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35053668-Empire-of-the-Soul-Paul-William-Roberts

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214<br />

EMPIRE OF THE SOUL<br />

foreign policy pertaining to <strong>the</strong> area. In effect, <strong>the</strong> wali presided<br />

over an advisory council <strong>of</strong> forty members that included ten Swati<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficials and advised <strong>the</strong> ruler on matters <strong>of</strong> state. It also acted as a<br />

legislative body. Membership to <strong>the</strong> council was by public elections<br />

held every three years. Fiercely independent in nature, at least, Swat<br />

had no income tax, and its annual revenue <strong>of</strong> some three million<br />

dollars in 1976 came from land revenues, forests, import and export,<br />

customs and excise, and minerals. With this relatively small sum<br />

<strong>the</strong> state paid for its own militia and police, <strong>the</strong> upkeep <strong>of</strong> all its<br />

hospitals and medical facilities, and its schools, as well as maintaining<br />

450 miles <strong>of</strong> road in excellent condition – all with no outside aid.<br />

Most Swatis supported <strong>the</strong>mselves as small landowners and<br />

farmers, harvesting two crops a year <strong>of</strong> rice, maize, wheat, barley,<br />

mustard, sugarcane, potatoes, tomatoes and onions, as well as fruits<br />

like pears, grapes, oranges, apples, apricots, plums, and even walnuts.<br />

Beekeeping was Swat’s largest cottage industry. More than seven<br />

thousand families still produce over two million pounds <strong>of</strong> honey<br />

and pure beeswax annually. The state grew all its own food grain<br />

and exported <strong>the</strong> surplus to Pakistan.<br />

Education was free and, while not mandatory, encouraged; needy<br />

students were even provided with free books and uniforms. Medical<br />

treatment was also free <strong>the</strong>n, with sixteen well-equipped hospitals<br />

spread over <strong>the</strong> four thousand square miles <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> state, twenty<br />

dispensaries scattered around <strong>the</strong> villages, as well as a mobile<br />

dispensary, a leprosy clinic, and a veterinary hospital. The entire<br />

population <strong>of</strong> just under one million seemed to know how lucky<br />

<strong>the</strong>y were, too.<br />

None <strong>of</strong> this, <strong>of</strong> course, was thanks to Ray. As far as I could make<br />

out, Swat seemed blessed with rulers <strong>of</strong> exceptional ability and<br />

dedication. The wali was a busy man, his duties ranging from<br />

general administration <strong>of</strong> state affairs to trying personally and<br />

passing judgement in civil and criminal cases, reviewing cases,<br />

hearing appeals, applications and petitions, interviewing members<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> public to hear <strong>the</strong>ir grievances, and even inspecting all new<br />

state construction sites. Whe<strong>the</strong>r for some junior state employee’s<br />

house, a school, a road, or a bridge, no final payment was ever made<br />

to <strong>the</strong> contractors before <strong>the</strong> wali had personally inspected <strong>the</strong> work

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