The most important clearly is the situation in Iraq where the ISIS has taken over much of the Sunni majority provinces bordering Syria, largely because the population of the area feared Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki’s persecution more than they feared ISIS domination of the area. It is probable that the ISIS will not be able to take Baghdad as Iraqi Shia militias answer the call of Grand Ayatollah Sistani to defend Baghdad and to stop the ISIS advance.
What seems certain, however, is firstly, a new round of sectarian killing — perhaps, worse than anything Iraq has experienced in its chequered history of sectarian relations — will tear Iraq apart. Secondly, strife-torn Iraq will not be able to maintain its current level of oil production. Thirdly, regional players — Iran, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and others — will be drawn into the battle and each will seek material and moral support from the rest of the region. Each of these has consequences for Pakistan.
Pakistan’s already fragile economy, stuttering to recover and having to sustain the financial requirements of Operation Zarb-e-Azb, will face a fresh financial crisis as Brent oil prices, having gone to $113 per barrel, climb further. The obvious response must be to impose fresh taxes on those who can afford to pay but if this does not happen and we have to go out with a begging bowl, then we may find it difficult to maintain our traditional political stance of neutrality in intra-Muslim disputes. It will be a situation requiring extremely astute and delicate handling.
On the internal political front, we will have to guard against the efforts of the regional players to make us, as they did with the willing cooperation of our religious leaders during the Iran-Iraq War, the secondary battlefield for the inter-sect battle in Iraq. If we are to genuinely tackle, as part of the Zarb-e-Azb operation, terrorism of every colour and hue and if adequate preparations have been made perhaps, the worst consequences of this can be avoided.
Today, stories about the Muslim world that dominate the headlines are horrible. The ISIS claims the massacre of 1,700 members of Iraqi forces captured during their advance towards Baghdad. The Al Shabab from Somalia is being held responsible for the slaughter of some 48 Kenyans in a Kenyan coastal city with a subsequent attack resulting in another 22 deaths and some women being abducted. The Boko Haram in Nigeria and its abduction of 270 school girls, who, the Boko Haram leader says, will be sold in slavery, continues to be in the news.
All this feeds into the growing alarm in the West that Muslim citizens of countries like the UK, US, France, Denmark and others are participating in the Syrian conflict, serving largely in the ranks of such extremist organisations as the ISIS or the Jabhat al-Nusra. What will they do on their return? In these countries, all Muslim citizens will find themselves under additional scrutiny and despite the safeguards the legal system may provide them, they may find their employment opportunities and their ability to maintain the flow of remittances to their country of origin being limited. This, too, will have an impact on Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves, which are inordinately dependent on remittances.
So far, we have had little public reaction to the systematic attacks by Buddhists on the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. Now there is news that a similar attack has been launched on Muslims in Sri Lanka in which at least three were killed and 78 injured while the police stood by watching. The Muslims in Sri Lanka’s affected area have said that their lives have been changed forever and a Muslim member of the Sri Lankan cabinet has denounced his own government’s inaction.
Difficult times lie ahead. We have to contend not only with our own problems but we have to guard against the impact that developments elsewhere will have on us.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 19th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (11)
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My question alway is where is the weapons and money trail, where are these things coming from in Iraq and Syria ?I hear even a small country like Denmark muslim youth is being recruited to fight in Syria right under the noses of the authority how can that happen? So far as Pakistan is concerned Well lets see what happened by the year 2015
A very good description of what is happening in the Middle East. Sir, Pakistan is the ultimate prize for all the Jihadi's because they covet its nuclear weapons. You must be having some ideas about those financing the mayhem in Syria and Iraq. Those same governments have a lot of influence on Taliban / Al Qaeda in Pakistan, putting the country in grave danger. Pakistan has the terror infrastructure, trained terrorists and a massive support network for them within Institutions. While greater numbers may be dying in Syria and Iraq today, we know where the terrorists are going once they leave those countries. The years Pakistan has taken to make up its mind in confronting the terror machine could come back to haunt the country.
Muslim world? What an illusion? What a misconception? Wherever there are Muslims, there has to be nothing but PEACE. Wherever there is conflict, violence, deaths and destructions, Muslims are simply not there. So live in your fools' paradise as you wish. The reality will never change. When there used to be Muslims they will always win. Win by winning hearts and minds through their heart waming and winning habits. Among the Lord's edict is "Thou shalt not commit murder". "Thou shalt not steal". We see theives and murderers all around every where in the world. The humankind is in for a very rude awkening on the day of reckoning. The day of Judgement. Until then live in your fools paradise and accumulate repulsive deeds.
Iraqi citizens perceive ISIS as foreign terrorists invaders. They are getting united against ISIS to protect their country. Najamuddin sahab seems to be influenced by the western, Arab and Pakistani media who is projecting it as Sunni-Shia fight whereas it is not and more and more people around the world are getting to know this. Talibans (another Al-Qaida linked group) are killing shias in Pakistan does not mean there is shia-sunni war going on in Pakistan. They are simply anti-state elements. Iraqis living in the UK are protesting against state funded BBC for their irresponsible and factually erred coverage of the events in Iraq. State funded BBC and other western media is giving legitimacy to militants from the al-Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) by terming them Sunni rebels while in reality they are primarily made up of foreign fighters from across Europe and the Arab world.
Banarsi : What in my post is hatred to you. I have questioned a concept called "Muslim world" and hope they come out of this concept.
Hmm: the world would've been more peaceful if there weren't any humans
@vasan: You really hate Muslims. So much hate boiling inside you.
World would have been peaceful in the absence of muslims .
When are we going to realise that the "muslim world" happens to be a part of a common and shrinking 'world' available to all humanity? The earlier we do this the better for us.
If we keep worrying about the "muslim world" only, the whole world will keep treating us as those not of their concern. We may be Muslim, but we are human first. Aren't we?
Good presentation; helps readers understand the big picture well.