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The deleted bits from Fatima Jinnah's 'My Brother'

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The sub-continent's histories may well be one of the most misled and misinterpreted ones in the world.

Part of the reason for that is, most histories now referred for research into the region were products of 'darbaars' (royal courts), meaning they were written by commissioned authors who were favourites of the kings, maharajas or other persons in power.

Such histories are bound to be overflowing with praise for the ruler of the time. These are not the people's histories; they only speak of the victories, generosity and other great deeds of the rulers that usually amount to a bowl full of lies. So no, they can never be taken as national histories.

Take a look: Photoshopping history

The subject of histories written by the victorious, reminds me of an event in the democratically uncertain times of Field Marshal Ayub Khan’s tyrannical rule:

During Ayub's era, there was a certain author who had just finished writing his novel and decided to go and check if any of the various publishers in town were interested in publishing his work.

But all of the publishers, one by one, bluntly told him to bugger off, as they were busy publishing the president’s autobiography: Friends, not Masters. One publisher, a not so known one, agreed to publish the novel. However, he demanded that the printing paper be arranged by the author himself.

Now, when the poor author visited paper vendors, every vendor told him that they were out of paper as every single ream was being used in serving the president of the country — national service, in other words.

Well, he finally managed to acquire the required amount of paper and got his novel published. In a couple of days, when he had hundreds of published copies of his novel in his hand, he went to the booksellers.

To his utter shock, they, too, mocked his fortune and told him that they were busy selling Ayub Khan’s book and had no time to sell any other book. He brought all the books with him to his house.

For some time, his wife tolerated it, but then she confronted him:

“It’s a small house already, and then this garbage of yours is not any help in space management, I tell you. Do something!”

The confrontation, more of a loud and brain-piercing monologue, lasted for only two days. You know who won, I’m sure.

And so, the author, disappointed and heartbroken once again, took his books to the old book bazaar. There came the surprise of his life, when even those booksellers told him that they were busy with selling Ayub Khan’s book and had no space for any other product in the market.

And that was that.

Explore: The untold story of Pakistan’s blasphemy law

Coming to the more important part of this blog, you should know that there are some aspects of Jinnah’s life which not many Pakistanis are familiar with; probably because if these aspects were to be made public, the Pakistani bureaucracy would not be able to digest the revelations. Not only that, but most of the facts that the sister of Quaid-e-Azam Muhamad Ali Jinnah, Fatima Jinnah wrote about her brother have also been buried within history.

My Brother is the name of the biography Fatima Jinnah wrote on Quaid-e-Azam. By the time the book made it to publication, several pages from the book's manuscript had vanished.

The perpetrator of this feat was Mr Sharif-ul-Mujahid of the Quaid-i-Azam Academy.

  The author with Sharif-ul-Mujahid.
The author with Sharif-ul-Mujahid.

I went to Mr Sharif and asked him the reasons.

“Those pages were against the ideology of Pakistan and I had to take care of it,” he said.

The mister neither had nor has any remorse or regret over the act.

When I told him that these pages had been published in Qudratullah Shahab’s book Shahabnama (1988), he told me that actually, Mr Shahab had played a pivotal role in getting these pages removed back then.

Here’s a scan of what these pages said, as published in Shahabnama (pages 291-293 of the 2013 edition):

These were the few words deemed against the 'ideology of Pakistan' and left out by Mr Shahab and Mr Mujahid.

There have been many such incidents in the history of Pakistan. I wish to bring as many of these to public knowledge as possible. If you have any such information with you, please do let me know.

After all, you see, it’s a matter of ideology.


Translated by Aadarsh Ayaz Laghari from the original in Urdu here


Inside the mind of Vladimir Putin

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On October 1939, just as the Second World War had begun, Winston Churchill stated: “I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma; but perhaps there is a key. That key is Russian national interest.”

75 years and the annexation of Crimea in March 2014 later, the situation remains the same. Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, once remarked that Vladimir Putin is living in a “parallel universe”. As people all over the world try to figure out the riddle that is Putin's mind, Churchill's key comes in handy again.

Putin’s signature style is “soft annexation”, which he used in the case of Georgia invasion and breakaway of provinces Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The idea is to use political, economic and military levers which cannot be considered a traditional invasion, and exploit ethnic conflicts in countries which were once a part of Soviet Union. The goal is to augment these tensions (seen as relics of the former Soviet Union's messy collapse) and to prevent these countries from moving closer to the West as well as gaining influence in former Soviet States.

Look through: Russia’s overtures

The annexation of Crimea was done to extend Russian influence in Eurasia and also create favorable conditions for domestic economic growth. In all likeliness, Putin will not back off from the Ukraine issue as he would consider it a sign of weakness.

Russia’s economic progress has been noticeable in the past 15 years. GDP has increased sixfold and income-per-head sevenfold. Russia has regained its position in the world's top 10 economies. Its GDP in 2007 was at the level of 1990s, indicating a comeback since the collapse of Soviet Union. In 2003, its major oil exporting firm known as Lukoil earned profits of up to 38 per cent. According to World Bank, the 2012 GDP figure was $2.015 trillion which clearly demonstrates its phenomenal growth.

And then there is Russia’s military resurgence. By 2020, the Russian army will be organized around combat-ready and easily deployable brigades, with an objective of having at least 70 per cent of these forces equipped with next-generation weaponry and equipment.

Their goal is to have, by 2020, a million active-duty personnel; 2300 new tanks; 1200 new helicopters and planes; a navy fielding 50 new surface ships and 28 submarines; and 100 new satellites designed to augment Russia’s communications, command and control capabilities.

Putin is committed to spending billions over the next decade to satisfy these requirements.

Also read: Russia’s new military doctrine cites Nato as top threat

When Putin looks towards the West today, what does he see? A United States that preached the values of capitalism narrowly avoiding economic collapse in 2008, and a Germany — Europe’s powerhouse — on the verge of recession.

So Putin is confident that he can manage to come out of the Ukraine crisis. He is probably of the view that the European powers will get tired of imposing sanctions and the economy will bounce back. In fact, this crisis is his opportunity to tighten his grip on several matters.

He is aware of China’s booming manufacturing sector. The resentment that existed between the two countries in the 1960s has diminished and a healthy rapprochement is observed. China’s model of economic development is perceived as an example of success for Russia. An example of the increasing Sino-Russian energy sector cooperation can be observed from the signing of $400 bn deal where Russian company Gazprom will deliver 38bn cubic metres of gas to China annually.

Putin has realised that his country’s strength lies in its resources and this is evident from asserting his control in the oil and gas industry.

See: Ukraine secures cheap coal, power supplies from Russia

The main problem with sanctions is that they take time to work and despite various attempts to make the Russian bear passive, the bear has awakened. The West ignores the fact that sanctions will not solve the problem of Ukraine. Russia’s neighbour requires assistance of billions of dollars to recover from the turmoil.

In the past, Russia and Ukraine had enjoyed a symbiotic economic relationship. Russia was the most important strategic trade partner of Ukraine and a vast market for Ukrainian goods. Russian financial groups held an important position in Ukraine’s economy and leading Russian companies are still operating in Ukraine; these include oil refineries (TNKBB, Lukoil), mobile companies (ALTMO) and banks (Alfa Bank).

This dependence has now come back to bite Ukraine, which now needs a substantial amount of money for it’s recovery. And this is Putin’s strength.

He is unlikely to settle for Crimea or eastern Ukraine embroiled in conflict. He desires entire Ukraine, and pursuing the stratagem of building political and economic pressure on Kiev, he believes is the key to success. Russia has remained stable, expanded its economy and enhanced its international prestige like no other in the past 15 years.

And inside Putin’s mysterious mind one thing remains certain: He will not bow to western pressure and his resolve to make Russia a power to reckon with remains strong.

Woman of the year: The Pakistani mother

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 No assessment of women can be complete without saluting the courage of the Peshawar attack victims.—Reuters/file.
No assessment of women can be complete without saluting the courage of the Peshawar attack victims.—Reuters/file.

It is an unenviable exercise, to write about one tragedy in the midst of another. As Pakistanis pick up the pieces from Peshawar, collect the condolences, assess the helplessness and avert their eyes from what is at best a feeble future, there is the task of assessing the year gone by. And within this yearly exercise is the job of taking measure of the year for the country’s women.

Was it a good year for them? Were they defined by the Pakistani girl that won the Nobel Peace Prize or by the Pakistani woman who was stoned on the steps of a courthouse? Was it a year of successes or losses, more joy or more tears, more hopefulness or more regret?

To begin the task of weights and measures; there are numbers. More men than women are born in Pakistan – 105.7 boys born for every 100 girls. Of the girls that manage to survive, roughly 40 per cent will not be literate, and will never learn to write their name or read a book or sign a document. It may be an unlettered life, but it is likely to be a longer one – life expectancy for the Pakistani female has risen from around 53 years in 1970 to about 66.4 years.

See: Mothers and children in conflict

Woman of the Year: The Pakistani mother

Nearly 150 of them buried their children in this the last month of the year, and no assessment of women can be complete without saluting the courage of these mothers. If war has defined Pakistan’s politics in 2014, the resilience of the Pakistani mother has been its least saluted constituency.

With the funerals of children tearing the hearts and minds of the country, it befits that the last moments of 2014 be devoted to remembering just that.

More than 75 per cent of Pakistan’s female population will be mothers; they will bring children into the riven reality of a country that can provide few guarantees for them. If any words can define the condition of the country’s women, they would be the words of headmistress Tahira Qazi, who told the Taliban gunmen who entered the school: “Talk to me, I am their mother”.

Also read: 1,029 mothers, 211 kids contract HIV/Aids

She is gone now, but in her bravery, the women of Pakistan, mothers of now or later, have a summation of the challenge before them, which will not cede with the passing of the year.

The youngest mothers and those who tend to them

Many Pakistani women who become mothers are children themselves. A recent study disclosed that over half of married Pakistani women between the ages of 20 and 24 were married before they turned 18. Even this is some progress, however, the average age of marriage has gone up from 13.3 years in the 1950s to about 23 years currently.

Unsurprisingly, the youngest mothers are the poorest and least literate, living in the country’s rural areas where they have little or no access to healthcare. Only 20 per cent of the poorest Pakistani mothers had any medical care when they gave birth, compared to over 77 per cent of the country’s wealthiest.

Like everything else, the landscape of motherhood in Pakistan is defined by class, by the luck of those who have much; against the fortunes of those who have almost nothing at all. The Pakistani mother will bear 3.8 children during her lifetime, one of the highest rates in the world. In maternal health, Pakistan ranks above only above Afghanistan in the entire world. Only a quarter of Pakistani mothers have access to any kind of contraception.

Read on: Mr Erdogan, we're mothers... and much more

Those that tend to the mothers were also targets this year. Members of Pakistan’s Lady Health Workers became targets, many were mothers themselves and others tended to women who were mothers; often providing the only healthcare that rural Pakistani women are able to receive.

Four more were killed in the last days of November, just as the numbers of the babies afflicted by the polio virus rose to 260, the highest anywhere in the world.

Being targeted by terrorists was not the only hurdle these mothers faced. Amid reports of widespread harassment by male superiors, one from Mansehra involved the case of Fauzia Bibi who was slapped on the face and abused. When confronted by the case, Dr Jamshed reported that the female health worker had “attacked” him. Despite all of these formidable obstacles, Pakistan’s Lady Health Workers continued to carry on.

The Plight of “Other” Mothers

There are mothers who mourn, and mothers who must be mourned. The year 2014 was barely half done when on the morning of May 27, Farzana Parveen, pregnant, was stoned to death outside Lahore High Court months before she could give birth.

In the initial reports of the incident, Parveen was said to have been stoned to death by her family for having married a man of her own choice. Those first reports said her father had admitted to the killing. Later, reports revealed complications in the story, with Muhammad Iqbal, Parveen's husband, now implicated in the murder of his first wife.

Explore: 5 awful responses to Sana Mirza’s harassment at the PTI rally

When the case finally came to court this November, Farzana Parveen’s father, brother, cousin and another man were found guilty of her death. She had been killed by her own. In meeting such an end, she joined the nearly 1000 women who are killed for honour every year in this country. In 2014, hers was the most gruesome and most public case.

This bygone year was also one in which a mother was sentenced to death. Asia Bibi, a mother of five, lost her appeal before the Lahore High Court on October 17 2014 and her death sentence for blasphemy was upheld. On December 2, 2014, her lawyer filed a final appeal before the Pakistan Supreme Court. If her case is not heard, she will await the execution of her death sentence.

The Pakistani woman stands very much in the midst of seas which were as turbulent in 2014 as they're likely to be in 2015. There have been flashes of brilliance, of sheer mettle and spirit; awards and achievements.

But any promise or glint of hope is drowned out by the wailing of those close to 200 mothers, who either buried their children in Peshawar near the turn of the year, or are awaiting the miracle of health and happiness for their battered, injured children languishing in hospital wards.


Related:

2014 — The year I made my FIFA world cup reporting debut

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2014 — The year Dawn made its FIFA world cup debut

By Umaid Wasim

“The second row? Really?” I almost screamed inside.

Dawn was making its FIFA World Cup debut and I was incredibly honoured and nervous at the opportunity of being part of the little slice of history.

At the high-profile opening match of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, I walked towards the media tribune with the opening ceremony just minutes away at the Itaquerao in Sao Paulo. The crowd eagerly awaited the hosts to start off the tournament with a bang against Croatia.

A volunteer checked my accreditation card and helped me take my seat alongside the giants of football journalism. This is where the news agencies — Reuters, AP, AFP and many others — relay the action from.

Covering the FIFA World Cup had been my dream. I hope to cover many more but Brazil 2014 was my first and one I will cherish forever. At the start of my career, I had made a point to become a ‘true’ football reporter in Pakistan. Many had not been supportive.

“You’ll get nowhere being a football reporter … try your hand at cricket,” people used to tell me.

Five years later, on June 12, I was walking towards my seat for the opener — making my World Cup debut.

 The media ticket for the final. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
The media ticket for the final. — Photo by Umaid Wasim

I was no giant, just a novice covering his first World Cup alongside people who were at their tenth, including Mike Collett, the global football editor of Reuters.

Journalists like Henry Winter, Jonathan Wilson, Sid Lowe and John Leicester, whose articles I had been reading for the last seven years were sharing their thoughts right next to me.

Buoyed by the atmosphere I filed my first pre-match report from the tournament well ahead of time; my first front-page story!

Reporting at the World Cup is done at a furious pace. Getting all the facts straight, translating, running after the interviewee and getting less than ideal responses at the press conferences can all add to the drama. So contrary to popular belief, it's not an easy ride.

But Brazil won that match 3-1 to kick off the footballing festival and make life easier for all of us. It's usually a good thing when the hosts start with a win. It not only settles the nerves of the fans but also the journalists.

I was going to cover 14 more matches, including the grand final that Germany won 1-0 against Argentina courtesy that superb extra-time goal by Mario Goetze.

Germany well-and-truly deserved to be crowned world champions. They had been the best team at the World Cup, hands down.

 Spain and Chile fans paint the Maracana red. It was on this night that Spain’s era came to an end. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
Spain and Chile fans paint the Maracana red. It was on this night that Spain’s era came to an end. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
 When FIFA honoured Dawn; the front row desk seat for the Brazil v Croatia opener. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
When FIFA honoured Dawn; the front row desk seat for the Brazil v Croatia opener. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
 Lionel Messi accepts the man-of-the-match award after inspiring Argentina to victory against Bosnia-Herzegovina in their opening match. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
Lionel Messi accepts the man-of-the-match award after inspiring Argentina to victory against Bosnia-Herzegovina in their opening match. — Photo by Umaid Wasim

While the Germans were given their due share of the spotlight, I had also been thrust into the spotlight four days before the final when local football website footballpakistan.com made a meme of me being the only reporter from the country in Brazil.

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It pushed me to get the scoop even faster to my editor in Karachi; it pushed me to get creative.

FIFA was very gracious towards me during the World Cup and I usually got the best seats in the rest of the matches I covered including the front row for the second semi-final at the Itaquerao.

That match came after covering the first semi-final in Belo Horizonte where the Germans ripped the Brazilians apart to the horror of the home side.

The scoreline at the end of that mayhem read: 7-1.

As we headed towards the media centre at the end of the game, we were all shocked at what had just happened. No one expected Brazil to lose like that. Maybe it was the curse of Messi.

Two hours before the semi-final began, I got a call from the desk asking if I could send some pre-game photos.

I, along with my journalist friend Siddharth Saxenna of the Times of India, went out from the stadium and towards the hordes of expectant Brazilian fans, all decked up in yellow.

They wore masks of Neymar, masks of the Incredible Hulk [hoping that his namesake would fill the void left by Neymar’s injury] and incredibly, they had one inflated doll that had an Argentina jersey with the name ‘Lionel Messi’ printed on its back in an apparent jibe at the master striker.

 Mocking Messi. Brazil fans celebrate before their World Cup semi-final against Germany, Belo Horizonte. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
Mocking Messi. Brazil fans celebrate before their World Cup semi-final against Germany, Belo Horizonte. — Photo by Umaid Wasim

Post-match, that crowd was nowhere to be seen.

We all shared the disappointment with the Brazilians. Brazil winning at home was too good to be true; too good for my first World Cup.

Back at the media centre, I recollected my thoughts as I began writing the match report. I wrote, and I deleted before writing and deleting again. The perfect intro just didn't come. How could you describe the emotion of all that had transpired just minutes ago? If it were to be a boxing match, the referee would have stopped the game at half-time.

Brazil's story had ended, my journey continued.

In the coming days I met the legends of the world game including Roberto Carlos, Alessandro del Piero, Steve McManaman, Juan Sebastian Veron, Ivan Zamorano and Faustino Asprilla— all of whom were working for different channels.

It was at the media centre at Rio’s iconic Marcana Stadium where I met legendary commentator Martin Tyler who hailed Dawn’s presence at the World Cup.The media centre is the hub of activity. Here, journalists from all over the world converge before and after the matches.

 Clockwise: (1) Alessandro Del Piero and I. As a Juventus fan, meeting this guy was fantastic although his agent kind of photobombed the selfie. (2) Running into Roberto Carlos (3) Brazilian fans. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
Clockwise: (1) Alessandro Del Piero and I. As a Juventus fan, meeting this guy was fantastic although his agent kind of photobombed the selfie. (2) Running into Roberto Carlos (3) Brazilian fans. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
 With Martin Tyler.
With Martin Tyler.

One of the people whose works I avidly read told me: “You’re covering your first World Cup at 26. Now that’s quite sexy!”

It is here that you feel the adrenaline rush. The media centre is the hub of activity with reporters furiously typing their reports, trying to meet the deadlines, running after stories. This is where you fall in love all over again with your job.

Covering World Cups are the highlight of our job as sports journalists. Brazil 2014 offered me my first big moment and what a World Cup it was, one that was given 9.25 marks out of 10 by FIFA president Sepp Blatter.

The attacking football at the World Cup was refreshing, it engaged fans all over the world and those who visited Brazil would have unforgettable memories.

Barring the security lapse in which Chilean fans invaded the media centre, FIFA and local organisers managed to hold a trouble-free World Cup despite concerns before the start of the tournament.

None of those concerns materialised. From the word go with Pitbull, J-Lo and Claudia Leite raising the roof till Goetze scoring that brilliant winner, the World Cup was an absolute delight to cover.

Spain and tiki-taka crashed, Luis Suarez bit, Cristiano Ronaldo misfired and Messi failed to conjure up that magic moment.

I think I wouldn’t be wrong in saying that Brazil 2014 was the absolute sporting highlight of the year. There were so many stories to tell. Maybe all World Cups have that many stories.

 The Brahma Girls. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
The Brahma Girls. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
 Pixacao - Brazilian street art in Rio. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
Pixacao - Brazilian street art in Rio. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
 A bar flooded with fans. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
A bar flooded with fans. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
Atop Sugarloaf mountain, Rio. — Photo by Umaid Wasim
Atop Sugarloaf mountain, Rio. — Photo by Umaid Wasim

But Brazil 2014 will always be the special one for me, even more so because FIFA honoured Dawn — and in a way, Pakistan — in the best possible way.

When Goetze scored that goal, I was typing as fast as I could.

Likhnay aye hain hum yahan. Likho (We’ve come here to write, so write),” as another journalist friend of mine, Dhiman Sarkar of the Hindustan Times used to say throughout the World Cup.

The newsroom was waiting for the story of the final. I had hardly five minutes after the final ended to send in my story.

I sent it in two. It was splashed on the front page of Dawn; a proud moment for me.

Maybe the next one would be of the opening ceremony of the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

The World Cup ended as all good things come to an end. We left Brazil with messages of ‘See you in Russia’ to each other.

In Russia, though, I hope there would be many other journalists from Pakistan.

I hope other media houses follow Dawn’s lead in sending reporters to cover the FIFA World Cup. Believe me, it’s a fascinating experience.


Click here for Dawn.com's special coverage of the year 2014

7 news stories that will shape Pakistan in 2015

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7 news stories that will shape Pakistan in 2015

By Tahir Mehdi


If I said ‘Pakistan is at an important juncture of its history’, I know most people would laugh or shrug it off as something they have been told a million times already. So, I have decided to fashion seven measures and leave it to the readers to use them to find out for themselves where exactly Pakistan is heading in 2015.

Here you go:

1. Whatever happens in North Dakota?


The 'oil-wrestling' games will roll over into 2015. Sit back, enjoy the plummeting prices and hope for lesser load-shedding.

 Oilmen of North Dakota and Texas have utilised a new technique called fracking to drill out oil from reserves that were earlier inaccessible or considered not viable. —Reuters/file
Oilmen of North Dakota and Texas have utilised a new technique called fracking to drill out oil from reserves that were earlier inaccessible or considered not viable. —Reuters/file

They say when elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers. But something quite contrary is happening in the world economy these days: as the fight between the oil giants is getting worse, our pastures are turning greener than ever.

Oil (petrol) prices in the world market are facing the worst slump of recent history. From a high of $115 (per barrel) in June 2014, the prices have nosedived to $60 in mid-December. According to The Economist, a price cut of $40 shifts $1.3 trillion from oil producers to consumers. (How big is $1.3 trillion? The GDP of China in 2013 was $9.24 trillion.)

The present reduction of $55 over June simply means boon for all developing economies. More money in consumers’ pockets raises demand for everything. It also means lower cost of production and prices that are affordable by more people. From farmers sowing wheat for home consumption to industrialists filling apparel export orders, everyone will benefit.

It is good news for a Pakistan government looking to weather the ever-worsening energy crisis. It can reap its benefits in both economic and political spheres. Lower oil prices will help reduce cost of energy and is likely to ease out load-shedding.

We owe this ‘largesse’ to the oilmen of North Dakota and Texas who have utilised a new technique called fracking to drill out oil from reserves that were earlier inaccessible or considered not viable. The supply gush of what is called shale gas has glutted the market, sending oil prices into a tailspin. Right now there is a war going on between ‘Shiekhs and shale’, in the words of The Economist, and lots of twists and turns are in store.

So enjoy the good times, hope for a better economy and don’t go away — Stay tuned to the free-style wrestling match between the energy giants.

2. In and around Lal Masjid, Islamabad, and Chauburji, Lahore too


As the war on terrorism enters a new dimension, everything that happens (and doesn't happen) to our local militant outfits will be central in shaping a (hopefully) new narrative of the country we live in.

 A man holds a sign during a protest near Lal Masjid in Islamabad, December 19, 2014. —Reuters.
A man holds a sign during a protest near Lal Masjid in Islamabad, December 19, 2014. —Reuters.

The fight against terrorism in Pakistan has gone into top gear towards the end of 2014, and it seems that the pressure from the clutch has also been released. It is finally moving forward and has shown ample signs of force and resolve with which it intends to march ahead.

But let us not be deceived. Terrorism as we, Pakistanis, have lived through over the past decades is not about a group of rouge, violent and misguided elements. It has taken deep roots in society, its polity and its economy as well.

The narratives that were propagated to support and sustain terrorism are also the ones that determine the way we see our religion, our religious minorities and other faiths. They define the way we perceive nationalism and decide for us which Pakistan we will live in.

These narratives and the structures supporting and sustaining them form the chilling mass underneath the tip of the iceberg known as terrorists. So while terrorist causalities matter, this fight is no high scoring-T20 that sends the national adrenaline level through the roof.

The tip will be chopped off but will the invisible mass melt too?

So if you are eager for signs of a real change in Pakistan in 2015, watch out for what happens at Lal Masjid, Islamabad, whose students have publicly expressed their support to the militants of Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

Watch out for what transpires at Chauburji, Lahore the working headquarters of Jamaat-ud-Dawa; that spews anti-India venom and is positioned to countervail initiatives for regional cooperation taken by elected governments.

Also important will be what happens with Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, and a dozen other names that the outfit comes in, as their anti-Shia ‘jihad’ has been instrumental in replacing belief with hatred and equating tolerance with treason in our country.

3. What is hidden underneath Kabul’s snow?


Will we see the last of 'strategic depth', of toxic connivances and of the Taliban to usher in a new era of peace and regional cooperation?

 2015 may well be the last ‘opportunity’ for Taliban to disrupt the system now in place in Afghanistan and restore their ‘emirate’. —Reuters/file
2015 may well be the last ‘opportunity’ for Taliban to disrupt the system now in place in Afghanistan and restore their ‘emirate’. —Reuters/file

Afghanistan will celebrate Nowruz on Saturday, March 21, 2015. It is one of the biggest annual festivals in the entire region including Central Asia, Iran and Afghanistan. That’s when the spring equinox happens, life completes a full circle and enters the next one. The snow melts, water starts flowing in streams again and the New Year begins.

As the sun shines bright, a host of things buried underneath icy white masses raise their heads. This includes both flowers and old wounds. The coming spring will be an extraordinary time for the Afghans as after three devastating decades of bloodshed, hopes for the beginning of an era of peace will be the strongest.

Most of the US and allied troops will have been home by then. The rest will be out of a pro-active combat role, which effectively means that the Afghan National Army will be face-to-face with its adversary, the Taliban.

It will be the last ‘opportunity’ for the Taliban to disrupt the system now in place in Afghanistan and make efforts for restoration of their ‘emirate’ (or some ‘khilafat’) that was dismantled by the US forces in 2001.

The Taliban have been significantly weakened as a fighting force. Their supply lines are curtailed and morale is low. The coming spring will all but disclose the real size of the Taliban as a fighting force. Initiatives to engage them out of the battlefield and break peace agreements with them are also afoot.

Whatever transpires in the battlefields and around negotiation tables in Afghanistan is crucial for Pakistan. It can translate into a lasting peace heralding a new era of regional cooperation and economic progress, and if things go wrong it might not only mean stagnation but more trouble.

Odds are stacked against a Taliban comeback but keep Kabul on your radar with a mix of anxiety and hope.

By the way, Pakistan’s strategic depth dream will be a ‘collateral damage’ of peace in Afghanistan. So if you are a Pakistan-reigns-supreme-over-the-world buff, do plan to take a refresher course in nationalism.

4. Will ‘ilaqa-e-ghair’ become ‘apna mulk’?


The time is ripe to do the overdue — integrate Fata into the country and turn the 'tribal brothers' into Pakistani citizens.

 This file photo shows a Pakistani soldier holding a rocket launcher while securing a road in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata). —Reuters.
This file photo shows a Pakistani soldier holding a rocket launcher while securing a road in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata). —Reuters.

The military campaign in Pakistan’s tribal areas has resulted in a mass exodus of local inhabitants. As soon as the campaign makes significant gains, the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) will want to return home.

But will they return to the same old Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata, known as ilaqa ghair in common parlance) caught in the jinx of a colonial-style governance system? The areas have had the status of ‘semi-governed’ for far too long which in reality means that its citizens have no rights and the authorities have no responsibilities.

This backwater of Pakistan has been kept lawless and transformed into a factory producing indoctrinated mercenaries fighting for dubious causes to promote ill-conceived foreign policy objectives. Pakistan is currently out to liquidate these strategic assets that have become a liability in a changed international environ.

But if Pakistan has to really uproot militancy and avoid its recurrence, it will have to abandon the endeared notion of ‘valorous tribes ready to sacrifice their lives’. It will have to extend the rule of law to these areas and start considering ‘the tribals’ as its citizens who need schools, colleges, universities, hospitals, clinics, police and all other civic amenities as does the rest of the country.

The integration of the Fatas into the federation will require consensus among all parties and constitutional amendments. It might also necessitate some Pak-Afghan negotiations on the border between the two, also called the Durand Line.

So news about an All Parties Conference deciding details of integrating these areas into the country will be important and the absence of any such news will be a cause of worry.

5. Will Imran Khan bounce back?


The dharna is over. The issues are not. How will the PTI go about politicking next? Will the naya year bring a naya Imran Khan?

 A cut-out picture of Imran Khan seen during an anti-government rally in Islamabad. —Reuters.
A cut-out picture of Imran Khan seen during an anti-government rally in Islamabad. —Reuters.

Imran Khan abandoned the biggest adventure of his political career in the wake of the December 16 Peshawar carnage. His movement was in dire straits anyway and many critiques believe that his party was desperate for a safe and honourable exit.

The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf is now in negotiations with the ruling party on its demand of setting up a judicial commission to probe the allegations of rigging in the 2013 elections. The talks do not at the moment seem to be heading towards a settlement. It will be important how these actually conclude in the near future.

The campaign against terrorism is likely to bring to fore new issues and change the national political agendas towards the second half of 2015. If the campaign succeeds quickly, who will get the credit and politically cash on it; and if it hits snags, who will be held responsible for new problems that might arise?

PTI politics might not remain focused on the sole agenda of rigging in previous elections.

The provincial government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is at the centre stage and its actions and stances related to the campaign against terrorism will be debated and contested at length on the national level. The PTI is leading a coalition government and its numbers in the house are not very secure.

In short, there will be lots of opportunities for politicking on hot national issues as new political realities take shape.

It will be interesting to see what avatar the PTI chooses as the choice will not only impact day-to-day politics of the coming year, but also affect the politics of KP and Punjab in the coming years.

So with bated breath, we await the naya Imran Khan.

6. Mid-term verdict?


The pressure to make local bodies elections happen, will be greater than before. Watch out for new configurations of power.

 Local government elections will be one of the defining issues of 2015's national politics. —Reuters/file
Local government elections will be one of the defining issues of 2015's national politics. —Reuters/file

While the Nawaz government may feel relieved at the abrupt end of the PTI’s protest campaign, it cannot take the rest of its tenure for granted. It has a lot many challenges to face still, one of them being organising local government elections.

The elected governments are under constitutional obligation to hold these local polls, and the Supreme Court has been pressuring them to fulfill it. But they have been evading it under one pretext or the other. The security situation may provide yet another excuse, but it may not hold for too long.

The Supreme Court has recently made the federal government appoint Chief Election Commissioner, another obligation that the government was dragging its feet on.

Local government elections will be important not only because these will take the electoral democracy down to the grassroots level, but also because they will serve as ‘shadow mid-term elections’. The aggregate verdict coming out of these will have the capacity to redirect the course of national politics.

Consider, for example, if the PTI can repeat its general election 2013 performance in KP and sustain or improve in Punjab, it will attack the Nawaz government with renewed vigour and from a more legitimate position.

In turn, if the PML-N can sustain or improve its position in the local elections in Punjab, it will consider itself secure until the general elections in 2018. Local elections can also unsettle the present balance of power in Karachi and the rest of Sindh.

So local elections, whenever they are held, if not in 2015 then maybe next year, will give birth to new political realities.

7. The billion dollar march


Tons of foreign investment is waiting to pour into Pakistan — waiting for an end to terrorism risks. If that happens, the worst may be behind us.

 Investment opportunities are knocking at our door and will gate-crash as soon as terrorism subsides. —Reuters/file
Investment opportunities are knocking at our door and will gate-crash as soon as terrorism subsides. —Reuters/file

Mega projects worth tens of billions of dollars are waiting in the wings, east, west and north of Pakistan. China is eager to invest in what is called a trade corridor to give a transport outlet to its fast developing northwestern Xinjiang. It is also keen on developing a massive copper field, considered the world’s second largest, in Afghanistan.

Afghanistan and India want a passage through Pakistan as the latter wants to mine iron ore in Bamiyan, Afghanistan.

Tajikistan requested Pakistan, just days ago, to allow land route for importing oil from Middle East. A gas pipeline project running from Tajikistan to Afghanistan, Pakistan and then India is being negotiated since the past few years.

These projects will prove a boon for our economy and will enrich and increase the size of our middle class. These opportunities are knocking at our door and will gate-crash as soon as terrorism subsides.

Mega investors are very shrewd about calculating risks that their projects might face and progress on these projects and terrorism are inversely related. So, any time next year if you think terrorism has waned, expect multi-billion projects to kick-start immediately; or if you read about real advancement on these projects first, you can be sure that we are past the most horrid phase of terrorism in our country.


Tahir Mehdi works with Punjab Lok Sujag, a research and advocacy group that has a primary interest in understanding governance and democracy.

He tweets @TahirMehdiZ

Why we have 'Ghosro Masters' and how to put an end to them

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These days, a campaign 'Ghosro Master' against ghost teachers in Sindh, is underway on social media (take a look here, here and here). So-called teachers who have never stepped inside their schools but are regularly drawing their salaries from the country's exchequer have been identified and are being ridiculed on Facebook and Twitter.

As the government drags its feet on action against these ghost schools/teachers, I believe this campaign has given a voice to the suffering students and parents. Sindh's education secretary has also confessed that about 40 per cent of school teachers in Sindh fall under the 'ghost' category.

Just a few months since the start of this social media campaign, residents of Sindh already seem to have witnessed one instance of change: In November 2014, 77 ghost teachers were suspended in Khairpur district.

I belong to a small village of Sindh and have seen some very dedicated teachers working under harsh conditions. On the one hand, we have teachers like Asu Bai, a differently-abled lady who has worked voluntarily and against all odds for the betterment of the society we are living in. On the other hand, we have scores of ghost teachers.

Also read: ‘Ghosro Master’

Let us explore the reasons why these 'ghosts' are so reluctant to attend their schools and how they are being encouraged by the society for not performing their duties.

If it's in the village, it belongs to the landlord

It is true that the feudal system is one of the biggest structural impediments to education in the rural areas. Landlords are mostly averse to letting any person become more important/powerful than them. They're unable to digest the popularity of dedicated teachers at work in their villages.

This one time, I learned a very interesting reasoning given out by a landlord: since the land belongs to them, therefore the government should only send those teachers to the school who were nominated by the landlord. Any other teacher was just not acceptable.

Lack of interest by the community itself

Hardly ever do we see complaints lodged by parents against ghost teachers. The community believes that since they are not paying the teachers, therefore they have no right to question them or complain against their regular absences from school.

Another factor which hinders the community members from raising their voices is the strong biradari (community) net. People believe that if they complain against their fellow tribesmen, they may end up alienating themselves.

Social acceptance of ghost teachers

Most of the ghost teachers identified on social media are famous names. They advocate the importance of education on national and international forums and portray themselves as paragons of education without showing any concern or interest about their own duties at school.

Also read: Absenteeism termed root cause of education woes

Society has shown an acceptance of this criminal act. No more are these people shamed or questioned for their hypocrisy. Obviously, the ducking of duties flourishes in this conducive environment.

Babus living in a different world

People in the education department and most key political figures hardly ever leave their air-conditioned offices to check what's happening in the schools. That is true for at least most who are involved. And the few who do go out tend to avert their eyes and hide beyond excuses to avoid confronting the massive challenge that lies before them.

And why shouldn't they? The children of these elites study in top notch private schools and universities abroad — they don't feel responsible for correcting something for which they are not the supposed stakeholder.

Nepotism and cronyism in appointments

Since education is a huge department, there is lots of space for cronies to be stuffed into. Countless appointments are made of persons with all levels of qualification. Everyone from those promised jobs prior to elections, to those who have failed in securing jobs anywhere else, are welcome, and are somehow adjusted in the education department.

Take a look: Khuhro admits fake appointments in education during last PPP govt

No wonder, then, that from the higher officials down to the teachers, few people have real knowledge of the subjects. Interestingly, history was made in 2013 when, female candidates were given extra 20 marks for "gender relaxation".

I, despite being a woman, believe that it is nothing but an utter injustice to male candidates.

To-do list for improving the situation

  • Education department should make a complaint cell for lodging complaints against ghost teachers, ghost schools and insufficient facilities at the school. Education department officials should be accessible to people via email, telephone and post. It should also be ensured that the identity of the complainant is kept strictly confidential.

Read on: Website launched to identify ghost schools

  • It's time that the community as a whole stand up for education. Any teacher whose attendance is not regular should not be allowed to stay in that school. Villagers should put pressure on the local education authorities for not sending any such teacher to their school who is unable to ensure his/her attendance. It's time to realise that school teachers are not just answerable to the education department but also to the pupils and to their parents for their apathy to the school.

  • Any person who is found guilty of being a ghost teacher should not be invited to speak at forums or gatherings. We have to be selfish in order to get our children educated. Forget about them being your nephews or cousins. If they are not taking your children's future seriously, you should stop taking them. Isolate them.

Also read: Balochistan government suspends 260 teachers

  • Many of the ghost teachers are working in private institutes. The government could impose a fine on any organisation hiring ghost teachers and asking them to work for them during term time. It is also important that education department makes a district-wise list of all the teachers and make this database publicly available via their website. This will enable private organisations to check if a person is already employed by the education department.

  • Babus sitting in their offices in the provincial capitals should seek monthly report from their subordinates from every district and taluka regarding schools. It will do them no harm if they go out in the field for a few days and pay surprise visits to different districts every month. Strict action should be taken against those who are not taking their duties seriously.

Also read: Monitoring system to trace ghost schools: CM

  • Appointments should be made only on merit. I am a woman and a teacher and I don't think women need 20 marks in charity. They can very well prove themselves. If the complaint cell is functional, people will be able to register complaints against anyone attempting to bribe them for appointment.

Teachers play a vital role in building nations, we'll never build ours if our teachers are not up to the task.

While we have had plenty who devoted their lives to this cause, becoming role models for the next generation; the elimination of ghost teachers is the need of the hour.

I am afraid if we don't act fast enough, these ghost teachers will become the role model, in fact they might already have. In any case, the social media campaign is a positive development to the end of countering this trend. It has had some positive results and if nothing else, at least proves there is a will to change the system.

Time is running out. Do the authorities care?


Related:

What Pakistani leaders can learn from the world's 'poorest' president

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From Jinnah and Liaquat Ali Khan to Nawaz Sharif and Asif Ali Zardari, political leadership in Pakistan has traditionally been the dominion of the rich. Back then, Pakistan’s independence movement was led by the Muslim elite.

Today, another generation of very rich rule millions of impoverished souls, who have no hope of ever having any control over their destinies.

The Jinnah House (South Court) in the Malabar Hills neighbourhood of South Mumbai is in a dilapidated state today. However, the palatial home of Pakistan’s founding father is worth millions of dollars. Some estimate the property to be worth tens of millions of dollars. South Court was constructed in 1936 and cost 200,000 rupees. Architect Claude Batley had designed the structure, which was built with the help of Italian stonemasons.

Today, that opulence is matched by Zardari’s Surrey Palace (Rockwood Park) and the choice digs of the Sharif family in Raiwind.

Explore: The mystery of Raiwind palace ownership

The gulf between the elected and electors has plagued Pakistan since forever. Electoral democracy has hardly made any dent in the country's dynastic politics.

For an egalitarian society to take root, the ruled must become the rulers of their destinies and governments.

This may change if Pakistanis were to learn from Uruguay’s President, José Mujica, who lives in a small house off a dirt road, and donates 90 per cent per cent of his $12,000 monthly salary to charity. Mr Mujica may be the world’s ‘poorest’ president, but he is also the president whose lifestyle resembles that of the people he leads.

José Mujica has some things in common with the Zardaris of Pakistan. Mujica is a former ‘rebel’ leader who spent 14 years in prison and was shot six times. He was condemned to solitary confinement for most of the time in prison. Zardari, Makhdoom Amin Fahim, and Nawaz Sharif have all been to prison for varying time periods.

However, unlike Mujica, Pakistan’s ruling elite crave opulence and splendour while paying lip service to the plight of the poor they rule over.

Also read: Pakistan politics: The mythical feudal and the real elite

Mujica was elected president in 2010. His prized possessions include an aging Volkswagen Beetle and a small house, which his political opponents disparagingly called a cave. When he was first elected, he arrived at the Parliament riding an old Vespa scooter. Two guards parked at some distance from his house are the only visible sign that Uruguay’s president lives there.

‘‘It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, who is poor,’’ he told Simon Romero of the New York Times in 2013.

Since his election, Mr Mujica has undertaken several progressive reforms. Legalising the use of Marijuana and a greater recognition of and tolerance for sexual diversity are two examples of how he is transforming the society.

Speaking to The New York Times, Mujica criticised the extensive focus on economic growth, which he considers “a problem for our civilisation” because of growth’s adverse impact on earth’s resources.

Being in a prison for 14 years for his political beliefs has made Mujica appreciate the plight of those who have endured similar ordeals.

Take a look: Through a foreign lens: The Other Pakistan

Earlier in December, Uruguay accepted six detainees from Guantánamo Bay. Mujica negotiated the release of four Syrians, one Tunisian, and a Palestinian who were cleared for release by the US authorities. However, the six detainees handed over to Uruguay, along with another 67 men still awaiting release, were kept at Guantánamo Bay because no nation was willing to accept them.

The US government is encouraging other Latin American countries to accept the remaining 67 of the 136 detainees at Guantánamo Bay who no longer pose any threat to the US. The Americans are dangling trade concessions to convince the struggling economies in Latin America to play host to strangers.

Mujica, however, welcomed the detainees on principle.

Uruguay, he says “would be hospitable to human beings that have endured an atrocious kidnapping.” He refuses to restrict the former detainees’ movements, against the wishes of the US government.

The 55-year old Canadian Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, is another example of an ordinary citizen rising through the ranks to reach the highest office in the country. While I oppose Mr Harper’s politics, I respect his struggle and the sociopolitical system that empowers citizens to become leaders. Harper, whose father was an accountant, attended public schools. He entered politics emerging later as the leader of the Conservative Party.

Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, who visited Pakistan in 1996, is another example of a little guy from a little town (le petit gars de Shawinigan) rising to assume the highest office in the land.

See: Some politicians rolling in fabulous wealth

Given the stark socioeconomic differences, some may consider the Canadian examples to be irrelevant to Pakistan.

But Uruguay, on the other hand, is very much like Pakistan; a developing economy. With a population of just 3.5 million and per capita GDP of $16,500, Uruguay may not be an ideal match but still, it merits some curiosity.

If the status quo were to be maintained in Pakistan, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, Maryam and Hamza Sharif, and other progenies of the ruling elite will take over control from their fathers and uncles. This will be no different from the past when the Mughals handed the reigns to their sons, condemning the indigenous of the subcontinent to a life of servitude.

José Mujica’s life shows that it is not the birthright of the elite to be rulers. Pakistani voters may want to emulate Uruguayans in the next elections.

Or is it too much to expect from Pakistanis to elect ordinary citizens to power?

Rise of blasphemy charges: Saudi Arabia, Iran, Indonesia in perspective

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Almost a quarter of the countries in the world punish blasphemy. Research by Pew indicates that while laws restricting blasphemy are found in several countries (including in Europe), they are most common in the Muslim world and unsurprisingly, the notion of blasphemy or “offending religion” also continues to be a particularly sensitive issue in parts of the Muslim world.

In December, a man belonging to the Ahmadi community was shot dead, for no apparent reason, in Pakistan allegedly after religious and media personalities incited hatred against members of that community – a people who have often found themselves accused of blasphemy by the very exercise of practicing their belief.

Earlier that month, in Indonesia, the editor of the prominent newspaper, the Jakarta Post, had been summoned for questioning by the police on blasphemy charges, for publishing a cartoon.

While readers will be quite familiar with the design and application of the blasphemy law in Pakistan and also the sudden spike in the extrajudicial killings carried out to punish alleged blasphemy, this article briefly touches upon the blasphemy laws of three Muslim majority countries which sit in different parts of the world, all of which privilege religion in their national constitution.

It also highlights a worrying trend: blasphemy related charges are on the rise in some countries, and often, for incidents that probably cause more harm to draconian sensitivities and the free exercise of religion than for any, real, tangible or identifiable harm to an individual or group.

While blasphemy laws in themselves need not by design inhibit rights and can have an ostensible purpose of securing public order, in practice, their application has often robbed individuals of precisely the sort of rights that would exist in any state that aspires to become a pluralistic democracy (which does not necessarily mean “secular”).

 Courtesy of Human Rights First
Courtesy of Human Rights First

Indonesia is the most populous democracy in the Muslim world. Its constitution does not privilege a particular religion but refers to “God”; in 1965, it enacted a “blasphemy law”, which makes it a criminal offense to deviate from or defame one of the six recognised religions; it also punishes non-religious belief, making it an offence to “...not practice any religion at all that is based on belief in Almighty God.” The maximum punishment is five years imprisonment. There are also similar provisions “protecting religion” in other laws in Indonesia.

In practice, blasphemy was rarely prosecuted in the country. However, Amnesty International reports that the number of blasphemy convictions” skyrocketed” during former President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s decade in power (2004-2014).

It recorded at least 106 individuals who were prosecuted and convicted under the blasphemy laws for offences ranging from expressing atheist beliefs on Facebook to believing and preaching that the current Quran was not the original one revealed.

In 2009-2010 several NGO’s bought proceedings in the Constitutional Court to challenge the validity of the law by arguing that it contravened the constitutional right to freedom of religion, but failed to have the law overturned.

 Courtesy of Human Rights First
Courtesy of Human Rights First

Saudi Arabia is ranked as having the second most “Islamic” constitution in the Muslim world in the Islamic Constitutions Index.

Its blasphemy laws are not clearly accessible (partly because the country claims to base its “laws” on the wholesale adoption of Shariah rather than legislation); there is no formal criminal code but yet the government has used charges of blasphemy against persons seeking to debate the role of religion in relation to the state, as well as promoters of political and human rights reforms.

The USCIRF alleges that the Saudi government has “used criminal charges of apostasy and blasphemy to suppress discussion and debate and silence dissidents. Promoters of political and human rights reforms, and those seeking to debate the role of religion in relation to the state, its laws, and society, typically have been the targets of”.

For example, a person who started a blog discussing religion, politics and other topics in Saudi Arabia was sentenced to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes. The blasphemy law was deployed to silence him; he was charged with insulting Islam. In 2011, an Australian Muslim was charged with blasphemy while he performed the Hajj; he had allegedly insulted the companions of the Prophet. There may certainly be other less known but similar incidents which have not made it in the press. It is hard to get an idea of the trend in blasphemy charges in the Kingdom but one would imagine that with recent expressions of political freedom, the number convicted may not have dwindled.

 Courtesy of Human Rights First
Courtesy of Human Rights First

Iran is ranked as having the most Islamic constitution in the Muslim world. The Penal Code stipulates that blasphemy against the prophets, Shia imams and/or the religious leadership is punishable by imprisonment, unless it is classified as against the Prophet, when it can be punishable by death.

Indeed, blasphemy can be charged under a range of offenses, such as “spreading corruption on earth,” (which is apparently an unpardonable offence and can include acts deemed undesirable by the state), insulting religious sanctities, insulting Islam, criticising the Islamic regime, or deviating from Islamic standards.

In November, an Iranian man was sentenced to death for “insulting the Prophet of Islam” for Facebook posts deemed offensive to the Prophet. Other examples include three years for a Shia history professor and Iran-Iraq War veteran who called for political reforms and 11 years imprisonment — for a senior Shia cleric who advocated greater separation of religion and the state. Bahai’s, Christians, and Sunni and Sufi Muslims, as well as Shia Muslim dissidents and journalists are often the targets of the blasphemy law.

Blasphemy laws do not have to be damaging to rights and conversely; the lack of a law punishing blasphemy does not mean a country has lost all respect for religion.

That is, democracies that respect religion do not necessarily need to impinge on freedoms.

Nevertheless, while intolerance is not unique to Muslim countries and is in fact, also rising in “secular” Europe, these incidents and cases portend a warning: intolerance and authoritarianism masquerading as blasphemy is becoming more prevalent – and for all the wrong reasons – in parts of the Muslim world and this can do little but erode democratic ambitions.


A map of blasphemy cases in Pakistan from 2009-2014:

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'Always show good news first – if possible at bed time also'

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The government has managed to somehow get its head out of the sand on terrorism, and one part of the effort has been a meeting of the Standing Committee on Information, Broadcasting and National Heritage, aimed at devising recommendations for the media's role in the ongoing war.

I know our parliamentarians mean well, but their tentative list of "psycho-social guidelines for the media" range from mundane to outright hilarious (full list of these recommendations at end of article).


Some recommendations are so broad, you do not know what may come under them



But they do provide some much-needed cover for our security forces


Some creative editing on the media's part may lead to work-arounds


However, this may have implications for a broader spectrum of people than we think


But perhaps some fringe benefits may emerge from all this


Psycho-social guidelines for media

(Now removed from NA website)

  • Always show good news first.

  • And if possible at bed time also.

  • Before 9 am no disturbing pictures of any kind.

  • Don’t show gory pictures.

  • Don’t repeat bad news too often.

  • Don’t name or show pictures of terrorist.

  • Don’t show anti state elements.

  • Worse taking sides in sectarian issues.

  • Enemy threats not to be highlighted.

  • It’s a bad idea to speak against the countries security apparatus.

  • Army officers and actions should not be on the media.

  • Show good role models.

  • Excessively highlight success in sports etc.

  • Show positive side like people who don’t commit suicide.

  • Entertainment is very important the people carve for it.

  • Too much current affairs.

  • Teaching discipline.

  • Youth character building efforts.

  • Culture of discipline.

  • Stories of success in life.

  • Lets not emphasize too much about smaller events like rape, robberies murder etc. the smaller events can leave a much worse impact.

  • Children not to be interviewed.

  • Breaking news phenomena to be discouraged.

  • Post disaster media can play a positive soothing healing role to the viewers.

  • Can give information to affectees about services etc.

  • Can instill hope by showing success stories of heroic deeds.

  • Awareness sessions all over the Country.

  • An Islamabad based two hour session for media house owners under this umbrella.

  • Guidelines to be implemented with help of all stake holders.

  • Guideline manual to be published.

  • Media to be aware of common mind health issues especially post disaster.

Abul Ala Maududi: An existentialist history

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To most Pakistanis and to those who have been associated with various Islamic political outfits in countries like Egypt, Indonesia, Syria and Malaysia, Abul Ala Maududi is to 'Political Islam' what Karl Marx was to Communism.

Both western and South Asian historians have described him as one of the most powerful Islamic ideologues of the 20th century, whose ideas and writings went on to influence a vast number of Islamic movements in the Muslim world.

For example, the well-known British journal, The New Statesman, in its July 2013 issue, suggested that the impact of Maududi's ideas can be found in modern Islamic movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood (first formed in Egypt) and similar outfits across the Muslim realms, all the way to the more aggressive postures of men like Osama Bin Laden, the founder of Al Qaeda and once the most wanted terrorist in the world.

Ambitions and achievements

In Pakistan, Maududi is mostly remembered as an Islamic scholar who founded the Jamaat-i-Islami (JI). But he also still remains a controversial figure here. To the left and liberal segments, he is remembered as the man who let the US use JI (during the Cold War) to undermine leftist and progressive politics in Pakistan, whereas many Islamic parties opposed to the JI once went on to declare him to be a religious innovator who attempted to create a whole new sect.

Also read: Maududi’s Children

He arrived in Pakistan from India as a migrant and scholar with the ambition to turn what to him was a nationalistic abomination into becoming a 'true Islamic state' based on the laws of the shariah.

Maududi had formed his party in 1941 like a Leninist outfit in which a vanguard and select group of learned and 'pious Muslims' would work to bring an 'Islamic revolution' and do away with the forces of what Maududi called modern-day jahiliya (socialism, communism, liberal democracy, secularism and a faith 'distorted by innovators').

To that end, he began to lay down the foundations of what came to be known as 'Islamism' — a theory that advocated the formation of an Islamic state by first 'Islamising' various sections of the economy and politics so that a fully Islamised polity could be built to launch the final Islamic revolution.

Maududi's theories in this context attracted certain segments of Pakistan's urban middle-classes and was also adopted by Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, which tried to jettison the process through a 'jihad' within Egypt.

Not only did Maududi and his party face resistance from leftist groups, it also entered into a long tussle with Ayub Khan's secular/modernist dictatorship (1958-69), and with the ZA Bhutto regime, which was based on populist socialism (1971-77).

Maududi was also taken to task by the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam, which accused the JI of creating a separate Muslim sect called 'Maududiat'.

Explore: Parliamentary democracy, caliphate and Islamists

Nevertheless, Maududi's ideas were eventually adopted by General Ziaul Haq, who had pulled off a successful military coup in July 1977 and then invited Maududi to help him shape policies to help make Pakistan a 'true Islamic country' run on 'Nizam-e-Mustafa.'

The course charted by Zia eventually mutated into becoming a destructive and highly polarising legacy that the state, politics and society of Pakistan has been battling with till this day.

But the irony is that none of what went down in the name of faith and 'Islamisation' during and after the Zia dictatorship was witnessed by the ideologue who had first inspired it, because Maududi passed away in 1979.

Not an all-out conservative — Maududi's existential journey

In all the noise that Maududi's career as a scholar, ideologue and politician generated, what got lost was the crucial fact that unlike most of today's Islamic scholars and leaders, Maududi did not emerge from an entirely conservative background.

His personal history is a rather fascinating story of a man who, after suffering from spats of existential crises, chose to interpret Islam as a political theory to address his own dilemmas.

He did not come raging out of a madressah, swinging a fist at the vulgarities of the modern world. On the contrary, he was born into a family in the town of Auranganad in colonial India that had relations with the modern and enlightened Muslim scholar, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan.

Syed Ahmed Khan was one of the earliest architects of Muslim Nationalism in India — a nationalism that attempted to create a robust Muslim middle-class in India that was well-versed in the sciences, arts and politics of Europe, as well as in the more rational and progressive understanding of Islam. It was for this very purpose that he formed the MAO college (later known as Aligarh University).

 The Aligarh University that was formed by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan to modernise Muslim education in India.
The Aligarh University that was formed by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan to modernise Muslim education in India.

Syed Ahmed convinced Maududi's father, Ahmed Hassan, to join the college against the wishes of Maududi's conservative paternal grandfather.

Incensed by the fact that his son had begun to wear 'Western clothes' and play cricket, Hassan's father pulled him out of the college and got him lectured by various clerics and ulema on how he was going against his faith by 'being overwhelmed by western lifestyle.'

Hassan soon renounced everything that had attracted him at the college and became extremely conservative and religious. When Maududi was born (1903), Hassan pledged not to give his son a western education.

So Maududi received his early education at home through private tutors who taught him the Quran, Hadith, Arabic and Persian. At age 12 Maududi, was sent to the Oriental High School whose curriculum had been designed by famous Islamic scholar, Shibli Nomani.

Read on: Mistaking Maududi for Mao

Apart from teaching Islamic law and tradition to the students, the school also taught Mathematics and English. Maududi then moved to an Islamic college, Darul Aloom, in Hyderabad. But he had to cut short his college education when his father fell sick and he had to travel to Bhopal to visit him. In Bhopal, the young Maududi befriended Urdu poet and writer, Niaz Fatehpuri.

Fatehpuri's writings and poetry were highly critical of conservative Muslims and the orthodox Muslim clergy, and on a number of occasions, various ulema had declared him to be a 'heretic.' But Fatehpuri soldiered on and had already begun to make a name for himself in Urdu literary circles when he met Maududi.

Inspired by Fatehpuri's writing style, Maududi too decided to become a writer. In 1919, the then 17-year-old Maududi moved to Delhi, where for the first time he began to study the works of Syed Ahmed Khan in full. This led to the study of major works of philosophy, sociology, history and politics by leading European thinkers and writers.

Maududi is said to have spent about five years reading books and essays authored by famous European philosophers, political scientists and historians, and he emerged from this vigorous exercise a man who claimed to have found the reason behind the rise of the West (and the fall of Muslim empires).

By now, he had also begun to write columns for Urdu newspapers. In one of his articles, he listed the names of those European scholars whose works and ideas, according to him, had shaped the rise of Western civilisation. The scholars that he mentioned in his list included German materialist philosopher, Hegel; British economist, Adam Smith; revolutionary French writers, Rousseau and Voltaire; pioneering evolutionist and biologist, Charles Darwin and many others.

With this article, he began to shape a narrative through his columns in which he emphasised the need (for Muslims) to study and understand Western political thought and philosophy and to 'master their sciences.' He said that one could not challenge anything that one did not understand.

Look through: Political Islam: Theory and reality

It was also during this period that Maududi began to exhibit an interest in Marxism. At age 25, he became an admirer of the time's leading Marxist intellectual in India, Abdul Sattar Khairi, and then befriended famous progressive Urdu poet, Josh Malihabadi.

By the early 1930s, Maududi was living the life of a studious young man and journalist who also enjoyed watching films in the newly emerging cinemas of India and listening to songs. He married an independent-minded girl, Mehmuda, who was educated at a missionary school in Delhi, wore modern dresses and owned her own bicycle! There was no bar on her to wear a burqa.

  The young Maududi (1927)
The young Maududi (1927)

Despite all this, Maududi did retain some link with his past as the son of a very conservative man. In his quest to revive the lost tradition of Muslim intellectualism, he had also come close to India's main party of Sunni Deobandi Muslims, the Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind (JUH).

But at the same time, he also expressed admiration for the political and spiritual leader, Mahatma Gandhi. Though he never joined Gandhi's Indian National Congress (INC) himself, he did urge other Muslims to join it in his articles. He also authored biographies of Gandhi and another Congress ideologue, Pundit Malaviya.

Maududi was greatly dismayed by the breakup of the Ottoman Empire in Turkey, and he blamed Turkish nationalists for it. When INC began to talk about an 'Indian Nationalism', something snapped in Maududi.

He had devoured every book on Western philosophy and history, but when the Ottoman Empire collapsed at the hands of Turkish nationalists, Maududi realised he had been highly underrating the power of modern nationalism all this time. This was one European concept he was not too familiar with.

Disenchanted by the Congress' Indian Nationalism and JUH's alliance with the party, Maududi retreated to the life of a husband who spent most of his time with his family, books, the occasional film and classical and semi-classical songs performed on stage.

See: Why are matters of faith beyond discussion?

In 1938, he bumped into Manzoor Nomani, a prominent Islamic scholar, who admonished him for distancing himself from his father's legacy, for not having a beard and living the life of a rudderless Muslim.

Already disappointed with the way the concept of nationalism was taking root in the minds of the Hindus and Muslims of India, Maududi retired back to his library, but this time to study Islam.

He now emerged with the theory that it wasn't really the greatness of modern Western thought that had been entirely responsible for the rise of European political power, but it was due to lack of conviction of the Muslims to practice their faith in the right manner that had triggered their fall and made room for European powers to enter.

In 1937, he vehemently attacked the INC's nationalism, accusing it of trying to subjugate the Muslims of India, but by the early 1940s he was being equally critical of Jinnah's All India Muslim League and of Muslim Nationalism.

He declared the League to be 'a party of pagans' and 'nominal Muslims' who wanted to create a secular country in the name of Pakistan.

Explore: Political Islam: An evolutionary history

Maududi's vehement attacks could not stop the sudden momentum that the League gained in 1946 and that helped it form an independent Muslim country in 1947.

In another ironic move, Maududi decided to leave India and head for a country that to him was an abomination and abode of nominal Muslims and the jahiliya. He began his political career in Pakistan in 1949, and it lasted on till 1979, when he passed away from illness in a US hospital. His funeral in Lahore was attended by thousands of admirers.

The many Maududis

Writing in the 'Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought', Irfan Ahmed suggests that there was not one Maududi but many.

By this, he meant that as a scholar and ideologue, Maududi's views were often derivatives of phases in his existential journey; one that saw him depart from the conservatism his father had tried to impose upon him and wholeheartedly embrace the freshness of European philosophical and political thought.

Maududi then bounced between Indian Marxism and the anti-colonial stances of Gandhi and Deobandi ulema (JUH), before settling for a quiet urban middle-class family life. But incensed by the rise of Muslim Nationalism, Maududi finally found his calling in the project of interpreting Islam's holy texts in a political light, and emerging with a complex theory that we now call Political Islam (aka 'Islamism').

Elements of organisational Leninism, Hegel's dualism, Jalaluddin Afghani's Pan-Islamism and various other modern political theories can be found in his innovative thesis, and that's why his thoughts not only managed to appeal to modern conservative Muslim movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood and populist youth outfits such as the Islami Jamiat Taleba, but even the mujahideen who fought Soviet forces in Afghanistan all the way to the more anarchic (if not entirely nihilistic) ways of men such as Osama Bin Laden.

But the question is, had Maududi been alive today, which one of the many Maududis out there would he have been most comfortable with?

A crippling start to the New Year

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It is the 1st of January, and as people are still singing and sharing their hopes and resolutions for the new year, Pakistan has registered its first polio case of the year (the number last year was 296).

Was it a coincidence? I'm not sure. I was sitting in my lounge watching 'Animal Planet' on TV when I read this news on my phone. I couldn't help my mind from drifting to all the bizarre things I used to identify with animals; things too irrational for the superior intelligence of humans; but which now didn't seem all too alien from our society at all.

Take, for instance, a guard dog that a friend of mine used to have in our early teens. The dog was, like most of its kind, the loyalest of creatures, but possessed one quirk: every time someone tried to feed it, it would bark at the feeder. Apprehension set in, and resigning to the dog's nature, my friend gradually got into the habit of throwing the dog food from a distance.

We would often laugh at this inanity; only if the dog was a little more intelligent, it would have been able to comprehend how aversive this behaviour was to its own welfare.

But that was long before I grew up and heard all the stories of my countrymen lashing out at the government for initiating schemes like polio vaccination drives, and declaring them conspiracies. Perhaps, biting the hand that feeds isn't restricted to animals, after all.

Also read: Pakistan's first polio case of 2015 reported from Balochistan

There are also other strange things that animals do (as all fans of 'Animal Planet' would know), which I used to differentiate them from human beings, like that peculiar habit of snakes eating their own babies.

As soon as the eggs hatch, the cannibalism follows, and while some baby snakes wriggle away and are spared, most get devoured their own mother, or by other snakes from within their own breed.

The commentators of documentaries dubbed it as a natural process of population control. But how, I wondered, could such cruelty be shown to newborns? And the answer was: Oh that's right, they're animals, they can't be the same as us humans of course.

This illusion, too, was shattered when it sank in that a large segment of our society did not let their own children be administered polio drops. To even fathom clipping the wings of these innocent souls, and then claim it was all predestined — what could be more cruel than that?

Then, there was the story that was hardest to digest. I read it in a children's book once. The synopsis of it was that, a worried scorpion stands at a stream with the intent to cross it, but afraid that he might drown in the cross waves. Sensing this predicament, a turtle offers the scorpion to ride upon its back, so the turtle may carry him across to the other side without so much as the scorpion's feet getting wet.

But as soon as they reach the other side, the scorpion stings the turtle. In excruciating pain, the turtle inquires from the scorpion as to why it had chosen to pay back the favour in such manner. The scorpion replies, "It was in your nature to do good, so you did that. It was in my nature to do bad, so I did that."

The moral was that expecting good from a bad person was a mistake.

This shook me up because it was against the very fundamentals of my own worldview. How could vice be done to the virtuous? Don't selfless endeavours win hearts?

Look through: Polio vaccinator shot dead in Faisalabad, Jundullah claims responsibility

And then, this worldview too, came crashing down when a cousin took me to meet his acquaintance, a doctor in Peshawar. With teary eyes, this doctor, a courageous unsung hero, related the following story.

The doctor was an active member of the polio vaccination drive in Peshawar. His team was wrapping up its work in a locality, when three cars stopped close to them. A person in an Army uniform summoned him, telling him he was needed by a certain officer and would have to go with them to see the officer.

Only when inside the car did he realise, it was the foe and not the friend.

The kidnappers had donned the shade of the Pakistan Army and snared him in. He was kidnapped for being a part of the polio vaccination campaign, and was taken to Afghanistan.

For over a year and a half, the doctor remained a hostage, eventually securing his release by paying his entire life savings as ransom money.

See: ‘Refusal major cause of Balochistan polio cases’

He was lucky, of course, to have gotten away alive. More than forty-five have already been shot down for doing the same duty. It is strange: in the times we live in, losing all your life savings to help others is considered lucky.

All those views and all those beliefs, now stand radically altered after all these years. Perhaps, I now wonder, attacking your benefactor isn't that deviant an act. Perhaps, the scorpion too, was misled by a few traders of faith. And perhaps, it is just in the intrinsic nature of some humans to keep being bad.

As 2015 begins, and the questions of 2014 go by unanswered, I have just one question this year: how much further into the abyss will we go?


Related:

'You can take it easy, you are a woman'

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A world where half our homes are run by men, and half our institutions are run by women, would be a far better world!

The first time, I heard Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook COO, say this was in 2012. I immediately turned to Wikipedia and this is what I saw:

Sirimavo Bandaranaike – Prime Minister, Sri Lanka (1960-65, 1970-77, 1994-2000)
Indira Gandhi – Prime Minister, India (1966-77, 1980-84)
Benazir Bhutto – Prime Minister, Pakistan (1988-90, 1993-96)
Khaleda Zia – Prime Minister, Bangladesh (1991-96, 2001-06)
Chandrika Kumaratunga – Prime Minister, Sri Lanka (1994)
Sheikh Hasina – Prime Minister, Bangladesh (1996-2001, 2008 onwards)

While the United States of America is yet to vote for Hillary Clinton, we, in South Asia have already seen six female heads of government, serving a sum total of 12 terms.

The numbers of women in leadership positions have sparked a global debate, for quite some time now. When in actuality, there are a lot of strong, brilliant women who are leaders, clearly they are not enough, not enough in business, and most certainly not enough in politics.

Studies demonstrate that as gaps are being closed between men and women, in access to education, in healthcare, and even in economic participation, the most difficult gap to close is in political participation.

Also read:From world stage to economic center stage: Pakistani women, let the rise begin

Why is that we don’t see many politician mothers around? Are women not aspiring, are they not ambitious or are they simply not power hungry?

I believe it is the political infrastructure which is holding our women back. Our political system is indisputably a patriarchal one, creating an invisible but virtually impenetrable barrier to women’s political participation.

Due to the negative connotation the word politics has, right from our school days, through college and especially at our workplaces, everything incomprehensible starts getting termed as ‘school politics’, ‘college politics’ and ‘office politics’. So, while women may be seen as school captains, college club presidents and community leaders, when it comes to the state level or the parliamentary level, there is one inherent question, whether women even want to enter the nasty game of real politics?

Most of the women who do enter politics locally, ultimately choose not to run for the top office. Eleanor Roosevelt, former First Lady of the United States, said in 1920s: Women going into politics should have the skin of a rhinoceros.

A century later, it appears not much has changed.

Also read: Policing Mathira, Deepika — and all South Asian women

Many even argue that the path to power is more apt to run through the C-suite than the halls of the Parliament.

Once, when I was discussing the organisation’s yearly plans and my own ambitions, somebody at work remarked, “You can take it easy, you are a woman!”

We can’t stop our male colleagues from saying this, but what we can do is ‘stop taking it easy’, more so when we are asked to.

Studies show that, globally, women represent around 10 per cent of all board-level positions, and just in India, 8 per cent of the top 50 Indian CEOs are women. In proportion to our representation in the global work force, these numbers clearly show how women leaders are equally, and at times, even more competent than their male counterparts.

However, the higher we climb up the ladder, the lower our numbers drop.

I have just begun my career and most of the time, I find myself as the only female in the room. I have, however, learnt that the more important thing is to not leave the room!

We need to advance our careers, negotiate our salaries, demand flexible working arrangements, speak for ourselves to get to the top, where frankly, we deserve to be.

Be it in politics, be it in business – let’s demand that both men and women sit together as decision-makers with equal powers. That would be the start of a cultural and social change.

It’s time we stop teaching our children, Moms cook and Dads work! It’s time we tell our daughters to write their own destiny and tell our sons to respect the women in their lives, and be equal partners at home. Let’s usher in a time when our men and not just women will be asked: how do you balance work and family?

India’s youngest female Cabinet Minister Smriti Irani righty says,

“A leader is someone who takes you where you want to be,
A female leader is someone who takes you where you ought to be.”

The world matters to us and it is time we mattered to the world.

The 'other' factors reshaping Pakistan's war on terror

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Over 15 days have passed since the gruesome Peshawar carnage shook up the entire country. The atmosphere is still somber as a flurry of activity continues in government quarters.

So has the situation reached tipping point?

Do the authorities intend real, meaningful action or are they still looking to stage manage some mass catharsis and bid their time before returning to their old ways?

A slew of senior analysts remain skeptical, and they have good reason to be, given recent history.

Nevertheless, I for one shall not be carried away by past experiences and lose sight of new factors that suggest that Pakistan may have turned the corner. There is more at play than meets the eye.

US troops are going home and so is US money

When the US military campaign in Afghanistan came knocking at our door, the country was under a host of economic and military sanctions imposed by none other than the US itself.

The Pressler Amendment of 1985 had bound the US president to annually certify that a country receiving military or economic aid from US was not pursuing a nuclear program. For five years, President Regan and then President Bush (Senior) signed the certificate, up until the Soviets finally withdrew from Afghanistan.

The period 1983-1990 saw US military aid stand at an average of around half a billion dollars (in 2009 constant dollar).

But the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989 drew a rather abrupt drop scene of this decade long Pak-US military friendship.

Then in May 1998, Pakistan defied international pressure and went ahead with nuclear tests. President Clinton imposed further sanctions under Symington Amendment and Glenn Amendment.

When General Musharraf toppled the elected government in October 1999, US Congress invoked Section 508 of the Foreign Assistance Act prohibiting all aid to Pakistan; these were termed as ‘democracy sanctions’.

The US non-military aid to Pakistan for the period 1991-2001 averaged just $75 million per year, while the total military aid during the eleven year period was a paltry $7 million.

All of this changed in September 2001. President Bush (Junior) waived Pressler, Symington and Glenn Amendments and the US Congress voted to allow the President to waive ‘democracy sanctions’. This broke loose a flood of US money.

US military aid to Pakistan in the first year of the new war, 2002, was a staggering $1.74 billion. The non-military economic assistance that year was $937 million.

See Sixty years of US aid to Pakistan

The US has certainly not been the only donor. As shown in a report by Center for Global Development, the US financial assistance worth $ 1.3 billion was just 30 per cent of the gross Official Development Assistance (ODA) that flowed into Pakistan in 2011, totaling $4.15 billion.

See Aid to Pakistan by the Numbers

Assistance from US and allies to Pakistan has maintained a high level since then despite many challenges.

For a broad comparison, consider that Pakistan’s total current expenditure for 2010-11 was Rs 2,296 billion and out of this Defense Affairs and Services (not total military budget) was Rs 445 billion.

The Coalition Support Fund (which reimburses expenses incurred by US allies against the war on terrorism) for the year 2010 was $1.22 billion (in 2009 constant) or roughly Rs100 billion; in other words, over a fifth of military’s current expenditure. It has remained at this level for a good 13 year period. This is a long time to stay hooked on to something.

Bloomberg quotes Congressional Research Service claiming, the U.S. paid Pakistan $11 billion out of the Pentagon’s Coalition Support Fund budget as of 2013. Including other military and economic aid, the US has given Pakistan about $28 billion during the 12 years through 2014.

General Raheel Sharif got an extension in the Coalition Support Fund for 2015 worth $1 billion during his recent visit to the US. But by 2016, US will be completely out of its combat status in Afghanistan.

In November 2016, during the next US presidential elections, Democrats would like to take pride in having successfully concluded the longest war in US history.

So while budgetary supports and civilian aid from the US and others will continue, though at a reduced level, military aid will slide down sharply, if not dry up completely after 2015.

Pakistan needs to keep around 150,000 troops in North Waziristan until at least 2017.

The monster of terrorism looming large at the western border at the time when resources are shrinking is no good news.

The time to act has arrived as Pakistan’s military strategists can no longer (financially) afford to let matters linger on its western borders.

The Kerry-Lugar bill had tried to use the US aid as a lever to create a new civil-military balance in Pakistan in 2009. The brazen attempt to give the newly elected government supremacy over military affairs had annoyed the army and was effectively blunted as aid to both civilian and military continued unabated.

The new reality is that the aid pipelines are drying up, especially the ones that directly supplied our military. It is bound to create a new civil-military power equation.

The civil-military hostility of 1990s can at least partly be attributed to the sudden reduction in size of the budget pie. We are again facing a similar moment in our history.

The only way to sustain previous levels of allocations is to increase the size of the national budget. That can come through measures like expansion in tax base, foreign investments and the overall growth in GDP of the country.

Peace is a pre-requisite to growth and it is only possible if terrorism is uprooted and we embark on a new era of regional cooperation.

Pakistan cannot afford to lose China as a friend

The recent upsurge in terror acts is blamed on the Operation Zarb-e-Azb, which, despite its shortcomings, the world has come to recognise as a step forward in the fight against terrorism.

Two weeks before the launch of Zarb-e-Azb, (on June 15, 2014), General Raheel Sharif paid a visit to China, holding meetings with political and military leadership of the new global power.

Since then, there has been a crisscross of meetings between US, China, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India.

China has advised Pakistan to settle its disputes with India through talks. It has also exhorted ‘neighbours of Afghanistan’ to not meddle in its internal affairs. It has come out in support of the new government in Kabul and has signed economic cooperation agreements worth tens of billions of dollar with Afghanistan, Pakistan and India.

A new economy is emerging in the region, and China is a dominant player in it.

China and Pakistan have close cooperation in almost every sector of defense. According to SIPRI, during the five-year period 2009-13, Pakistan was the world’s third biggest importer of arms in the world (having a 5 per cent share in total international arms imports) and 54 per cent of Pakistan’s imports came from China.

Looking at it from the other side, China became the world’s fourth largest arms exporter during the same period and 47 per cent of its total exports were bought by Pakistan.

China has three main stakes in the region that are related to Pakistan.

One: it sees the militancy in Pakistan and Afghanistan as a source of unrest in its home province Xinjiang, and it has zero tolerance for religious extremism.

Islamic militancy in Pakistan and Afghanistan is a constant source of inspiration, if not support, for ethnic Uighurs of Xinjiang and a major irritant for Beijing.

Two: Xinjiang is important for China from more than one aspect. It has a fifth of that country’s oil reserves and its largest coal and natural gas reserves. It also serves as the distribution hub of the gas China imports from Central Asia.

Beijing has recently said it is investing $300 billion in the region and a good part of this is going in developing roads and railways that will link China with Europe and other regions. One important route shall pass through Pakistan and China wants its merchandise to flow on it, but is wary of religious extremism traveling back into its already troubled region.

See: China Invests in Region Rich in Oil, Coal and Also Strife

Three: China has stakes in the region’s economy. It already has a $3.5 billion copper mining contract at Mes Aynak near Kabul. China's appetite for mineral resources is insatiable.

Besides that, many of the Chinese investments in other countries of the region can materialise or optimise if there are no cross-country hindrances. This provides “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to kick-start the two redundant economies of Pakistan and Afghanistan.”

Also read: Can China bring peace to Afghanistan?

Pakistan’s western allies have been exhorting it to ‘do more’ in the war against terrorism with frustratingly limited success. The pressure to walk the last mile now may not be coming from the wily West but from ‘all-weather friend’ China.

Given the ‘unreliability’ of the US, Pakistan is trying to diversify. Its recent overtures to Russia are part of this effort but these are unlikely to yield anything substantial given the uncertainties faced by that country’s economy especially in the face of the current slump in oil prices.

So Pakistan is left with China as the only reliable military partner – and it certainly cannot afford to lose or annoy her.

Breaking barriers: A Pakhtun and his electric guitar

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Amidst scenes of laughing Pakhtun children playing with worn out tyres at an internally displaced peoples’ camp in northwest Pakistan walks a young man named Naseer Afridi, singing of peace and love:

“If you hit me with stones, place a gun to my head, I’ll greet you with a flower in return. I am Pakhtun.”

So touching are the resilient smiles of the displaced Pakhtun children in Naseer's music video that an American woman sitting halfway across the world contacted him about how his song Za Pukhtoon Yam (I am Pakhtun) gave her peace. She thanked him profusely for pushing her to learn about a people of whom she was previously unaware.

When Naseer began his music career, he didn’t predict that the lyrics he wrote in his bedroom in Islamabad would impact someone so geographically and culturally distant from him. He was simply frustrated by the lack of experimentation in the Pashto music industry and decided to rebel against its stagnant state.

Also read: Gripes of underground musicians

His ambition of revitalising Pashto music led him, in partnership with Shahab Qamar as the guitarist, to form the first Pashto rock band in 2010, 'Naseer and Shahab'.

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Since then, the duo has progressed from learning through YouTube videos and producing music independently to performing last month on Coke Studio Pakistan month, the country’s most popular television program of music.

"Music has become an educational trip for me," Naseer tells me.

"I want to push people to realise the importance of breaking free from their shells and creating something original. I deliberately experiment with accent, tune, and lyrics. Yes, I face criticism for how unconventional my music is, but I believe in change. Culture is dynamic and constantly evolving. Pashto rock is my way of contributing to an evolving culture."

This is just how innovation and new genres typically enter into Pakistani music: the fusion of Western and Eastern traditions. The resulting product is a distinctly original and strong expression of the country's historical and cultural realities.

  Naseer and Shahab’s logo, as designed by Shahab Qamar in 2010. The logo consists of a Pakhtun turban atop an inverted electric guitar and speaks of the multiculturalism they're out there to promote. The duo draws its instrumental inspiration from their favourite Western bands as teenagers like Linkin Park and Coldplay.
Naseer and Shahab’s logo, as designed by Shahab Qamar in 2010. The logo consists of a Pakhtun turban atop an inverted electric guitar and speaks of the multiculturalism they're out there to promote. The duo draws its instrumental inspiration from their favourite Western bands as teenagers like Linkin Park and Coldplay.

Following in the footsteps of 'Junoon', which introduced the world to Sufi rock in the 1990s, the band 'Naseer and Shahab' is attempting to break new ground by experimenting in Pashto rock. The traditional Pakhtun instrument rabab has been replaced with the electric guitar to pull a much larger crowd, while the Pashto lyrics offer a change full of freshness to mainstream Pakistani audiences.

Take a look: Music has no boundaries: Strings battle it out with Indian band Euphoria

Music is arguably the most effective medium of cultural exchange because it invades hearts, inspires minds, and transcends borders. Naseer Afridi and Shahab Qamar are not the only artists in Pakistan driven by the prospect of cultural exchange.

Shayna Cram, an American public diplomacy officer at the US Consulate General in Peshawar, sings in multiple languages and recently collaborated with Naseer on a Pashto song, titled Za na manum (I don’t accept).

The song rejects stereotypes about Pakhtuns that portray them as terrorists. Considering the frequency and severity of terrorist attacks in northwest Pakistan, it is important to highlight the consequences that Pakhtuns themselves continue to face; Pashto rock is one way to open up channels of communication and bridge the region with other parts of the world.

 A still from the track “Za na manum”, with Shayna Cram and Naseer Afridi on the vocals and Sarmad Ghafoor playing the guitar. —Photo credit: Irshad Ali Khan
A still from the track “Za na manum”, with Shayna Cram and Naseer Afridi on the vocals and Sarmad Ghafoor playing the guitar. —Photo credit: Irshad Ali Khan

Naseer believes that raising awareness through artistic productions can educate people in Pakistan with the idea that change does not threaten culture, but helps develop it.

Read on: Living legend wants state to preserve classical music

The band’s upcoming projects include their first English track with animations. After producing songs in both Pashto and Urdu, this next project showcases the duo’s eagerness for further experimenting.

“I don’t want to be tied down to one locality,” says Naseer.

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Why are such initiatives worthy of notice? Because in a volatile country like Pakistan, it is important to highlight that experimentation and synthesis with the outside world does not always yield negative results, but a whole range of new possibilities too.

We are what our cultures are, and if we isolate our cultures, we'll isolate ourselves.

Music will help connect us in a way that politics will never be able to.

And that is why people like Naseer and Shahab need to be encouraged in every way possible.


Related:

How to try a terrorist

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It was a grim end to a sad year, Pakistan, was quiet on New Year’s Eve as the rest of the world reveled and brought in 2015 with fireworks and fanfare.

The alleged mastermind of the bloodiest school massacre in Pakistan’s history, however, was busy sending emails.

Just as the New Year changed the date on smartphones and computer screens, Khalifa Umar Mansoor sent a mass email message to hundreds of Pakistani journalists and newspapers. He wanted everyone to know that he now has a new Facebook profile page. He provided its ID and promoted a video message he has posted on it. It is impossible to tell whether the message was authentic, but the profile exists, as does the video message.

After killing hundreds of innocent children, Khalifa Umar Mansoor of Darra Adam Khel apparently still has things to say and does so via email and Facebook.

In Pakistan’s smoke and mirrors battle against terror, it is difficult to tell whether or when Khalifa will be apprehended. However, the question of the legal venue of where he or the many like him should be tried and convicted is one that is being fervently tossed around.

As is often the case in the aftermath of bloody pogroms, there is talk of abridgments of procedure, amendments to the Constitution and the establishment of military courts.

Also read: Military courts: How the reluctant were brought around

On just the second day of 2015, a multi-party conference called by the sitting Government issued a statement that endorsed “the proposed legislative measures including amendments to The Pakistan Army Act to extend the jurisdiction of speedy trial of cases under specified acts and provide Constitutional cover”.

The efficiency of annihilation; of bombings and raids that is the business of an Army, will now be applied to the matter of judging terror suspects. The whole country, the statement issued after the MPC declared, is firmly behind the project.

It makes sense.

When suspected terror masterminds send out emails pointing to their social media activity logs, while the victims of their mayhem bury their newly dead, it is indeed the hour of revenge.

To establish any court at all, military or otherwise, seems a lenient allowance to temper the country’s legitimate desire for vengeance by some minimal procedures of justice. The courts will be fair the people are told, the amendments legally sound. To all this can be added the truths of failing and politicised civilian courts, whose frailty or frivolity has at different times betrayed the nation in varying ways.

It is in the nature of wounded nations, and Pakistan is one at this moment in history, to lose patience with procedure.

In the aftermath of the Holocaust, when Germany had been freed and it was revealed that nearly 8 million Jews and 4-6 million non-Jews had been killed by the Nazis, Joseph Stalin the leader of the then Soviet Union recommended the execution of 50,000 to 100,000 staff officers. The British Prime Minister also considered summary execution of high-ranking Nazi officials without trials. As in the case of Pakistan’s terror masterminds, the culprits were known and hence the question of the utility of proof and of evidence, rule and of verdict a cumbersome one in the face of obvious evil.

And yet, there were no summary executions in the aftermath of the Holocaust. Instead, there were criminal trials. The Nuremberg Trials had the additional challenge of having to develop rules of procedure that were based on the laws of several nations.

In the case of Pakistan’s current situation, it is the reason why the Nuremberg Trials were considered necessary that are of particular importance.

Editorial: Military courts: A wrong move

What they revealed in relation to the question of justice and revenge is that it is not simply the guilt or innocence of the murdered thousands that is at issue. It is instead the complicity of entire nations and the immediate and urgent need for a public and participatory moral reckoning that engages with the reasons that had justified the killing.

Hitler’s holocaust was possible not only because he had harnessed the power of a vast state to make it possible, but also because the German population was either silently acquiescent or silently disapproving. They were in either case, unwilling to stop it, unable to develop a national narrative that unequivocally condemned the atrocities of mass killing. It is this final piece that was made possible by the Nuremberg Trials; they created space for a public conversation and reckoning whose absence in Germany’s past had made unimaginable evil possible.

Some of the same reasons apply to Pakistan. The danger of military courts and their implied secrecy is not simply legalising the looping together of the frail threads of ad hoc procedures but also their inability to provoke a mass moral reckoning in a country that desperately needs it. In this second sense, it is the denial of the necessity of a public conversation about just how evil and unforgivable the ideology of extremism is that is at issue.

Attacks like Peshawar, and hundreds before them have happened not only because the state is weak, the judicial institutions politicised, corrupt or simply frightened, the Army overextended but because the confusions of identity mixed with the rhetoric of extremism have made it impossible for the ordinary Pakistani to see terror as a black and white moral issue.

This silent citizen, who is unwilling to confront the massive nature of the murders at the behest of extremism; does not see the connection between his own sectarian prejudices and the agendas of murderous suicide bombers.

If this failing is to be addressed, then the trials of terror suspects must be public and televised, the procedures clear and transparent and the crimes against the victims documented and recorded.

If terror suspects are tried in this way, the weight of moral reckoning will fall on every Pakistani. The consequent public debate will not simply convict and condemn but more crucially, destroy the rationalisations that have either through silence or apathy allowed terror to live and flourish in the country.

Without such a public conversation around terror, the evisceration of justifications for killing the innocent is not possible, and as long as those continue to live, no court, military or otherwise, no multi-party conference, however staunch its resolve, can excise terror from the hearts and minds of many.


The fatwas that can change Pakistan's blasphemy narrative

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This article is the second in a five-part series on the untold story of Pakistan’s blasphemy law. Read the first part here.


Pakistan's blasphemy law continues to sustain popularity and credence, with death being considered not only the most appropriate retribution for offenders, but the only one. This ideology is embraced most wholeheartedly when it comes to non-Muslims charged with blasphemy.

In my previous article when I spoke of the authentic Hanafi position on the permissibility of pardon for all blasphemers (Muslims and non-Muslims), the overwhelming response supported such a pardon for the likes of Junaid Jamshed (a ‘fellow Muslim brother who had offended some by mistake’) but held that the same principle of pardon could not be extended to non-Muslim offenders such as Asia Bibi.

This is largely reflective of the predominant public narrative on blasphemy.

Those who dissent – who speak of pardon and of waiving the death penalty, particularly for non-Muslims – are seen to be speaking from borrowed western ideologies or from a faith deemed too weak to be seen as a credible authority for the public. This has made it convenient for citizens to largely ignore those who plead for clemency, reducing these voices to a small, ineffective and irrelevant force, at best.

There was a time when this was not so – in fact, at one point, the most revered ulema (religious scholars) of South Asia had rallied together to defend the position that non-Muslims could not be awarded the death penalty for blaspheming.

This occurred in the late 19th century, when the South Asian ulema (the overwhelming majority of whom belonged to the Hanafi school of thought) were under ideological attack from the Ahl-e-Hadith.

The Ahl-i-Hadith originated as a movement influenced (and later funded) by the Wahabis of the Arabian Peninsula. This movement challenged the established Hanafi rulings on various issues, including blasphemy, alleging that these were based on opinion (ra`y) and Greek influenced analogy-driven reasoning (Qiyas), rather than on prophetic tradition (Ahadith).

In particular, they took exception to what they perceived as Hanafi lenience towards non-Muslims blasphemers (i.e. not prescribing a fixed death penalty and the provision for pardon) which they viewed as incompatible with Ahadith.

 The exact position of Abu Hanifa (the founder of Hanafi School) that ends up being a source of contention for the Ahl-i-Hadith.
The exact position of Abu Hanifa (the founder of Hanafi School) that ends up being a source of contention for the Ahl-i-Hadith.

These criticisms roused the Hanafi ulema to an impassioned rebuttal.

Many of them targeted the Ahl-e-Hadith from within their own framework, deconstructing several Ahadith that formed the basis of these criticisms.

One such example is a monumental, 21-volume commentary, the I'la al-Sunan (the exaltation of the normative practices [of the Prophet]) by Maulana Zafar Ahmad ‘Uthmani, aiming to demonstrate, against the charges of the Ahl-i-Hadith, that the legal doctrines of the Hanafi school were in fact solidly based in traditions of the Prophet (PBUH).

Despite monolithic individual efforts of such stature, the most profound and relevant in terms of blasphemy, in my view, was Fath Al Mubeen Tanbeeh Al Wahabin (an explicit victory and a warning against the Wahabis).

This contains a fatwa (see below) that clearly states that a non-Muslim blasphemer cannot be killed unless he/she is habitual in the offense.

This last part is an important qualifier because it differentiates single acts of blasphemy from multiple and deliberate attempts, in fact from what is considered politically rebellious blasphemy.

 The monumental fatwa endorsed by 450 scholars that shows that killing is not permissible unless adat (habituality) and kasrat (high frequency) of offenses are established.
The monumental fatwa endorsed by 450 scholars that shows that killing is not permissible unless adat (habituality) and kasrat (high frequency) of offenses are established.

The Ahl-e-Hadith, in challenging the Hanafi position on blasphemy presented a compilation of Ahadith which supposedly showed that blasphemous offenders (including non-Muslims) were in fact killed, and that therefore the Hanafi ruling was erroneous in this regard.

In the rebuttal, the fatwa pointed to an important flaw in the Ahle-Hadith argument — that the Ahadith thus presented all pertained to cases of repeat or habitual offenders.

There is not a single case where a non-Muslim was ever killed for committing a singular offense of blasphemy.

(Further, according to Imam Abu Hanifa, the death penalty is awarded in cases where it is categorised as siyasa (political) punishment, as opposed to sharia (divine) punishment, against elements openly rebelling against the Islamic state, using habitual blasphemy as a tool).

This legal position was approved and signed by no less than 450 of the most prestigious names in the Hanafi ulema, not just from South Asia, but around the world.

It is difficult to come up with a case study of a bigger systematic consensus (ijma) than this one. Hundreds of leading ulema of their time from South Asia have declared that non-Muslims cannot be killed for a single offense for blasphemy and their pardon is acceptable unless it becomes a habitual and high frequency offense.

But to really appreciate the magnitude of this ruling for a country like Pakistan, we must look to some of the key signatories of this stance — one of them being Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi.

Many readers might know that Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi was the founder of the Barelvi school of thought, one of the two predominant Hanafi groups, and the religious orientation to which groups like Sunni Tehreek subscribe. The founder is considered a Pir, Saint and a most revered figure, amongst his followers, and the general populace.

Ironically, four years ago this month, Punjab Governer Salman Taseer was assassinated by Mumtaz Qadri, for pleading for pardon for Asia Bibi.

Mumtaz Qadri, who is a devout Barelvi, would be surprised, I am sure, to learn that the founder and most respected figure of his sect had endorsed pardon for non-Muslim blasphemers, and the view that non-Muslims cannot be killed for a single offense of blasphemy.

Incidentally, the co-founder of the other of the two Hanafi groups (Deoband), Mahmood Hassan Deobandi – also known as the Sheikh al Hind– is also a signatory on the above.

 A partial list of signatories fath al mubeen showing the endorsement of founder of Barelvi and Deobandi thought.
A partial list of signatories fath al mubeen showing the endorsement of founder of Barelvi and Deobandi thought.

Both the founders of Deoband and Barelvi have endorsed the position that a non-Muslim cannot be killed for a single offense of blasphemy and therefore must be pardoned.

It is interesting to note that as per the Hanafi thought, we might be talking about no jail time/punishment for the first offense.

 The Hanafi position clearly stating that first time offenders will only be warned, meaning that may not even be subjected to jail time.
The Hanafi position clearly stating that first time offenders will only be warned, meaning that may not even be subjected to jail time.

Quite apart from this fatwa, there is another key scholar of immediate relevance in the minds and hearts of the nation who has echoed the same position as these revered names.

Maulana Maududi is a household name across the country and is the founder of Jamaat-e-Islami, one of the main religio-political parties in Pakistan.

Readers might be surprised to know that Maulana Maududi has also said that an act of blasphemy does not leave non-Muslims liable to capital punishment by the state.

 The rights of dhimmi (non-Muslims) living in a Muslim state include protection of his life even in instances of blasphemy as per Maulana Maududi.
The rights of dhimmi (non-Muslims) living in a Muslim state include protection of his life even in instances of blasphemy as per Maulana Maududi.

All this nuanced handling of the issue is a far cry from the reality of its application today, where a single unfortunate, ill-informed, ill-judged alleged utterance can lead to a conviction under the law, and the death penalty.

Our law in letter and in its judicial interpretation prescribes a hudd punishment for a single offense of blasphemy.

It makes no distinction between Muslims and non-Muslims, repeat vs single offences, siyasa vs sharia punishment.

It goes against hundreds of top South Asian ulema and it goes against the founders of the predominant religio-political groups in Pakistan.

The idea that the current interpretation of this law is based on a complete consensus in the religious tradition is a myth.

This is especially crucial for those currently charged under the law, held in jail and fighting for their lives, as in the case of Asia bibi.

She is not guilty of multiple offences of blasphemy.

She has begged for pardon multiple times.

According to the rulings of founder of Hanafi School, founder of Deoband thought, founder of Barelvi thought and the founder of Jamaat-e-Islami, Asia Bibi should be given a pardon.

What punishment then, would our clergy, our Mumtaz Qadris, and our vigilante mobs, like to prescribe for their revered religious figures, the founders of their sects and 450 of the most prestigious scholars in South Asia and around the world, for allowing pardon for non-Muslims?

The voices of these scholars are key for the change in narrative around the blasphemy law, opening space for conversation and debate, in building tolerance, in honouring the real voices of those who have dedicated their lives to studying these positions.

Most importantly, referencing these scholars ensures that no grave injustice occurs in the fair name of our Prophet (PBUH) — an act of devotion we sorely need.

The real hero: Abid Farooq risks all to defuse bombs

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Abid Farooq is not deterred by threats. He is often called into court to testify against terrorists whose bomb attacks he has foiled.

“Imagine, we are present in the same court as the terrorists, they can easily identify us,” he says. “They tell me, ‘don’t think even for a second that if we are inside, nothing can happen to you, our resources are vast,’ and that’s how they intimidate us.”

But Abid stands his ground and often tells them that he is just doing his job; a job that he loves very much.

Abid’s early years were spent in Lahore, where his father was also in the police force.

“My mother was very upset when my father decided to leave the force after serving for eight years to start his own business. I don’t think she ever got over that trauma.”

When the family moved to Karachi, he decided to enroll into the police academy.

“I made a decision at that time, that I will enter the police and will show them that even if my father was not able to do this job, I will be able to do it.”

Explore: Invisible Heroes

In 1994, while in the police, Abid enrolled himself in a bomb disposal course, after which he was called upon whenever they received a bomb tip.

“In those days, we rarely ever received calls,” he recalls. “Perhaps, once every two to three months, and even then the bombs were simple, small and easily defused.”

Now, in charge of the West Division in Karachi, Abid’s cell phone is perpetually ringing. His unit gets between two to three calls a day, often in the middle of the night and that plays on the minds of his wife and three children.

Abid married Tahira in 1998. Initially his wife was very happy that she had married a police officer, but when she discovered he was working in the bomb disposal squad she was very upset.

“My wife watches the news; she knows what the situation is like in the city. Every time I get a phone call, she wants to know where I am going and whether it is to defuse a bomb. So now, I have to hide from her. I have to pretend I am going to the office, when in fact I am going to defuse a bomb,” he tells us.

Abid is a tall, quiet man who hesitates to talk about himself. When you meet him, you won't be able to tell that he has defused most of the bombs in Karachi.

“It’s my job,” he kept telling us. One thing that does become evident very quickly is that the high risk job has taken a toll on him personally. “The IEDs that are being used today are full of ball bearings and are connected to mobile phones, and placed in cars and motorcycles. These are the things that scare me a little.”

A few days before we met him, Abid received a call about a taxi laden with explosives near Sohrab Goth. When the unit arrived they found that the taxi was booby trapped and laden with explosives. The neighbourhood is densely populated; the human toll from the blast would have been catastrophic.

“I asked my superiors to evacuate the area,” Abid tells us. “Then I slowly made my way towards the taxi and began working on disassembling the bomb. The worry was that a suicide bomber or a second bomb could have also been placed. All of these things were weighing down on us while we worked. But we were successful,” he says with a smile.

“Whenever I go on such a mission, I perform wuzu, we know our bodies are not made of steel and iron, we are human, so we know the dangers. But there is this yearning, this passion, that maybe because of us, because of our sacrifice, this bomb could be defused and some lives would be saved,” says Abid.

On Sundays, Abid takes his son and two daughters to the park. There, amongst all the other families, it seems relatively normal. The daughters roller-skate on the cemented rink, and both the husband and wife lay a picnic out for them. They tease each other and laugh together and for those few hours, the family forgets the dangers and risks that lurk around them.

Abid’s meagre salary is not reflective of the job he does. He has received numerous job offers from other countries but is adamant to stay in Pakistan.

“My husband tells me this country needs me more than the others. That is why he has rejected the job offers, he wants to save his own country,” says Tahira.

We seldom award or acknowledge men like Abid Farooq — those who risk their lives for a meagre salary, for little or no rewards or benefits. Their families live with uncertainty every day of their lives. These are the real heroes. They are the reason many of us are still alive today.

If we were to look beyond the stereotypes and prejudices we carry, we would be able to see the men behind the uniform more clearly and perhaps then we would be able to acknowledge their sacrifices and once in a while salute them for their courage in the face of such adversity.

Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, January 4th, 2015

My grandfather died and I didn’t cry

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http://www.dawn.com/news/1155065

India and Pakistan: The fault is not in our stars

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“The fault, dear Brutus”, Cassius says in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar,” is not in our stars, but in ourselves”.

Years and years of ‘Aman ke Aashas’ and cabinet level meetings, of confidence-building measures and sari exchanges, of showing up at swearing-in ceremonies and civil society initiatives ... and then they all come tumbling down.

Slowly, painfully, assiduously we pick up the beads and start threading them. Each pearl is accounted for, each step pondered over, but then one slip and the process has to start afresh.

Extravagant, excessive preparations are made to make an omelette of reconciliation. Then a singular egg turns out to be bad, and the food gets spoilt.

It is not that we do not comprehend the need to establish friendly relations. The inevitable falling back to the narratives of peace and of building goodwill, the talks of overcoming the barriers and the friendly gestures all betray the understanding of the necessity of peace that persists among members of the public. If there was a lack of will, these processes would never have initiated, ab initio.

When the anger subsides, the realisation returns that belligerence is not a sustainable model; it cannot persevere, it has to stop.

Why, then, do these initiatives fail time and again?

It is because the animosity is too deep, the sentiments too fragile, the composure too fickle and the hurdles too many. It is this peculiarity which exists in men the world over, but most of all in the men of the subcontinent – the unyielding hubris, and the vanity. That is all it takes to lose focus of the objectives.

All it requires is one Vikram Sood and one Amir Liaqat, and a single moment of commentary in the presence of a jeering, thumping crowd.

All it demands is a single brainwashed soldier, who knows nothing better, and a moment of inhumanity that clouds the mind, to undo years of hard work.

This then gets shared, accumulates airtime, gains public attention and plays on the minds of the two nations – the nations, mind you, who are not wary of barbaric reactions themselves.

Gojra and Gujrat; Babri mosque in Ayodhya and Sri Krishna Ram temple in Karachi; the forced conversions in Uttar Pradesh and the forced conversions in Upper Sindh; all indicate to one aspect of the two nations: despite the animosity, and the overbearing pride in individuality, we are not too different.

We are more alike in treating our minorities than we would feel comfortable to admit.

In the hands of zealots and fanatics, the stories become an argument against all peace initiatives, making the journey all the more strenuous.

Patriotism becomes analogous to war cries, and public representatives, forever ready to pounce on a chance to gain some cheap publicity, dish out threatening statements, basking in their bubbles and relishing the short-lasting pertinence.

Unfortunately, the hawks always take over the narrative in these moments. The cardinal rule of perception is that the more intense, the more enduring statements would be perceived more readily by the public. These bring in ratings, and popularity. They ring home with the fable that has been etched in the conscience of the two countries. In the river of peace, the few ripples of pugnacity get noticed, and the relative sustaining calm gets easily ignored.

Philosophy believes the solutions do exist. Saadi Sherazi, the Persian poet had written:

Garat Khoway man amad nasazawar;
Tu khoway naik-e-khawaish az dast maguzar

[If my nature does not bode well with you, you don’t have to lose your own good nature because of it.]

Or like Marcus Aurelius, one of the five good emperors of Machiavelli, puts it: “The best revenge is to be unlike him who performed the injury”.

One of the two nations would have to show magnanimity; one of the two would have to sacrifice; and one of the two would have to take a leap of faith.

The warmongering would have to take a backseat, despite the excesses from the other side. Hearts would have to be won, foremost. Paranoia would have to be placated. Without this, the current state of affairs would persist.

Building any relationship requires working, but the one that comes with this much baggage requires the most. This is a rut, escaping from which requires considerable courage, ability to forgive and a lot more forbearance than we have shown the capability of.

The fault is not in our stars, but in ourselves.

Breakfast delights: Chanay and dum ka keema

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We all love the delicious chanay, a true delight with poori, in Pakistan, and a side of batura across the border in India.

I do not remember the first time I had chanay poori, I’ve been eating it all my life and loving it. The proverbial poori chanay ka nashta is what we immigrants crave for and that is my first meal on all my visits to the motherland.

Chanay is a legume, and when legumes are hulled and split it is observed that they make for easy cooking and digestion. The subcontinent is known for innovatively cooking chanay in a variety of ways.

We serve spicy packaged chanay snacks and chana choor garam sold by the wandering neighbourhood vendour, chana chaat, chanay key daal ka halwa and the ever favourite Multani cholay, Amritsari cholay and chikaar cholay, a Punjabi delight.

The interesting thing about chickpeas is that it may be eaten as a whole or as a split pulse; it’s the grains that are used as cholay chana. Chickpea has been known to Asia and Europe for over eight to 10 thousand years and was cultivated in both continents.

Archeologists claim that its earliest cultivation may have been in the regions encompassing the Mediterranean, Persia, Afghanistan and the lands surrounding it. History suggests that the subcontinent may also have been its place of birth, hence the wide use of chickpea in Pakistan and India, ranging from pakora, poori chana, halwa and the list goes on.

A Lahori Punjabi twist to the Multani chanay is the chikar cholay, made with chicken and chanay. Across the border the delicious Multani chanay are referred to as Amritsari chanay. Whatever may be the name, the taste is richly rustic and a favourite from pauper to prince.

As a child, I savoured the taste of the chanay from the poorioon ke dukaan; for the ones made at home never tasted the same. And then I discovered the secret ingredient: soda!

It is soda that brings out the melt-in-your-mouth texture of the chanay.

No lavish winter breakfast is complete without dum ka keema and my research lead me down an interesting road. The modern day dum ka keema is a derivation of the malghubah recipe found in the Ain-e-Akbari. My mother always referred to a dish called malghubah, whenever she saw a dish mixed to the point of becoming unrecognisable. I thought it was a made-up name until this week when I came across an actual dish by that name, and its main ingredients and style of cooking was similar to that of the Hyderabadi dum ka keema.

The historical malghubah recipe is made with minced goat meat, yogurt, ghee (clarified butter), onions, fresh ginger root, and cloves.

The tried and tested recipes I share with you today are from the kitchen of Shazli Auntie. Here they are, from my kitchen to yours:

Dum ka keema

Ingredients

1 to 1 ½ lbs mince meat
2 sliced onions
1 tbsp ginger garlic
1-2 tsp chillie powder
Pinch of turmeric
3 tbsp yogurt
1 tbsp raw papaya
2 green chillie
2 tbsp lemon juice
Small piece of coal
Salt to taste
¼ cup of oil
4 to 5 cloves

Method

Marinate the mincemeat in all the ingredients, except onion, green chillie and oil. Cover and set aside in the refrigerator for a few hours. In a separate pan, heat the oil and the brown the onions, adding mincemeat mixture and cooking on high heat for a few minutes.

Wrap coal in a foil with one tsp. of oil and add to the pan, seal lid and initiate the dum method of cooking for 20-30 minutes on medium heat.

Remove the coal and add green chillies, seal the lid and let it simmer on low heat until done.

Garnish with mint, coriander, lemon and chopped onions and serve with naan or paratha.

Chanay or Cholay

Ingredients

1 lbs chickpeas
½ tbsp. red chilli
Salt to taste
1 onion
1 tsp fresh ginger and garlic
1 to 1 ½ tbsp. coriander powder
½ tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp garam masala
¼ oil
½ tsp baking soda

Method

Soak the chickpeas overnight and drain, adding fresh water and salt and then boil until tender, approximately 2-3 hours.

Once boiled, add all the masalas and cook until tender.

Fry onions and garnish. Cover and cook for a few minutes, serve with a side of your choice.


—Photos by Fawad Ahmed

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