New Delhi: Pakistani minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry was quick to take a jibe at the Chandrayaan 2, terming the spacecraft as a mere 'toy', which the debt-ridden country is far from capable of developing.
Pakistan's National Space Agency SUPARCO (Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission), which was set up in 1961, took 50 years to launch its first communication satellite into the orbit by using Chinese-made launch vehicle, that too with aid from a subsidiary of China Aerospace and Technology Corporation.
The agency was established eight years before the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). Decades hence, while the ISRO made world records such as sending 104 satellites in space in a single launch in 2017, Pakistan's space agency has witnessed various failures and setbacks.
In 58 years of its existence, SUPARCO has largely been denied the funding and resources needed to ensure a sustained rate of advancement and innovation. The likelihood of the agency's budget being swelled anytime soon is grim, in consideration to the country's debt-ridden state.
Yet the condition that the sub continent's oldest agency today should not be blamed on the state of the economy but on the disinterest of Pakistan's politicians.
The real downfall of the agency came in the 1980s and 1990s when the then President Zia-ul-Haq cut off funding to major ongoing projects, including the flagship satellite communication launch.
The state policy of discriminating against minorities was reflected in Pakistan's space programme when they shunned Abdus Salam for being an Ahmadiyya and the assistance that the Noble Laureate could have offered for the growth of the space agency. Military generals replaced scientists atop the organisation and the focus of the agency moved from independent research to counter India. The current chairman of the space agency, Qaiser Anees Khurrum, is the former top general.