Rewarding a Rogue? When Global Banks Fund a Terror-Tainted State
š§ØBlood, Loans & Blindfolds
April 22, 2025. Pahalgam, Kashmir.
The nation mourned.
India bledāagain.
While families lit funeral pyres, and soldiers stood on high alert, a billion-dollar headline quietly surfaced.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a $1 billion loan to Pakistan. And not to be outdone, the World Bank announced a jaw-dropping $40 billion aid plan for Pakistan over the next decade (2026ā2035).
Coincidence? Or a reward for terror dressed up as economic reform?
šµ The Timing: When Terror Meets Treasury
Indiaās wounds were still fresh from the Pahalgam terror attackāblamed on The Resistance Front, a Lashkar-e-Taiba-backed proxy. Evidence pointed to Pakistanās deep state, its old playbook of cross-border terror.
But instead of sanctions, Pakistan got a cheque.
The IMF, citing economic reforms, unlocked $1 billion. And then came the World Bank, like Santa with a sack full of aidā$40 billion to be handed out over nine years, supposedly to āsupport development and sustainability.ā
But hereās the uncomfortable truth:
You canāt grow peace on soil soaked in blood.
š Diplomacy or Hypocrisy?
These aren’t just ādevelopment funds.ā These are lifelinesāin a country where terror outfits freely raise money, recruit openly, and are protected by parts of the military.
India has long argued that foreign aid to Pakistan often gets diverted. Ask where Osama bin Laden was found. Ask where Hafiz Saeed holds rallies. Ask how Talha Saeedāthe Pahalgam attack plannerāroams free.
And yet, global financial bodies play blind.
Would the IMF have funded North Korea after a missile test?
Would the World Bank have signed a deal with Russia right after Crimea?
Then why this soft corner for Pakistan?
š§ The Billion-Dollar Question: Where Does It Go?
The World Bank says the funds will be used for:
- Climate resilience
- Healthcare
- Education
- Clean energy
Sounds noble. Looks noble. But in a country where even flood relief camps host radicalization camps, can we be sure?
Can you tell a LeT camp from a āliteracyā centre without oversight?
Isn’t this like giving fuel to a fire and hoping it cooks dinner?
š The India Dilemma: Paying for Peace, Watching Terror Grow
India didnāt oppose development aid.
India opposed timing and trust.
How can a nation watch its civilians die, and then see the killerās patron state get a billion-dollar standing ovation from the worldās top banks?
This is not diplomacy. This is economic blindness.
This is the world saying: āYes, you shelter terrorists. But hereās some cash to keep your economy afloat.ā
𧬠A Pattern, Not an Exception
This isnāt the first time.
Pakistan has received multiple IMF bailouts over decades. Each time, promises are made. Reforms are pledged. Dollars are released.
What happens next?
- More terror attacks in India
- More arms for jihadi groups
- More debt cycles in Pakistan
- More pressure on India to āact responsiblyā
Meanwhile, the money trail vanishes into a black hole of military control and extremist networks.
š Enough Apologies, Time for Accountability
The world needs to ask tough questions:
- Why is there no terror-audit of financial aid to Pakistan?
- Why aren’t human rights and anti-terror compliance preconditions to loans?
- Why is global funding turning into a terror subsidy program?
This isn’t development aid. This is geopolitical negligence.
š„ Final Thoughts: Blood Money Has No Currency
Development is not the issue. Pakistan’s people deserve better lives, no doubt.
But when a state refuses to act against terror groups on its soil, and the world still throws billions at it, the signal is clear:
You can kill, but only if youāre broke enough.
If terror becomes a bargaining chip for bailouts, then peace becomes a myth. And justice?
A joke.
Dear IMF, dear World Bankādevelopment without decency is just disaster with a ribbon on it.
š Nations shouldnāt be rewarded for exporting violence.
š India deserves global solidarity, not global silence.
Because in the end⦠bombs may explode in India, but the credibility crumbles elsewhere.



