Archive for the 'Pakistan Politics' Category

Pakistan is for hire

October 5, 2008

We expect to be paid 100 billion US dollars for the dirty work U(S) are asking of us. Only 100 billion dollars and it will all be done, no problems. Actually, whoever pays our prices takes our services. So if U(S) can’t pay us, we might actually make it as bad as hell for ya..

Well, you know the drill, U(..S) have paid crooks in the past, under the table ofcourse, now we are just asking for our price out and clear!! and make it quick for if you don’t, Pakistan will come crashing down in a few days time. and there is no way I, Asif Ali Zardari, the president of Pakistan, will ever let that happen. I will just take my price from someone else. I will be waiting for the check..

New Year, Happy?

January 1, 2008

I don’t know if the new year is really as happy this time around for Pakistanis. It certainly did not begin on a happy note.  Contrary to what mainstream media portrays, I am a Pakistani and I am not grieved ONLY by the death of Benazir. In fact, I am saddened a lot more by its aftermath.  There is no point in a blame game but was there any in killing people, smashing cars, burning down buildings? All that and all we are told is that these were a bunch of unknown assailants, that it was wise of the government to let them express their grief and emotions: How very naive of our nation to take that!!

This year brings a new young face to PPP: Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari. A young lad with a new name for the new year. For a look at his life so far: click here

Bhutto assasinated

December 28, 2007

Benazir Bhutto was assassinated in Rawalpindi yesterday. The entire country is burning, 600 cars, a dozen banks, several petrol pumps have been set ablaze. Where are we going?

Assassinations are condemnable. The reaction following it, the way it is seen often in Pakistan, is also equally condemnable.

It certainly looks like an act of cowardice and it has already been branded “a terrorist act.”

Think now for a minute. How many high-profile murderers have been caught in this country? How many politicians have been tried and executed for their involvement in extra-judicial killings or plain state terrorism? In an ideal world, if some is accused of murder or terrorism, they should be tried in court and if convicted, punished according to the law of the land?

“Law of the land.” How many Pakistanis believe in that phrase? And how many have actually witnessed the law if it was ever applied to a premier or a parliamentarian?

If one common man’s brother was killed in a politically motivated act of violence and the victim’s family holds the current premier directly responsible, will this family get justice? Will they ever get a fair trial? God forbid, if it were you who’s brother was killed in such a way, would you not yearn to avenge his blood? What ways to do you have to achieve justice?

On the same note, what law prescribes killing of “suspected” militants? What happened to innocent until proven otherwise?

By no means do I intend to fan the fires of extremism or promote violence. But how can we ignore the gross injustice that people of this country face everyday? How can we ignore the fact that if today, you or me or anyone of us gets killed in Pakistan, there is hardly any chance that we will ever receive justice in this system. There is hardly any chance that the killers will be caught.

I hope that Bhutto’s assassins are caught. But I also pray and hope that they are given a fair trial, a public fair trial.

For a reflection on Bhutto’s track record in the words of none other than Jemima Khan: click here.

Why don’t students spend their time doing something more useful than politics?

November 16, 2007

I have faced that question twice in the last 2 days as we tried to convince students get involved in Pakistan’s political affairs, to realize the catastrophe that imposition of martial law is and the installation of a pseudo-democracy is about to be in the days to come.

These people, the age of our parents and more experienced, want us to spend our time collecting money for the poor, organize charity melas and spend our time in clinics in katchi aabadis instead of worrying about the politics of the country and its future and the stupid traitors who are in control. Perhaps, they are just being parents. Perhaps, they are disillusioned that nothing will ever change or perhaps, they have simply got their priorities wrong.

When some one with an acute heart attack walks into the emergency room, what do you do? Do you counsel them about their headache or their malnutrition? Do you give pain killers so that their headache will get relieved or do you give them laxatives so that their constipation would get better? Do you tell them they need to get audiometry done to figure out more about their hearing loss? Absolutely NOT!! The first thing you do is give them IV streptokinase with mere hope that it will reverse the pathology to some extent, at least. And then, sometimes, its simply too late for that as well. But you definitely don’t worry about his hearing loss because you can take care of it if he will actually survive, RIGHT?

Talking about needy patients and social work and ethics awareness right now is exactly that. Pakistan is suffering for a condition analogous to a heart attack. If we don’t take care of that right now, there will be irreversible damage done to the heart of this country. Forget the constipation and headache for a while, we need to worry about the heart right now. Teachers and professors, leaders and parents, PLEASE GET YOUR PRIORITIES STRAIGHT. We need an acute intervention to save this country!!

Murtaza Bhutto’s daughter speaks out against Musharraf-Benazir deal

November 16, 2007

The false promises of lady democracy

By Fatima Bhutto, LA Times

We Pakistanis live in uncertain times. Emergency rule has been imposed for the 13th time in our short 60-year history.

Thousands of lawyers have been arrested, some charged with sedition and treason; the chief justice has been deposed; and a draconian media law — shutting down all private news channels — has been drafted.

Perhaps the most bizarre part of this circus has been the hijacking of the democratic cause by my aunt, the twice-disgraced former prime minister, Benazir Bhutto. While she was hashing out a deal to share power with Gen. Pervez Musharraf last month, she repeatedly insisted that without her, democracy in Pakistan would be a lost cause. Now that the situation has changed, she’s saying that she wants Musharraf to step down and that she’d like to make a deal with his opponents — but still, she says, she’s the savior of democracy.

The reality, however, is that there is no one better placed to benefit from emergency rule than she is. Along with the leaders of prominent Islamic parties, she has been spared the violent retributions of emergency law. Yes, she now appears to be facing seven days of house arrest, but what does that really mean? While she was supposedly under house arrest at her Islamabad residence last week, 50 or so of her party members were comfortably allowed to join her.

She addressed the media twice from her garden, protected by police given to her by the state, and was not reprimanded for holding a news conference. (By contrast, the very suggestion that they might hold a news conference has placed hundreds of other political activists under real arrest, in real jails.)

Ms. Bhutto’s political posturing is sheer pantomime. Her negotiations with the military and her unseemly willingness until just a few days ago to take part in Musharraf’s regime have signaled once and for all to the growing legions of fundamentalists across South Asia that democracy is just a guise for dictatorship.

It is widely believed that Ms. Bhutto lost both her governments on grounds of massive corruption. She and her husband, a man who came to be known in Pakistan as “Mr. 10%,” have been accused of stealing more than $1 billion from Pakistan’s treasury. She is appealing a money-laundering conviction by the Swiss courts involving about $11 million. Corruption cases in Britain and Spain are ongoing.

It was particularly unappealing of Ms. Bhutto to ask Musharraf to bypass the courts and drop the many corruption cases that still face her in Pakistan. He agreed, creating the odiously titled National Reconciliation Ordinance in order to do so. Her collaboration with him was so unsubtle that people on the streets are now calling her party, the Pakistan People’s Party, the Pervez People’s Party. Now she might like to distance herself, but it’s too late.

Why did Ms. Bhutto and her party cronies demand that her corruption cases be dropped, but not demand that the cases of activists jailed during the brutal regime of dictator Zia ul-Haq (from 1977 to 1988) not be quashed? What about the sanctity of the law? When her brother Mir Murtaza Bhutto — my father — returned to Pakistan in 1993, he faced 99 cases against him that had been brought by Zia’s military government. The cases all carried the death penalty. Yet even though his sister was serving as prime minister, he did not ask her to drop the cases. He returned, was arrested at the airport and spent the remaining years of his life clearing his name, legally and with confidence, in the courts of Pakistan.

Ms. Bhutto’s repeated promises to end fundamentalism and terrorism in Pakistan strain credulity because, after all, the Taliban government that ran Afghanistan was recognized by Pakistan under her last government — making Pakistan one of only three governments in the world to do so.

And I am suspicious of her talk of ensuring peace. My father was a member of Parliament and a vocal critic of his sister’s politics. He was killed outside our home in 1996 in a carefully planned police assassination while she was prime minister. There were 70 to 100 policemen at the scene, all the streetlights had been shut off and the roads were cordoned off. Six men were killed with my father. They were shot at point-blank range, suffered multiple bullet wounds and were left to bleed on the streets.

My father was Benazir’s younger brother. To this day, her role in his assassination has never been adequately answered, although the tribunal convened after his death under the leadership of three respected judges concluded that it could not have taken place without approval from a “much higher” political authority.

I have personal reasons to fear the danger that Ms. Bhutto’s presence in Pakistan brings, but I am not alone. The Islamists are waiting at the gate. They have been waiting for confirmation that the reforms for which the Pakistani people have been struggling have been a farce, propped up by the White House. Since Musharraf seized power in 1999, there has been an earnest grass-roots movement for democratic reform. The last thing we need is to be tied to a neocon agenda through a puppet “democrat” like Ms. Bhutto.

By supporting Ms. Bhutto, who talks of democracy while asking to be brought to power by a military dictator, the only thing that will be accomplished is the death of the nascent secular democratic movement in my country. Democratization will forever be de-legitimized, and our progress in enacting true reforms will be quashed. We Pakistanis are certain of this.

Fatima Bhutto is a Pakistani poet and writer. She is the daughter of Mir Murtaza Bhutto, who was killed in 1996 in Karachi when his sister, Benazir, was prime minister.

Imran Khan writes to the students of Pakistan

November 13, 2007

Imran Khan writes to students of Pakistan

The good thing about Pakistan’s martial law

November 11, 2007

It is surprising and perhaps, questionable by many, but I constantly find myself thinking about the many benefits General Musharraf’s martial law will bring to Pakistan in the long run. Don’t get me wrong though: peace, stability, economic growth and roads and infrastructure is not what intend to elaborate on.

Students in protest. For the first time in my (intelligent) life, I have a witnessed a phenomenon I have always wished I could see in Pakistan. Students, that too, from an elite university, have come out to protest infringement of human rights and freedom.

An unprecedented occurrence in today’s Pakistan, this could turn out to be one of the single biggest benefits of imposing martial law in this country. Had it not been for Musharraf’s martial law, these comfy cozy elites would have never woken up. Had it not been for Musharraf’s brute force and wild arrests across the capital, the people of the capital actually didn’t give a damn about the happenings in Swat or down in Dera Bugti or the hunger in a given village in Pakistan.

They are students, they are from the elite class, they are powerful and well read and they are mostly politically neutral: makes them excellent potentials for tomorrow’s leadership. Finally, they are thinking about where Pakistan is headed.

While Lahore is up with its unusual air of protests, Karachi is still asleep. Elite or no elite, students in Karachi have done very little to protest this situation and to taken an initiative to change it. The silence in Karachi yet again makes another point. Student politics in Karachi is largely dominated by student wings of mainstream political organizations. You can see how little they care about the future of this country their greedy minds are intoxicated with political power. Qasim Moini wrote about Karachi and its silence in DAWN here.

Why should we protest, you may ask? A student from Lahore answers here .

There is a LONG way to go. At least I don’t want to be part of the crowd that remained silent and engrossed in mundane activities while I country was thrown into a well of darkness.

Updates on Civil Society Activism in Pakistan

November 7, 2007

check out the updates from LUMS here and a press release from the LUMS administration here.

SMS revolution in Pakistan, GEO is still available

November 5, 2007

A GEO news report shows on November 4, 2007, an average of 10 SMSs were exchanged per cell phone. This is a record in Pakistan’s Telecom industry.. Yes Musharraf, are you going to block all these cell phones?

Perhaps a speculation but GEO also said 90% of these SMSs were anti-state.

Also, GEO TV audio stream is available here and the video stream here.

Academics and Human Rights Activists are being arrested and harassed in Musharraf’s Pakistan

November 4, 2007

Two emails circulated on Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) network need our attention. The first one below is about the arrests of around 50-60 people outside Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) building including prominent members of the society, academics and journalists:

This afternoon, a group of 50 or 60 peaceful protestors – including some prominent journalists, lawyers, academics and human rights activists – gathered outside the HRCP building to protest against Musharraf and his emergency declaration. The protestors were surrounded by the police and arrested. The latest information I have received is that detention orders are expected to be issued soon for all those arrested, which means that they may be put in jail indefinitely. Mr. Bilal Minto (adjunct faculty, Law & Policy) and Professor Ali Cheema (Economics) are also amongst the
arrested individuals.

In another VERY encouraging email that I quote here, a faculty member at LUMS appeals its students to peacefully protest the imposition of martial law in our country.

Dear all. As I write to you many members of society are actively protesting against the travesty that has plunged us once again into the dark ages. The hrcp building has been surrounded by police and peaceful protesters including some of our faculty members are about to be arrested. In islamabad and elsewhere the top judiciary of the country remains under house arrest and similar arrests are being made. The press has been completely muffled. This is the time to peacefully but unequivocally express our very strong dismay and protest against yet another martial law. Howvever as we unite in this please ensure that nothing happens that in any way undermines our institutional norms. Please introspect and gauge whether continuing silence makes sense any more. Please speak up, stand together and be counted. And be careful. Regards. Osama siddique

This appeal applies to all students across Pakistan, it is encouraging that someone is ready to make the move. We wanted leaders right, well we got our leaders. Let Musharraf make more of his mistakes and very soon, we will have such leaders across the whole country.

See this as well

Musharraf, this time, you HAVE to go!!

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