Operating on society’s shadowy margins, militants say they wish to eradicate immoral or un-Islamic activity, and they use violent means to do so. This practice was at its most extreme in Swat before the military operation but Swabi and other settled districts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa have faced their own share of violence, with 2007 being an especially bad year for CD shop owners as they were hit by successive bomb attacks. Faced with all this, the issue of censorship pales in comparison to a larger problem: that the writ of the state is being undermined by militants, who kill and bomb innocents with impunity. For a strong, stable Pakistan, the state must be the only entity with the moral and legal authority to crack down on any activity — indeed, the state must be the only entity that can determine whether an act is immoral or illegal in the first place.
Legislative procedures must be followed and debate should allow for all interests to be taken into consideration before decisions are made. If the state does not stand its ground and take steps to curb the militant’s illegal and deadly actions in Swabi now, militants will only carve out greater spaces in which they feel they can exercise their will.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 28th, 2011.
COMMENTS (5)
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@Ali Tanoli.: so corrupt extremists can take over.......hmm lets try that too. Maybe it will go better for us than it did for Afghanistan.Probably not!!!! you cant just enforce a type of rule and expect everything to get better .You have to have systems in place and people who are honest
@Ali Tanoli.: So, just to punish the corrupt you are willing to go back to medieval ways? Its called cutting the nose to spite your face
More in to islamic tradition jaye pakistan soon crrupt elite gonna hide in caves of jehlum. inshallah.
You have PTCL employees who attempt to take on the mantle of defenders of Pakistan's morality through their intellectually-challenged SMS ban list. It is surprising that no one in Pakistan called for censuring these employees.
When the government and PTCL leadership chooses to turn a blind eye to such repression in their own ranks, is there any surprise that vigilantes take it upon themselves to enforce their regressive ideas of morality through violence and force.
The slide into extremism seems more likely by the day in Pakistan. The tolerant culture Pakistan inherited from India doesn't have a bright future.