Then the morning after arrives, as it always does. The reptiles move in. The grief is still fresh, but the shock is gone. Such an issue should not be ‘politicised’, they argue, when there’s still blood on the pavement — politicisation here meaning whimpering about gun law reform. Blunter cousins might casually mention the right to bear arms, that golden piece of wisdom the founding fathers etched into the Constitution, an intrinsic right that is part of the nation’s soul.
Finally, the doctrinaire ones, referred to as idiots in normal life, will take over and suggest that the school staff should have been itself armed to stop the murder. Mental awareness counsellors will be brought in. Lobbies will throw money at any venue that may work: op-ed space, airtime, Christian preachers, Republican congressmen. America will be convinced once more that there’s only one solution to having too many guns — more guns.
What happened in Connecticut, where 20 schoolchildren and seven adults were killed by a 20-year-old gunman as he attacked an elementary school, was an instance of human evil. But massacres like these are afforded by lax gun laws that the United States not only refuses to change, but at times seems to revel in, even when data overwhelmingly suggests otherwise. US states with the harshest gun laws have the lowest rates of gun deaths and this holds just as true for the reverse. Countries that have instituted tight weapon regimens, like Britain and Australia, or reformed previously slack ones, like Japan and Switzerland, can’t even be mentioned in the same sentence as the US when it comes to the death toll.
And yet, all these words ring hollow because while Pakistanis are rightly moved by the tragedy of Connecticut, it would be a mistake for them to overlook the sheer scale of what is happening right around them. Karachi is all but lost. One only takes the liberty to correlate the two because legal reform is needed even more desperately for the latter. That such a beautiful city, the centrepiece for Pakistani ambition for so long, has descended into a cesspool of ethnic parties, armed wings and sectarian murderers is heartbreaking. But whatever the cynics may say, bringing back a safer, better Karachi is within grasp if we develop the will to do it.
The issue is not the legality of the weapons themselves; in this latest Connecticut shooting, all three firearms used in the Connecticut massacre were legally registered to the gunman’s mother. As for Karachi, anyone familiar with Zulfiqar Mirza, Badin’s one-man answer to the NRA, could tell you that getting a weapons licence is directly proportional to the relevance of your turf war. How sickening that a home minister charged with protecting lives had to teach us that lesson.
The answer lies with seizing those guns in the first place and curbing subsequent access via the law. And the beauty of democracy, at least the Yousaf Raza Gilani/Raja Pervaiz Ashraf version we’ve been fed over the past four years, lies not in the authority of a military operation, but with the supremacy of parliament. Our lawmakers, comprised in no small number by Karachi’s principal stakeholders, must legislate across-the-board deweaponisation today and much harsher gun laws in the long run. With the body count having become meaningless in Karachi, this may sound more than a little idealistic. But the alternative, in all its grubby cynicism, is military operations or surgical Rangers’ strikes. And see how those worked out in the past.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 20th, 2012.
COMMENTS (19)
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My son growing up in Britain in the 70's was just appalled and shocked at the rise of the kalashnikov culture In Pakistan. In the UK gun law is extremely strict. Letting off a AK47 at weddings just seemed so incomprehensible from the perspective of a UK youngster. Little did he or I realize that this was just the beginning and Pakistanis will eventually be blowing themselves to bits.
Does it safeguard militias then? Seems to be a circular argument.
Asad Rahim Khan is spot on. Again.
Here's an article by Paul Craig Roberts that wud be of interest, Agenda Driven News: http://www.paulcraigroberts.org/2012/12/19/agenda-driven-news/
the 2nd amendment does not safeguard non militias. it would be stupid to say anythin different. the 2nd amendment is outmoded. it is democracy at its most fixed, not at its most beautiful. the beauty of democracy is the changeability of its ideals, not the set in stone nature of rules that break what they should protect
People need to fight the power, take the guns by force, listen to nothing. we can do this
In US gun violence in areas permitting legal gun ownership has the lowest rate of incidence, even lesser than UK and other ref'd places - Gun violence is highest where guns are banned. Schools in US do not allow for arms. With guns you have the real chance of defending yourself. Without capability for self defense, you are obediently ready to be murdered by a crazy.
Psychotropic drugs get no attention. It's over $350 billion per year industry. Every human emotion is now classified as a disorder. One wonders how much psychotropic drug use is prevalent in Pakistan.
While in the US you still need to have a license to own guns,in Pakistan its a free-for-all game.The numbers of those killed since the inception of Pakistan is mind boggling and yet there is no political or moral will to confront the problem.Its only the few, bold and educated women or men of letters who broach this subject in an article or two,a another few comment on them and then its trashed to history.The deafening silence of the populace is not hard to understand.The gun as epitomized in most parts of this land is a symbol of manliness and has become a part of the culture.Indeed the Bacha Khan generation that once professed to be a disciple of Gandhi is now proudly displaying this as their new symbol.In the rural areas, the gun is used to settle old scores and is so freely used that the civilized world would be shocked..While I will not take away the credit that such articles deserve I feel that the warriors using the pen bring in more consistency in their causes.We as readers need to lend them support rather than use these spaces for point scoring or for being petty minded.
Good article
author is spot on
@Roger, You don't understand that possession of Guns/Right to Bear Arms is the fundamental right of every single American. If the government takes away the guns, then the people are powerless and are subjugated to the will of the evil Globalist American government.The 2nd Amendment to the US constitution makes it clear that Americans HAVE THE RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS. Although, I feel very sorry for Connecticut victims, on the other hand I believe if the teachers/principals of the school were armed or had a gun the shooter wouldn't have caused so many deaths! THE ANSWER TO TYRANNY IS LIBERTY NOT MORE TYRANNY! Trust me I am an American citizen.
@MSS Don't think author was comparing the two, but making exactly the points you raised, and that Karachi is much worse, and that there needs to be the will to do it. I am not sure however as to whether the 'principal stakeholders' will agree on deweaponisation, when they are so clearly involved in the opposite.
Author makes a very clear point, that is an imperative - develop the will to tackle the problems of Karachi. However, the comparison between Karachi and the US as a nation is not valid. In the USA some indiviadulas, luntaics or sane, commit these mass murders. In Karachi, target killings are done for money, extortion, bhatta, politics, settling scores and violent resolution of property disputes. Karachi's problems are far bigger than USA. To make matters worse, if that was possible, no ministers or government agencies are even discussing the issue.
It is a miracle of history that the worlds leader, the United States, should have laws like these. What a cruel joke. Hope those children are in a better place