ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has asked the Obama Administration to bifurcate $1.5 billion assistance per annum for Islamabad into the budgetary support as well as for the social sector projects, in order to extend its help both for the government and people of Pakistan, it is reliably learnt.
Pakistan has proposed to the US for providing $800 million as budgetary support while remaining $700 million for the projects, which will be executed through USAID, mainly for social sector out of total $1.5 billion per annum assistance package announced by the President Obama.
The last Bush administration had abandoned budgetary support for Islamabad in the last two years by restricting its annual assistance for the development projects through USAID. In the first three years, the Bush regime had extended its annual $600 million in shape of $300 million as budgetary support and remaining $300 million as Foreign Military Grants (FMG).
Now we are pursuing Washington to bifurcate its upcoming annual $1.5 billion assistance both for the budgetary support as well as for projects through USAID, a high-level official of Pakistan embassy in Washington told The News on Sunday.
The official said that the Foreign Relation Committee would start hearing about its upcoming assistance for Pakistan from Monday and procedural requirements would take one and half month to get through the legislation process. Pakistan assistance is expected to be received from the next financial year, starting from July 2009, added the official.
The official said that it was not yet known in which shape the US is going to extend its support for Pakistan. However, it is the desire of Islamabad to provide it the budgetary support of $800 million per annum from the next fiscal year, added the official.
Pakistan embassy in the US, the official said, is hardly pursuing Islamabad case before the Obama administration in order to convince them for providing support in accordance with the objectives outlined by the incumbent regime.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
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