This is a common problem. The obsession with security continues to reach new heights. We have set up checkpoints, blocked off roads, closed down buildings and encroached on public space (our space) only to try and achieve what cannot be done — protect certain areas from the threat of terrorism. But in the recent case of Kamra, the ‘aviation city’ — and repeatedly demonstrated on various occasions in the past couple of years — this is all an illusion. Terrorists enter at will, sometimes with the help of people within. But we can’t talk about that now. Journalist Saleem Shahzad lost his life trying to make that point.
Our security check posts, like the numerous ones that dot Lahore and Islamabad, serve no purpose other than to cause traffic jams and waste time. In Lahore and Peshawar, a barely literate NCO (non-commissioned officer) decides for me — based almost entirely on my appearance or his perception of it — which route I can take to enter the city.
The police in Karachi, as usual, are more enterprising. The local SHO ‘rents’ out police mobiles to his juniors, who then proceed to go out and set up a naka in the name of law and order. The sipahis spend hours stopping and extracting money from the poor and the powerless. Once you pay the bribe, you can all but carry a cannon for all they care. And in the process, a mobile police unit makes over Rs20,000 or more daily. If only they could spend some of that on their vehicles and their uniforms.
The claim that our police force or law enforcers don’t have enough funds is a lie. Not only do the officers ride in vehicles that cost over Rs5 million, but many have more guards than there are at police stations. There is over-employment based on false threat of terror. And there is a plethora of forces we are maintaining. In Sindh, for example, we spend billions for the upkeep of the Rangers — a border security force that now patrols our urban centres.
We think we are safe because we have armed people around. The opposite is actually true. But many have seen the obsession with security as an opportunity to make money and give jobs. In Sindh, the incidence of crime increases with the money the government pumps into law and order. The more the policemen, the more the crime. Today, one can actually argue that if we scrap the police force, things might actually get better.
The roadblocks remain in our mind. In Colombo, even in the worst of fighting, never were hotel visitors subject to the elaborate TSA standard searches we see at our local hotels. These security check posts — many created on public footpaths and roads — only give a false sense of security. We are as safe as we were without them. Our president has apportioned a main Karachi boulevard on which millions of Pakistani and American taxpayers’ money has been spent. Possibly the bigger the fish, the larger the encroachment.
Billions continue to pour into half-baked security initiatives. Take, for example, the now-abandoned Safe City project in Islamabad. The purpose of this project was to create a city within a city. These attempts at erecting safe areas are a bureaucrat’s dream and a common man’s nightmare. In the process, the real issue of rising crime and terrorism continue to remain unaddressed.
The inability of the government to deal with lawlessness means that the writ of the state and the rule of law suffer. When you see people not stopping their cars when a policeman beckons them to do so, what you are seeing is the beginning of something bigger. One can only hope the issue is addressed in time.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 10th, 2012.
COMMENTS (16)
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TTP operating in Karachi? now that's shocking!
In my opinion, the reason TTP is able to fill this gap is not just because our state officials are corrupt, but because we have a government that lacks sound policy as well. Be it economic, education or foreign policy. We still have no clear policy on how to handle an army we rented to fight our war, which helped the Taliban exploit the poor and uneducated.
I'm also not sure if we can rightly call our army, judiciary and the police force 'incompetent' when they competently know how to protect their own interests.
Nice article and nice concern for the American taxpayers too.
good article.
Good column, and I agree with what you've written, especially when you say, ''We think we are safe because we have armed people around. The opposite is actually true."
The rich leave the city proper, and escape to their enclaves. The false sense of security is the illusion is so that the influential and monied can feel secure knowing that the illiterate, poverty stricken masses are left to their own devices and dont come in mingle in their neighbourhood. After all, when we go to a "nice" natures, and spend an average Pakistanis monthly wage on a meal, we dont wont to look out into the streets and be bothered by sites of the common man.
These security details are out and about to do much more than just "secure" cities. They are now part of a culture of exclusion which will insure that society will continue to split and breakdown for years to come.
A very courageous editorial but that should be expected from someone who has the courage to run the type of newspaper you do.
@author ::very good observation.The funny part of all this 'joke' of checking for criminals is that in the morning when the staff goes off-duty they leave the road-blocks exactly where they put them while doing the so-called checking,blocking more than half the road with no checkers around present,for whole day.First govt, broadens the roads then police puts the bottlenecks,what a dilemma?
Good stuff. A fish rots from the head downwards. The answer is to chop off the head if the body is to be saved, fit to eat at least.
The fallacy that men in military are trained for security in cities and towns stands exposed with security lapses at Kamra, GHQ, PNS Mehran/PAF Drigh Road, etc etc. These men in uniform are trained only to protect our borders from intruders. Security in cities, town etc is a specialized field and as long as we do not have trained men the security lapses will continue. The biggest threat to security is the rampant corruption which allows thousands of containers loaded with weapons and other contra band stuff to sneak out of KPT, or the ease with which assasins from South Africa sail through our immigration and than manage to sneak out of the country courtesy the obliging Immigration at Karachi Airport, or the way that biggest Heroin Drug Lord Imam Bheel moves around securely even after kiling a public servant, and the manner in which target killers patronized by Karachi's political stake holders and religious fanatics like TTP get hold of abundant ammunition to kill anf rob citizens of Karachi. As long as criminals are not punished and prosecuted, people of Pakistan will have no sceurity.
The author is correct in his analysis. For the government, illusion becomes reality, all the while blaming the ever popular FOREIGN HAND for all the security ills Pakistan suffers at its own hand!
i agree with u...we hv ruined beauty of our cities on the name of security...
Instead of building new castle every here and there why don't they destroy the castles of enemy around.This is absoluty a nonsense and waste of funds waste of time and results! Chaos, fear, frustrations.(Marz barta hi giya joon joon dwa ki).
wow! such ingratitude!? this "false sense of terror" has taken the lives of thousands of brave policemen especially from KP, who have wrestled suicide bombers to save the lives of thousands! Every time an imam bargah or a mosque is saved from a suicide bomber, then that usually involves the sacrifice of a brave uniformed soul, usually a constable who is being paid a really low salary.
a bit of google might help. books such as “Shuhada-e-Dera Ismail Khan Police” have stories that are mandatory reading for Siddiqi sahib.
They started the Taliban..to give them a base in Afghanistan so that the Indians will not be there Their whole world view is India..India… They are paranoid..they don;t even know when they are lying..
@Kamal - Agreed. As long as elite of the country keep thinking that they can isolate themselves from the fate of the nation, this will continue to work this way. Its about time they wake up and smell the coffee; more security guards and gated communities are not a guarantee of safety, but investment in the worth of the country (at the intellectual / political / economical level) is.