if no lobbying occurred and the government chose to make an arbitrary decision, why was this done? Where was the broader sector consultation?
Third, members of the Humanitarian Coalition make a contribution annually so the coalition can operate. The members tend to be larger agencies, and the current requirement sets the bar at $10 million. It's hard to imagine that our government would allow a program to exist whereby a charity would have to pay to join a group in order to access government funds. Pay-for-access programs are not appropriate.
The last point I want to raise is that I've spoken to other members in the charitable sector—other leaders—and they share the concerns I'm bringing to you, but they are hesitant to speak out because they are afraid of losing government funding and of how this actually may impact their professional careers. This is not a good sign for a democratic country. The Canada we live in should not have the fear of speaking truth to power and calling out a bad policy.
By incentivizing Canadians to give only to the Humanitarian Coalition, our government—the Canadian government—has hindered the ability of other agencies to help Pakistanis in their desperate moment of need. If you had kept the old policy, dozens of humanitarian agencies would be working to rally their donors and create a larger movement of help.
I want to be clear before I close: I'm not disparaging the work of other agencies. I'm not even requesting government funding. I'm requesting that this government stop taking funds away from smaller charities with this policy. As members of this committee, you have something that we as humanitarians don't: You have the power to stop this bad policy.
Thank you.
Good evening, Mr. Chair and committee members.
I will not go into describing the situation in Pakistan. Previous speakers have covered that and, in the previous session, details and statistics were given.
I will introduce Humanity First. It is an international humanitarian aid agency with branches in 62 countries. Our Canadian headquarters are based in the city of Vaughan, Ontario. Humanity First provides emergency assistance using a global volunteer network, irrespective of race, gender, age, religion or political affiliation. Since 1995, Humanity First has responded to over 190 emergencies in 99 countries and assisted around 2.5 million people affected by natural disasters, including major responses in Haiti, Bangladesh and the Philippines. This is in addition to our other humanitarian programs.
Since the start of flooding in Pakistan, Humanity First has continued to assist victims of the flood. Humanity First has provided over 1.1 million meals, distributed thousands of care packs and helped tens of thousands of people with emergency supplies. We have helped 68 medical camps, where over 101 doctors treated over 25,000 patients. Humanity First has given tents, mosquito nets and water purification tablets to affected people. In fact, 3,395 volunteers have worked over 34,700 hours to help.
Our long-term plan includes building 500 homes for impacted families, continuing our medical clinics, providing farmers with feed for their livestock and providing crop compensation and fertilizers for farmers. We will also be assisting with other needs, such as education of children and psychosocial support.
Like all other international organizations, Humanity First is also facing various challenges on the ground, including but not limited to the safety and security of our volunteers, the fund transfer process, and the inflation, which is not only impacting Pakistan and Canada but is worldwide. However, the biggest challenge that Humanity First has faced was not on the ground in Pakistan; rather, sadly, it is being faced in Canada, our homeland.
I would like to bring to the attention of this committee how the launching of the matching fund has adversely impacted Humanity First and many other small Canadian NGOs. The Government of Canada announced funding of $30 million to help humanitarian partners provide life-saving services. Also, on September 13, Canada launched a matching fund in which the government matched dollar for dollar donations made by individuals to the Humanitarian Coalition and a couple of other organizations. The funds were matched up to a maximum of $7.5 million. Sadly, Humanity First did not receive any funding from the $30 million announced, and we are not part of the matching fund.
What was the impact of that? Canadian donors are among the savviest people, who want to ensure that their donation has the maximum impact. When they find out that the government is going to match their donations to certain organizations, they choose only those organizations to get the value of their donation doubled up. It definitely makes sense. Who would not like to complement their generosity by increasing the value of their donations? However, this unfair practice negatively impacts organizations like Humanity First in terms of fewer donations, resulting in the shrinking of our response, despite our potential. Moreover, some donors take it as a credibility issue. They prefer and trust those organizations that are funded by the government. We received numerous calls asking us if the government would match their donation. When we said no, they did not donate to us. We lost a substantial amount of donation that could have been used by us in Pakistan. We rely on our donors to provide this help.
The government completely ignored some key factors when deciding about matching funds, factors such as on-the-ground presence, past track record, availability of resources on the ground, volunteer base and the agility and nimbleness of the organization.
For example, Humanity First has a proven track record of being a trusted partner of the then CIDA when we responded to typhoon Haiyan in 2014. We built over 400 homes and two schools with help from funding by the Government of Canada, a project on record that was successfully delivered by Humanity First. The fact that Humanity First has over 100 doctors and over 3,000 volunteers on the ground in Pakistan with the ability to reach out to a wider population, and that we have already helped thousands of victims from our own resources, was never considered by the government when deciding matching funds.
I have only two recommendations.
We recommend that the government consider pre-qualifying a larger base and a mix of large and small organizations as their trusted partners who are eligible and may automatically receive government funding as their on-the-ground partner.
As well, for matching funds, the government should impartially and universally match funds for all charitable organizations that receive donations for the particular cause and that are also active on the ground.
I will end my submission by saying that it is never too late to change this unfair policy. There is an urgency for the need to help the people who are impacted, and aid delayed is aid denied.
Thank you very much.
:
Thank you so much, Mr. Chair and committee members, for discussing the situation in Pakistan.
Islamic Relief Canada is part of a global family, a global network. In Pakistan specifically, our teams have been active for more than 30 years. Currently, we have 400 staff members throughout the country, and 100 specifically working in Balochistan. Islamic Relief Pakistan has, so far, reached more than 550,000 individuals in providing life-saving aid.
I'd like to provide a first-hand account from August 17 to August 28. I was on the ground in Pakistan, especially in Balochistan. This is a province that, even compared to the rest of the country, has already been lagging in terms of the infrastructure that's there. Most of the areas that have been impacted by this flooding.... Most of Balochistan was already under extreme poverty. You're talking about six million out of the 12 million individuals there already living in poverty.
What I saw on the ground were people who had lost not only their homes—and in some cases their lives—but a dignified way of earning a livelihood. Most of the rural parts of Pakistan rely on either agriculture or animal rearing. Because of global warming and climate change, what has happened is that in this area of Balochistan, just two months before the flooding, there was a severe drought. It hadn't rained there for a long period of time. You go from drought-like conditions to excess rainfall, where the infrastructure isn't there to manage all of the excess water. More than 30 million people have been impacted and have lost the ability to provide a dignified livelihood for their families.
Even when the cameras leave, when the media stops talking about the situation in Pakistan, we know and we fear that for many years down the line the impact will still be there. This is a larger impact than the earthquake and the floods that happened a decade ago.
Islamic Relief is doing what we can. We appreciate the Government of Canada for initially announcing rapid deployment funds of $5 million, and then $30 million. Islamic Relief has had a presence in Pakistan, and $2 million was deployed through us. Islamic Relief is also part of the Humanitarian Coalition, a pre-vetted group that has received government funding in order to make sure that efficient, transparent and effective aid can get to the people who are in most need.
Canadians have been very generous in this crisis. I can report that just with Islamic Relief Canada, we have raised $5.5 million since the middle of August, specifically for Pakistan. Canadians from coast to coast do care about the crisis and are willing to heed the call of the matching funds to donate more.
Mr. Chair, I'd like to mention that in the previous session we spoke about climate change. I think one element of this crisis in a country like Pakistan is that when you look at their GDP and their debt financing, it is really handicapped by not being able to invest in climate-resistant infrastructure.
An initiative that I saw on the ground, when we talk about disaster reduction, is something as simple as a $5,000 flood wall. It's stones and can be built in strategic areas near the villages. The villagers showed me videos where the flood waters came and because we had done that intervention just six months ago, the waters bypassed their village and their homes, and their crops were protected.
I think it's this type of climate-resistant disaster risk reduction and common-sense initiatives that we need to empower both the NGOs and the governments to do more of.
Both the IMF and the World Bank, in terms of multilaterals, and I think Canada and some of the other nations, have a responsibility to talk about how we can do debt swaps to make sure that the country is not burdened by debt repayments. Some of those external debts can be forgiven and converted into climate-resistant and climate-adaptive interventions.
As you know, the ODA from Canada is extremely low. That's another area we'd like the government to increase, but the needs will remain for the people of Pakistan.
It's our hope that we can be standing with the people of Pakistan. They have more than 5,000 or 6,000 glaciers in the north. Unfortunately, global warming and climate change will probably mean that we will be having this conversation in the near future again, with climate disasters. It is an area of urgency.
Thank you so much.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the witnesses.
I'll take your admonishment, Mr. Chair. I have that same problem of speaking too fast at times.
I'm relatively new to the committee, so in the interest of transparency, I did serve on and was employed by the Canadian Foodgrains Bank for five years, prior to being elected in 2019. I wanted to put that on the record. If my bias shows through, I apologize for that up front. I'll endeavour not to have that happen.
I'd like to start, Mr. Khan, with what you just referenced in one of your closing comments. Canada's ODA is fairly low. We heard in testimony earlier that Canada has committed, I believe, $33 million to a UN estimate of $816 million of immediate need.
Can you comment on how that compares to other countries?
:
I have three quick answers.
First, we work through local partners. Our Aga Khan Foundation in Pakistan is older than the Aga Khan Foundation in Canada, so it's a local partner. It's all staff from the region.
Second, I agree that the government has to decide on the portfolio: multilateral, bilateral or civil society projects. They all have their own profile of strengths and weaknesses, but the accountability that you get when you fund and support Canadian institutions is orders of magnitude higher than anything we see from the other two categories.
The last thing I would say is that when we do work with local civil society institutions, we have to insist they coordinate with the government. It's not really either/or. It has to be both. They have to be working closely with the governments in the region to ensure they're coordinated and getting the most bang for their buck.
:
Perhaps I can build on that.
The crisis in Pakistan has really shown a great deal of resilience from the communities rallying together, and they are absolutely helping each other. You're seeing that some widespread strikes are going to happen this weekend, which will make it impossible for aid agencies to deliver assistance. Some of those occurrences actually harm us and make it harder for us to deliver aid.
Overall, you have an increased demand for services and aid, just by the sheer volume of people who need help, counteracted by a decrease in the amount of available money, delayed money arriving, and then, of course, such rising costs, meaning that you can reach fewer people with those funds.
I want to thank all the witnesses for their testimony and for all the work they're doing in Pakistan.
First, Mr. Khan, Pakistan has contributed less than 1% to global warming, and yet it's one of the countries being most impacted. I'm curious to know how you see Canada's role in supporting Pakistan and ensuring that around the world we are better prepared for climate disasters. As well, COP27 is happening in the next few weeks in Egypt. There will be lots of conversations about international financing for climate-related loss and damage. I'm sure that the enormous damage caused by the flooding in Pakistan will be top of mind for people there.
You spoke a little bit about the need for debt swapping and debt forgiveness, and how that could help Pakistan with climate-resilient infrastructure. In my mind, Canada, as a high-income country but also with our historic and ongoing high per capita emissions, has a responsibility to do more. Can you speak a little bit about what it would mean if this kind of debt forgiveness were implemented, and why it's so important for Canada to step up on a global stage?
:
Thank you so much for the question.
I think, really, in some cases Pakistan is maybe at ground zero for a climate change impact. I saw first-hand and heard from the teams on the ground that the same area that's been flooded for so many years had extreme drought-like conditions. For a pastoralist society, where the vast majority of the country earn their wages through either agriculture or animals, both of those are impacted when they have no water or, in this case, flooding and too much water.
I think there's a recognition that the impact of it will be very great. Pakistan's contribution to carbon emissions is incredibly low. Obviously, in the western world, including Canada, it's high. This is just one additional reason why there is a moral responsibility for Canada to step up and do more. It already has, obviously, made some commitments, but the need is for this to be sustainable and increase in magnitude. Even speaking to everyday Pakistanis on the ground, there is a recognition that western countries need to do more to help countries like Pakistan that face this.
Again, there are more than 5,000 or 6,000 glaciers in the north. They've seen those melting at a very rapid pace. Unfortunately, there's a fear that they may not even recover fully from this before we're dealing with this crisis again.
Canada has a large Pakistani diaspora. I think throughout the country we saw that in terms of the interest for this appeal. To get ahead of it, I think lots of Pakistani Canadians will be expecting Canada to do its fair share in the commitments that it makes at the global level in working with multilateral agencies like the IMF and the World Bank. A country like Pakistan has so much of its GDP on debt financing, and it's really crippled with the amount of debt that it has to pay to the multilateral agencies. We can convert and utilize some of that to make it more climate-resistant. Prevention is always better than the cure—sometimes the investment isn't that significant compared to what we're doing now. Just a little bit will go a long way.
Thank you.
Thank you so much to all the witnesses for your testimony and, more importantly, for your work on the ground.
I appreciated the comments that were made with respect to the vital need for reform to the matching program. It is the intention of this committee to prepare a report following these hearings, and my hope is that the report will include a strong recommendation to the government to reform the way they do matching programs. As I mentioned previously, this is a problem we've seen in multiple different cases, and I think there are alternatives the government could be pursuing that would achieve the objectives it wants to achieve while also being fairer.
I want to put this question without asking anyone in particular, but just opening it up to whoever wants to answer. It's about the challenges around minority rights in Pakistan, and how we can ensure that development assistance is available to all communities and also that Canada is playing a constructive role in addressing threats to minorities.
I was very disturbed recently to read of the horrific incitement to violence against the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community by one cleric in particular, who was calling for violence against pregnant women. We have other instances of violence and legal discrimination against Christians and various other minority communities.
Would any of you like to speak to the issue of how we can ensure equal access to development assistance for minorities in the context of Pakistan?
It is true that in Pakistan there is racial, religious and ethnic turmoil, where people are against one another. You just mentioned the edict about attacking pregnant women—Ahmadi women—and this is a very sad situation.
Another incident was that there were some tomatoes that were imported from Iran and one group of people said that they would be destroyed because they were Shia tomatoes and Sunnis cannot have them. This is a very sad situation, and this is because of illiteracy, because of fanaticism and because of misguidance that is being spread over there by certain factions.
I think that, at a time of need, the country and the international community should ensure that aid reaches out to all sectors, all groups of people, without any discrimination. That can be ensured by putting some conditions on this: that the government report on how the aid was distributed and how various ethnic, religious and other groups have benefited from the aid that has been provided.
There's not much that can be done about it, because it's the people on the ground who are fanatics who take this action, but the government can be forced to prevent that or at least stop the violence against various ethnic groups and make the aid reach them.
I'm sorry that I had to step out during the testimony. I was, unfortunately, giving a speech in the House.
It's been very interesting to hear. I'm going to talk a little bit more about the climate impacts or climate financing. We know that Pakistan, of course, has contributed less than 1% to global warming, yet they are bearing the burden of climate change and the climate crisis.
Perhaps, Mr. Shariff, I'll just finish with you, if I could.
How could or how should Canada be financing climate mitigation and adaptation better? How could it be better delivered? How could we ensure that it is reaching the most vulnerable people, that it's using indigenous knowledge and that it is aligning with our feminist international assistance policy?
:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chairman.
I think this is a really important question, and I'm sure I won't do it justice in the time we have. Let me say a couple things in terms of principles of work.
The first principle is that, worldwide, including in Canada, climate finance has had a very significant portion associated with debt and equity financing rather than grant financing. While I understand why that aspiration might be there, I think it's very optimistic to think that the dire climate needs we have can be adequately addressed through resources that are non-grant resources and that are going to have to be paid back somehow. There is absolutely room for so-called innovative finance work here, but I would say that it is a very particular response; it's not going to be the generalized response.
The second thing is that I think we probably have to be much more analytically precise about the specific issues, country by country, where we think we can make a real contribution. Let me take clean energy as an example. In many parts of the world, we have a situation where we have both climate fragility and energy poverty. That is to say, we need to expand massively the amount of energy available. At the same time, we're going to be much more conscious about carbon footprints. We need to bring a lot of innovation to the ability of countries to develop energy security plans that convert resources in those countries into sustainable energy sources. How expert are we at that right now? What's the relationship of our funding to that massive question?
The last example would be in agriculture. There is a massive opportunity for us to do much more in climate-smart agriculture. It's a very significant issue around the world. I think we have lots of opportunities to partner with communities. My sense is that if we walk toward communities with ideas here, they will run toward us.
We need to make a commitment, and I think that a lot of this is going to have to be grant.