Mind you, these were lawyers and advocates, people who had graduated from law school, respectable citizens who defend the innocent and the guilty, not the sort of chaps who go around burning tyres and minibuses and looting shops. What was really frightening was the fact that the tempers of these men had been stoked with a great self-righteous pleasure and an indulgent joyous malevolence. Whatever happened to the dignity and resilience which was shown when they fought for the reinstatement of the chief justice?
There have been quite a few political assassinations in the subcontinent in the past. After Mr Liaquat Ali Khan had been shot, the infuriated crowd literally tore the body of the assailant to pieces, so there was no question of trying and punishing the attacker. The Sikh personal guard who gunned down Mrs Indira Gandhi surrendered immediately after the shooting, a trial was conducted and the killer hanged. The fact that the president and the leader of the opposition, both friends of Salmaan Taseer, couldn’t find the time to attend the latter’s funeral, and the fact that neither the president nor the prime minister went on television to condemn what can only be described as murder, not justifiable homicide, has made a number of people in the secular, liberal intelligentsia wonder if attempts will not be made to ensure that, after a suitable period has elapsed, the killer of the Punjab governor is whisked away to North Wazirstan. The events of the last fortnight have indicated that it is the religious parties and not the ragbag coalition that passes for a government that are calling the shots. The nation will have to get used to the idea.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 20th, 2011.
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