Why is the census a secret? Sherry Rehman

Author: Agencies

Islamabad: Senator Sherry Rehman of the PPP voiced alarm over a number of controversies arising from unresolved issues related to the census currently underway. Rehman stated, “The census has dangerous shortfalls that need to be addressed immediately. As much as it is the government’s constitutional duty to conduct a census, key deficits and designed flaws in the exercise put it in the eye of a huge potential storm”.

“The government has failed to address the most fundamental issues of transparency and verification of numbers, leading many to question the intention and validity of the long-awaited exercise. The questionable use of forms that exclude carbon copies or any form of cross verification by enumerators is a huge problem, and will create more questions than answers as to the whole point of the census,” asserted the Senator.

Senator Rehman further stated, “It is alarming that no counterfoils are given to members of a household after the enumeration, which means the household will have no evidence of any details they have provided the enumerator. It is also questionable why the government is not disclosing how many people are included in a bloc”.

The Vice-President PPPP continued, “There is no counter posting or verification on websites either, which can potentially empower the federal government to reinvent numbers in Islamabad for each province and even each constituency!”

“From what little we know about the planning and cost estimations, it seems like the government is spending a premium for an exercise that lacks both credibility and consensus. Why is the government sticking to an outmoded census methodology when there is a variety of technologically advanced ways of collecting population data that are used all over the world?” questioned Rehman.

The government is currently facing gaping questions on rules and practices regarding the collection of data pertaining to overseas Pakistanis, disabled people and women. “The exclusion of Form 2A is a problem considering how this will result in significant data and social indicators being left out,” the Senator reiterated.

Data available suggests that there are around seven million overseas Pakistanis, most of them working as laborers in the Middle East.

“So far, only those who have left Pakistan six months ago will be accounted for, automatically omitting around 4 per cent of the population. Even students studying abroad who are outside Pakistan for over six months will be excluded from the census,” Rehman added on the contentious exclusion of overseas Pakistanis.

The 1998 census revealed that 3,286,630 or 2.4 per cent of the population are disabled. The government is still relying on this two-decade old data. Rehman said, “The government is excluding a form with questions that will tell us how many Pakistanis are with disabilities or who is employed. Inaccurate and dated statistics are a major problem in the way of service delivery and protection of all Pakistanis”. Again, data on women in Pakistan will prove substantial for crucial matters concerning development, politics and health. From 1951 to 1998, the women’s population increased from 46.22 per cent to 48.5 per cent. Senator Rehman pointed out the importance of ensuring accurate data on Pakistan’s female population is collected. “Cultural and social barriers are crucial factors that should be taken seriously. In case the male member of the family is not present in the house, the female members may not give accurate information due to prevailing illiteracy and may not even meet the enumerator. How is it possible that there are no female enumerators in the Punjab census team? This is a clear violation of the government’s own census instruction manual and gender policy that must be resolved immediately,” concluded Rehman.

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