Closer to home and despite some liberalisation in Saudi Arabia the overall picture is of basic freedoms being rolled back. In Pakistan ‘disappearances’ silence the dissident voices and if the disappeared do reappear they quickly leave the country. The press and media generally have learned that self-censorship is the key to survival and criticism of the government and the establishment is muted and sometimes absent altogether. Religious minorities continue to be suppressed and driven out and their numbers constantly fall. The blasphemy laws remain unattended and the religious right wing is able to have the government by the throat as demonstrated by the Faizabad incident and although the country as a whole is safer, the space for authoritarian groups expands with the state choosing to look the other way as they do.
Freedoms are hard won in a country like Pakistan where the default position is ‘authoritarian’ and defenders of freedoms get short shrift. This drift is going to continue as there is no countervailing narrative on the horizon and the state will continue to edge towards being less free by the year. We are not alone in that more is the pity and we expect no early improvement.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 26th, 2018.
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