If we take the example of Pakistan, we have similar accusations being flung at the incumbent Peoples Party government; our president, said by some to be a yaaron ka yaar, is criticised for appointing his loyal comrades to important positions. Our media cannot get enough of it, with entire prime time talk shows dedicated to the closeness of a minister to our president or prime minister. Do these friendly appointments matter?
The answer is that in some way they do. Having your fat cat friends on an honours list or appointing them to a position by virtue of your relationship with them is not the decent thing to do. In a civilised society, we should not overlook such a practice, because it may give out the wrong message that social relations trump merit.
But can one say that Pakistan behaves like a civilised society? Do our poor citizens have the same rights as our rich ones? Are their basic rights to safety, shelter, food and education secure? Are all Pakistanis treated equally under the law? The answer is no, they are not.
I am not defending the current government by any means. I am merely pointing out what affects the lives of an ordinary citizen. Memogate, sovereignty, nepotism — these are all terms that seem to mean so much when we are looking at them through the microscope of the media. But what really matters is that Pakistan is heading towards a social and economic disaster and our government is failing to handle the crisis. We do not have gas, electricity, employment, basic infrastructure, security and justice. And none of this can be blamed on nepotism, or the violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty, or because a secret memo was sent to the Americans to reign in Pakistan’s overreaching army. We spend a lot of time crying over matters of national security at the expense of tears for issues of personal security.
Politics is dirty; much to the disillusionment and apathy of a country’s people — important game players indulge in corruption, nepotism, fraud and then do anything to stay in power or save face. Every government does it. Armies do it. What matters is that they deliver and that they put food in the bellies of their citizens, provide them with education and basic rights.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 9th, 2012.
COMMENTS (18)
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a great article and i agree with your views...although some things have been left unanswered which should be answered.
Imran Khan will come. All problems will be solved. We'll have gas coming out of every hole in the ground, money growing on every tree and rivers of arms flowing into the country. All kids will go to schools (in madrassas) and everyone will have a job (in the Taliban). In short, Pakistan will be a true Islamic welfare state just like the one the Taliban built in Afghanistan. Imran will also ensure that there is no nepotism -- he is personally scrutinizing everyone who joins his party. He will do the same for all appointments, and honours and only the most deserving will get them. Make your vote count -- vote for PTI!! ;o)
rhetorical questions really shouldn't be answered, it defeats the purpose of rhetoric.
Like most other op-ed writers, you have explained the situation in Pakistan that everyone already knows albeit in a very fine literary way. I wish writers give the causes and solutions to the prevailing problems in Pakistan. To me, the real cause is the colonial governing systems that we did not change at the time of inception. If Pakistan can only revamp the Police structure of 1861 and conform to the one being used in the safest societies of the West, corruption will reduce by at least 70%. Look at Georgia- ex Soviet country. They fired 80% of the police and adopted same system as in the West, and now 81% of the citizens trust police as compared to Zero before.
That's just a very bad piece
serious lack of coherence in this article. things are connected and disconnected arbitrarily without any prior thought. but lets just not discourage her too much. Ma'am, it was good attempt but next time we would love to see some coherence and appreciate it, good luck!
Being sharp and opinionated is another thing and being mature and accurate another. Feedback should open your eyes.
All Pakistani's are born political and social analysts.
Does not mean they are good though.
I think what you have said is quite correct. The comparison with the doings of the UK government with ours was an apples to oranges thing. Your punch line at the end could have been explained a little more in detail.
Strange Analogies.....Anyways...its normal in our societies to be expert of politics and societal dynamics...
Poorly written, overly simplistic, immature and inaccurate. I'll leave others to dissect the article in detail, but for starters, your claim that these matters do not affect the common man is absurd, to say the least. *We do not have gas, electricity, employment, basic infrastructure, security and justice. And none of this can be blamed on nepotism, or the violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty, or because a secret memo was sent to the Americans to reign in Pakistan’s overreaching army.* seriously?are you really saying that nepotism and corruption have nothing to do with the failure of institutions which provide electricity, gas, transport, sugar, wheat, etc to the common man or it has nothing to do with lack of efforts to provide quality health care, quality education and equal opportunity system for the common where he can have access to good jobs rather than everything being sifarish based or industries and organizations riddled with unfairness and nepotism, etc etc . please et, maintain quality of articles
criticised for appointing his loyal comrades to important positions Exactly which government in the world appoints disloyal enemies to important positions?