At a recent dinner, a businessman who represents a country which has a population less than that of North Nazimabad and who places his right hand over his heart whenever the national anthem is played at diplomatic functions, asked me why I haven’t migrated since I don’t think Pakistan had a future. Now I must make one thing absolutely clear. In spite of the incompetence and corruption of the leaders and the politicians, the ineptitude of the officials, the double standards of the clergy, the ambivalence of the army, the total lack of interest shown in coming to grips with the real issues that are mitigating against progress — I still love my country. I love the food, the people, the hospitality, the feeling of togetherness. But I don’t like the leaders and the sycophants that cluster around them. And I don’t like those hypocrites who pretend to be nationalists and carry ten-year visas and renewable airline tickets for self and family in their brief cases.
This brings me to that amiable and people-friendly chief minister of Sindh, Qaim Ali Shah and his blinkered staff who prepared the Four-Year Performance of the Sindh government. Now I don’t want to take anything away from Mr Shah. Karachi is an extremely difficult city to administer. However, the statistics that were presented essentially demonstrated improvements in the number of misdemeanours — mobile snatching, the arrest of targeted killers, the arrest or elimination of jihadi terrorists and dacoits, the fall in the number of people who have been kidnapped and an increase in the number of people arrested for bhatta. But not a word about the real issues — the alarming population growth, the absence of the rule of law, the nonexistence of appropriate punishment for acid throwers, shortage of water and energy crisis. Apparently these problems don’t exist for the army of local ministers who are cocooned in their cells. In fact, the way things are going, it looks as if they are going to be around a pretty long time.
Published in The Express Tribune, May 15th, 2012.
COMMENTS (7)
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Great article...thank you for summing up what a lot of us feel...so well and so succinctly...
Excellent, Anwer.
"The second, in the tart tones of repressed rage, made some rather indecent suggestions which had a primordial, bucolic base, before exploring various incestuous relations that he thought the journalist had been indulging in ever since he had his first biscuit."
thats a heavy sentence :D
Classic and totally expected "Let them eat cake" mentality...
Go tell it like it is, Sir.
Now you better watch it, The fascists will be after you, the communists are already after you, the mullahs are thinking about it and will soon decide, the government is after you too now that you are exposing Mr.Shah and his minions. Are you determined to live, well take your chances, I will say get a job with one these politicians who will be staying in posh areas of Europe and American, they can't write or read themselves but they could claim what ever you write, hey the life will be beautiful with this kind of living by free loading, they are doing it too, people can't live on love for too long, right?.
One of your best so far. Your last article and now this one are great examples of the use of the pen and the strength that it has to influence others.