However, in keeping him in harness, the people of Pakistan have paid a terrible price. I can’t remember a period when so many Shias have been the victims of targeted killings, an apocalypse of war-mongering bloodlust, while the army has stood by detached, as if the events were taking place in another country. We have all been told that it is the president or the prime minister who gives the nod to the army to counter an insurgency. But as long as Saudi Arabia fights Iran on Pakistani soil, with the apparent acquiescence of the government, the carnage is likely to continue. I always naively believe that it was the duty of the Pakistan government to protect its citizens, whether they are Shias, Sunnis, Christians, Hindus or Parsees, not just the diplomats and the freeloaders in parliament. If they can’t do so, they have no business being in power.
I remember that day almost five years ago, when I was driving down Clifton Road, minding my own business. The window panes were up, the air conditioning was on and the music system was playing an aria from ‘Tristan und Isolde’. Suddenly, a Cruiser, crammed with fierce-looking guards, armed to the teeth pulled up alongside and drove my car off the road. ‘Allah be praised’, I said to myself. ‘Democracy has come to Pakistan’. Since that date, I’ve seen hundreds of Cruisers that have instant right of way, the gradual escalation in the price of essential commodities, totally unjustifiable deficit financing, worsening crime statistics and an orgy of ethnic killing. So when Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf keeps repeating the cliché that Pakistan has a bright future, perhaps he knows something that I don’t.
I would be unjust if I said that the peoples’ government had not done its bit in the field of food production and providing shelters for the poor. Laws were also passed for women protection, but nobody appears to be pushed to implement them. But all this is meaningless when the people are fearful for their lives, when the prices of commodities are increased every fortnight and nobody seems to give a damn. Unless the government can reintroduce the Rule of Law, protect the minorities and change the mindset of the people, we will continue to float on an unchartered ocean.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 27th, 2013.
COMMENTS (4)
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Very well written Moraj Sb
"what the Brits would have described, as native cunning, a quality without which it is difficult to make any headway in the murky field of Pakistani politics.emphasized text Some Pakistanis may not be happy but your above statement says it all about the characteristic of Pakistanis. The leaders who were not the master of this Pakistani quality have been killed or failed.
True, but problem with the world is that brainy people are full of doubts, while the stupid and relgious fanatics are full of confidence. I am for democracy because it is stll better than big talks of 'nation' savers witth no mendate..
If only wishes were horses, this artful dodger has done everything but govern. The litany of charges against him and his corrupt sycophantic followers, are probably longer than the old Grand Trunk Road, and growing. The problem is nobody is putting forth credible alternatives. Maybe if the author was listening to "When I am laid in earth (from "Dido and Aeneas"), soprano aria (Dido's Lament)", he may have reconciled himself.