The civilian government capitulated way too early to an agenda set by the extremists, who not content with using the issue of blasphemy as a domestic political lever, are insistent on imposing it on the world. The ludicrous outcome of the so-called protests on what was supposed to be a day to show our love for the Holy Prophet (pbuh) was massive (but entirely avoidable) damage to human life, public and private property, and a slowing down of economic activity which cost the economy billions (in a country chasing IFIs for quick cash), and most importantly, to the future of a democracy in Pakistan.
A shameful competition ensued between political parties and religious groups and the blasphemous video stung our collective imagination. All was forgotten: the deaths of 40,000 Pakistanis at the hands of extremists, the genocide of Shias and Hazaras, the exclusion of Ahmadis from the citizenship radar and of course, the much larger issues of inequality, exploitation and a collapsing state.
Perhaps, the capitulation of the state was partly due to its inability to withstand the power and domination of extremists, carefully nurtured and consolidated by the state itself. The haplessness of Islamabad’s policemen on September 20 and 21 demonstrated how a few thousand inspired men could come extremely close to violating the essential guarantee of diplomatic immunity; central to the notion of statehood. The bitter irony was that the Holy Prophet (pbuh) would assure protection to diplomats and envoys, even if they were from hostile foreign states.
Who were these violent protesters? This is an important question to address, especially after finding out that a vast majority of people who protested on Friday remained peaceful across the country. From schoolchildren to traders and from conservative groups to moderates, most Pakistanis refrained from engaging in violence. Television footage of the protests testifies to the presence of angry and determined members of banned militant outfits such as the Jamaatud Dawa, the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (rechristened for the umpteenth time into something else, but does it really matter?) and curiously, a few members of the Jamaat-e-Islami and the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf.
This extreme cadre was supported by a huge number of young men and teenagers, who were in all likelihood driven by the desire to indulge in criminal looting and expressing their lack of opportunity by venting violence. The net result was the loss of around 30 lives, dozens of buildings and countless vehicles — all caused by a brazen impulse to attack the state and symbols of privilege.
The tragic burning of cinemas in Karachi and Peshawar by this lunatic fringe appeared as an attempt to close a chapter of sorts. One of the cinemas in Karachi inaugurated by Ms Fatima Jinnah (also bestowed with the title of Mother of the Nation) was also set ablaze. Cinema was to undivided India what opera was to 19th century Europe; a culmination and amalgamation of various art forms and technological advancements, shaping the sensibilities of an evolving civilisation. True, that the Pakistani film industry died before the burning of these cinemas, but the last symbols of a long-gone era were attacked and destroyed.
Singling out the political parties may be an easy route but it is a simplistic approach. The self-righteous media became an active participant of this major rupture of Pakistani society. Days before this mayhem unfolded, the media — almost through a tacit consensus — had set the stage for a collective expression of irrationality and covert condoning of violence. By relaying messages of murder — without a trial — to avenge the American film-maker, and by spinning a multitude of conspiracies against the Islamic faith, it only fuelled misled passions. It became rather ludicrous when the US government had to finance expensive advertisements on national TV to broadcast to audiences in Pakistan that the US government had nothing to do with the blasphemous video and that it deeply regretted its production. Some say it was an exercise in futility, for the media discourse had established links between the demented act of individuals and the American state; as well as to the impending presidential election in the US.
Questions, however, remain unanswered as to why the US government did not ‘do more’ with respect to the film on the Internet, considering that it has screened and managed online content in the past. To beat the drum of free expression after the loss of its innocent diplomats and the blazing Arab street was simply intriguing. Of course, there is no clear legal mechanism for Pakistanis to impose their will on the global Internet, but Western countries should not have abandoned caution altogether. After all, why is vilification of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) turning into a touchstone of free speech? There may be no method to this madness but to an aggrieved, weaker and strife-ridden Muslim world — if one can take the liberty of generalising in such a manner — the US state’s behaviour appears to be that of an aggressor.
Nothing justifies violence and, more critically, self-harm. Instead of bashing the world, I am more worried about what is happening to the society in which I live, and where I want my children to grow up. The Pakistani state has very little time left to reorient its strategic worldview and its overarching paradigm of pursuing an ambitious, expansionist regional policy by using extremists as convenient proxies and promoting extremism as the only version of a nationalist discourse.
The militants had not reached the gates of the Diplomatic Enclave in Islamabad; they have already visited the GHQ, various naval and air bases, and they are gradually making inroads into the minds of those who operate the state.
A critical choice to survive awaits us all.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 26th, 2012.
COMMENTS (53)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
@Arijit Sharma: @Zeeshan: ” … Do you want Pakistan to disintegrate so that you can live in your “undivided India” fantasy? … “ That is a nightmare scenario, not a fantasy. People who talk about “Akhand Bharat” talk about the land, not the people. So, rest assured, going back to British India is an option nobody in India even wishes to consider.
I cant find enough words to thank Jinnah for achieving Pakistan. Thank God. Although I must say, I feel bad for the hindus/sikhs/budhidhist/jains/parsis stuck there.
@Arijit Sharma: Exactly the point. Let Pakistan withdraw its Army, paramilitary forces, tribal militias and Punjabi settlers from the territory occupied by them. Let them get back that part of the motherland which they ceded to the Chinese. Before this the Pakistanis have absolutely no right to open their mouths on anything concerning Kashmir.
How dare they ?
@Zeeshan: " ... Thanks for exposing the fascist nature of your country’s national project. It is this fascism which Kashmiris are struggling every day against. ... "
If we were so fascist, there would be no Article 370 for the State of Jammu And Kashmir. Your fascist Punjabi and Urdu speaking brethren have changed the demographics of Kashmir under your control beyond recognition - while India maintains the demography at 1948 levels.
@jism:
Why would Arabs have a vision of integrating Pakistan into the Arabian Peninsula?!!
@ Arijit Sharma, "That is a nightmare scenario, not a fantasy. People who talk about “Akhand Bharat” talk about the land, not the people. So, rest assured, going back to British India is an option nobody in India even wishes to consider"
Thanks for exposing the fascist nature of your country's national project. It is this fascism which Kashmiris are struggling every day against.
@ Arijit Sharma, "That is a nightmare scenario, not a fantasy. People who talk about “Akhand Bharat” talk about the land, not the people. So, rest assured, going back to British India is an option nobody in India even wishes to consider"
Thanks for exposing the fascist nature of your country's national project. It is this fascism which Kashmiris are struggling every day against. .
India should openly state that it does not want one square inch of Pakistan territory. We want Pakistan to stand on its legs solidly and in service of its people. Disintegrated Pakistan is not in India's favour. A democratic Pakistan is. God bless all.
@jat
I just want indians to mind thier own bussiness and stop using muslim names :)
@Afzaal Khan: "@Aleem Sadiq How about then not commenting on pakistan"
Ohhhhh now you want to ban Aleem Sadiq too ?
@Yuri Kondratyuk: they are slowly building up to it. right now, the Arabs are regarded as brotherly states (btw, the Arabs states are locked in an eternal battle with each other,there is no brotherly relation between the Arabs themselves)and slowly in near future Pakistan will become an Arab state. that is their vision of integration.when they say that they will make Pakistan an Islamic welfare state,they are indirectly referring to Saudi Arabia or the oil rich Arab states, that's their vision of Pakistan.
@Aleem Sadiq
How about then not commenting on pakistan? After all since no connection with Norway why waste your time on pakistani news website commenting on internal pakistani issues :)
When was it really integrated to start with?
@Naseer Ahmad: Correct, but about 40 years too late.
An analysis worth consideration.
@Tony Singh: This one is beyond repair... :)
@Arijit Sharma: I agree with your comments. Even if Pakistan disintegrates into ten parts, India would not wish to take even a single part of it, however nobody wishes here that the same should happen to our neighbour.
To be honest if I were Norwegian I would not let Pakistanis emigrate to my country. Even as a Pakistani I think it is a foolish policy by the Norwegians to let Pakistanis to emigrate there. Norwegians did not colonise Pakistan they have no guilt conscience to let Pakistanis in. Of course as a Pakistani I am very happy if I got a chance to go to Norway. Norwegians are a clean, tidy, liberal and educated people; everything we are not.
A very well written warning. But the problem is that the people who have some power to do something about it, still think they have chosen the right path (strategic assets, strategic depth, strategic location, strategic nuisance value).
And they will continue on this path and reach the inevitable destination.
@Lala Gee: "You think diplomatic immunity is bigger than a nations sovereignty. Do you see US observing this principle? Didn’t she violate Pakistan’s sovereignty on May 2, 2011 in Abbottabad Operation. Doesn’t she violate Pakistan’s on every other day in drone attacks and kills innocent civilians including women and children. Showing one sided picture is not good journalism."
And what was your establishment doing while hiding OBL all the while in Abbottabad. Your leaders including Musharraf cried hoarse that OBL is not in Pakistan. You support "non state actors" to wreak havoc in different parts of world including in India and Afghanistan. You yourself ponder on it if it was right behavior of Pakistan.
We are in total denial! Just like in 1971.
@Was a Pakistani
I beg to differ bro, just to cite example of Mexico, state exist and is fighting, the violence is reflection of that fight not of disintegration.
The state should be blamed for the unrest but the crown goes to our out of control media! Any leader that had dared not to take part in these "protests" would have been labeled an infidel by the media. Our media and these duo number anchors are to be blamed for fanning the fire and advertising this movie.
Excellent piece Mr. Raza Rumi.
Pakistan faces difficult choices, deweaponization and establishing writ of the state priority number one followed by scaling down the religious rhetoric. How this will be done is going to be a precarious path, i am not so optimistic given that state within the state or establishment does not want to relinquish its control. Good piece Rumi Sahob, keep writing.
The extremism in PAK has reached a point that the state has to concede to every demand the mob rule puts forward. The Friday holiday events are a window into the future.
The events of Arab spring are in the horizon and it may unlikely to be very positive.
@Lala Gee: National sovereignty depends upon diplomatic immunity and not" terrorist immunity". It is something to be found in the history of world and the history of Islam as well. Why was Bait-e-Rizwan held? Just because of the rumour that the diplomat of the Prophet(PBUH) was killed by Meccans and the Muslims vowed to die. Moreover, the Prophet(PBUH) not only welcomed the Christian diplomats from Najran in his exalted mosque but also allowed them to worship therein as per their faith. The debacle of Bagdad, massacre of millions of Muslims, rapes of countless Muslim women, demolition of mosques and madrasahs and burning of golden books at the hands of Mongols was triggered only by the violation of diplomatic immunity. Moreover, had Pakistan been sovereign and not held hostage in the hands of terrorists, foreign and local, the debacle of May 2 may never never happened.
It is true that the Pakistan is not going to disintegrate because of this incident, but beware of 'boiling frog syndrome'. if a frog is placed in boiling water, it will jump out, but if it is placed in cold water that is slowly heated, it will not perceive the danger and will be cooked to death. Intellectuals should dominate low IQ religious fanatics. Fanatics are useful idiots as they can be used in a war like situation.
@Litmus: Bravo! Though brief, your comment says more than what reams of pages of windy rhetoric could have said! Well done!
@raza: Brother your statement is the most alarming one. If such violence is a norm then state surely doesn't exist
Everyone wants to exploit the situation for it's personal gain. The media, the politicians, the military, and the mullahs - they look for such opportunities and want to get mileage by being the 1st, by being the most, by being the sympathizer. The whole equation is messed up. Instead of thinking what can go wrong, they think what they can get out of it.
This problem exists world-wide, but in countries like Pakistan, it is really bad. I was shocked to see the Pakistani government giving a Friday off so people can protest! And, what about the minister who has put a bounty? If he has that much money, why not give it some local charity to help the poor out!
@ the author,
The state is not heading to disintegrate but had already done so in 1971. The events we are seeing now is a reflection of further disintegration in future, however, there is hope that we have the super glue of nuclear technology which makes foreign intervention "as a catalyst" least likely.
pakistani people needs to exterminate militancy from their rows...otherwise its dragon that will never be solace until it annihilates entire society....these criminals has distorted and bleak entire muslim history and societies...
screw them...
@Zeeshan: " ... Do you want Pakistan to disintegrate so that you can live in your “undivided India” fantasy? ... "
That is a nightmare scenario, not a fantasy. People who talk about "Akhand Bharat" talk about the land, not the people. So, rest assured, going back to British India is an option nobody in India even wishes to consider.
@Abbas from the US: pakistani educated and non educated are all the same, more or less
"Television footage of the protests testifies to the presence of angry and determined members of banned militant outfits such as the Jamaatud Dawa, the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (rechristened for the umpteenth time into something else, but does it really matter?) and curiously, a few members of the Jamaat-e-Islami and the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf." This says it all. It was a demonstration of street power of rightwing extremists and their supporters. They were burning our country and killing our people to protest the US and for the love of our prophet PBUH. The fact is the US or the West cannot change their constitution just to please the street power of Pakistani mullahs. The US constitution cannot be amended without the approval of majority of all 50 states and both houses of congress and president. Even then it can be shot down by the US SC. Everybody knows about this including the rightwing politicians yet they pretend that it is the US govt's fault. We have to grow up and learn to live in the 21st century with democratic countries and in a global village.
What does a state's integration have anything to do with its lawlessness? Is Mexico disintegrating because of its lawlessness? Is India disintegrating because of its lawlessness? Is America disintegrating because of its urban violence?
The fact is that 100s of these "fanatics" are put behind bars because of the state. The reasons why the embassies are protected and standing still are because of the state.
Instead of engaging in this ecological fallacy through merely observing the protest, shouldn't you be placing more attentions to massive number of Pakistanis who didn't even participate in those protests? Shouldn't you be more concerned on how to create a space for peaceful protest and how to punish violent protests within the state identified as Pakistan?
Can you as a solemn citizen of Pakistan whose forefathers sought refuge and prospered here perform your duty to this state by delineating carefully the rules for protest in this homeland of yours? And remember the citizens of your state, while they understand the rule of law, don't subscribe to liberal values.
A state could only disintegrate when the citizens of that state want disintegration. Do you want Pakistan to disintegrate so that you can live in your "undivided India" fantasy?
What does a state's integration have anything to do with its lawlessness? Is Mexico disintegrating because of its lawlessness? Is India disintegrating because of its lawlessness? Is America disintegrating because of its urban violence?
The fact is that 100s of these "fanatics" are put behind bars because of the state. The reasons why the embassies are protected and standing still are because of the state.
Instead of engaging in this ecological fallacy through merely observing the protest, shouldn't you be placing more attentions to massive number of Pakistanis who didn't even participate in those protests. Shouldn't you be more concerned on how to create a space for peaceful protest and how to punish violent protests within the state identified as Pakistan?
Can you as a solemn citizen of Pakistan whose forefathers sought refuge and prospered here perform your duty to this state by delineating carefully the rules for protest in this homeland of yours? And remember the citizens of your state, while they understand the rule of law, don't subscribe to liberal values.
A state could only disintegrate when the citizens of that state want disintegration. Do you want Pakistan to disintegrate so that you can live in your "undivided India" fantasy?
Yes, the institutions in Pakistan are collapsing one after another and state of Pakistan is failing again and again to provide equal rights, opportunities and security to its citizens. Symptoms are clear; Pakistani state is disintegrating. Imran Hussain USA
If your opponent is of choleric temperament, seek to irritate him. Sun tzu - art of war
Perfectly describs how Pakistan can be destroyed by its enemies.
@taimoor niazi
How about Mullah Zaeef? Why was his rights violated? He was an ambassador too in this country, or is it he doesn't count because you didn't like his government. News of demise/collpase/disintegration of Pakistan reminds me the saying of Mark Twain "The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated."
"Who were these violent protesters?" Technically, you can't really rule out the usual suspected groups even if they were doing so peacefully somewhere at the same time. They like the concept of things like having militant-wings. The primary advantage that concept has is you can commit crimes yet also have a way of denying involvement.
@ Lala Even in the dark ages of history, diplomats and envoys were not touched, whatever their states might have done...
@Lala Gee Respecting diplomatic immunity is an intrinsic aspect of society, whether someone like you chooses to accept it or not., and dates back over two thousand years.
Even the pagan warrior Geghis Khan held great store in the inviolability of diplomatic missions. It should be recalled that the anhililation of the Muslim Khalifate by the Mongols was due to the barbarous of murder of Genghis Khan's ambassador by the arrogant Khwarizm Shah. (Ruler of modern day Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Iran,) Iraq,Tajikistan & Uzbekistan. This act of barbarity was eventually repaid in kind by inhuman destruction of Baghdad and slaughter of its 1,800,000 inhabitants, which ended a great Muslim civilisation.
emphasized text the US state’s behaviour appears to be that of an aggressor.- Reza Rumi
I can only show surprise that someone like Reza Rumi who explains a lot of situations in Pakistan as a social commentator can make such a naive assumption.
The average American preparing to express his political will shortly, would find it extremely reprehensible if his or hers freedom of speech could be curtailed as an acknowledgement of the needs of foreign religious group. Obama could lose the election if there had been the slightest hint of the American right to the freedom of expression underwent even the slightest restraint.
The American Taliban ( Read The Christian right) would make life miserable for the American government much like the Pakistani Taliban (The right wing nut cases) have made it for the diminishing power of the elected civilian government in Pakistan.
Why media not highlight peaceful protests? So many photoshopped pictures are available of "peaceful protests" on Facebook! They could have used any of them!
Your argument is sound. After Fridays incident my friend in America suggested I look up a book written by Zbignew Brezinski (an ex-Secretary of State of USA) called 'The Grand Chessboard' (on covert war against Pakistan) in which, my friend says, the author argues that as it is not possible to attack Pakistan directly, its internal dissent and energy is being used against itself. Fridays incident shows how true and easy this was. It also appears like the religious extremist parties were used wittingly or more so unwittingly in this sinister affair.
@Lala
In order to be considered sovereign over in area the state must actually maintain control over it. That's the basic definition, and the one that the U.N. uses. Pakistan has vast tracks of land completely outside the writ of the state. That's where the drone strikes are. As for the killing of Bin Laden, well you could take that case to the U.N. as a violation of your sovereignty, but then the U.S. will likely reveal papers from the compound that indicate that he was actually helped by elements of the state.
Is the state disintegrating?
Islam does not sanction the concept of a state.
Your argument is very sound. After Fridays incident a friend in America suggested I look into a book by Zbigniew Brezinski called 'The Grand Chessboard' (on the covert war against Pakistan) in which my friend says the author argues that since it is not possible to attack Pakistan directly, its own internal dissent and energy is being used against itself. How true and easy Fridays incident proves this to be. The religious extremists appear to have been used wittingly or more likely unwittingly, in this rather sinister business.
A right heading by the writer. Pakistan was already on the brink but the mobs indulging in burning and destroying its own properties as protest against a third rate movie is a perfect recipe for an impending disaster for which no guesses are required.
@Author:
You think diplomatic immunity is bigger than a nations sovereignty. Do you see US observing this principle? Didn't she violate Pakistan's sovereignty on May 2, 2011 in Abbottabad Operation. Doesn't she violate Pakistan's sovereignty on every other day in drone attacks and kills innocent civilians including women and children. Showing one sided picture is not good journalism.
@Author:
You think diplomatic immunity is bigger than a nations sovereignty. Do you see US observing this principle? Didn't she violate Pakistan's sovereignty on May 2, 2011 in Abbottabad Operation. Doesn't she violate Pakistan's on every other day in drone attacks and kills innocent civilians including women and children. Showing one sided picture is not good journalism.