One has to take with a very large pinch of salt the statement by Special Assistant to the Chief Minister on Culture Sharmila Farooqi that the provincial government would take “stern action” against banned organisations, including the ASWJ. The culture minister is all talk and little action. The term equally applies to the federal government and the much-trumpeted National Action Plan (NAP), which has evolved into a look-busy-do-nothing exercise populated by a proliferation of committees. As Mr Nasir commented after his release, allowing the ASWJ or any other banned organisation to openly carry out political activities is a violation of the law. It is, and unless and until the governments, both federal and provincial, decide to grow a spine and don the trousers that go with the job of responsible governance, they can expect little but derision and contempt. The attack on the Army Public School on December 16, 2014 was supposed to be a watershed moment, and the detention of Mr Nasir and others tells us just how wrong that perception is.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 7th, 2015.
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