Adil Najam
The frustration and anger that one finds in the comments on the Emergency imposed by Gen. Musharraf in Pakistan is mirrored everywhere. In every conversation one has with any Pakistani anywhere. I was in Pakistan till last weekend and this pent-up feeling of frustration was evident in every conversation even before the Emergency was imposed.
It is, of course, a complex feeling emanating from the complex dynamics of our complex politics. At its very core, however, is the burning desire to be able to “do something” about what is happening made all the intense by a sense of helplessness about exactly what it is that we as citizens might, in fact, be able to do that might make a difference.
Since Saturday every conversation I have had with Pakistanis ends in exactly this question. What can we do? I have an in-box full of emails asking me to sign a petition, attend a meeting, say this or that to the media if I speak to them, join a protest, pass on a message, do this or that on ATP, join a conference call to plan a strategy, send out notes to my contacts, and so much more. There have been call after call from friends and acquaintance many of whom not even Pakistanis who just want to talk and share the intensity of their disgust at how the events are unfolding.
Of course, at the basest level doing anything - anything at all - has a cathartic effect and makes one feel that at least we did not do nothing. But the desire to do something is more intense. The desire not to just be a spectator to history. The desire to have contributed something, somehow. As one watches the heroic struggle of the lawyers, and now the students, to stand up and speak out - despite the brutality they are met with - makes this desire even more intense.
We each do what we can. We speak out to the media (I have had more than a dozen media interviews and comments already, we give talks (I have been giving multiple talks on this a day), we send out messages of support to those on the front lines in Pakistan to let them know that they are not alone, we sign petitions, and above all we hold hands in solidarity and vent our feelings where ever we can - on blogs, on phone calls to friends, in gatherings. All of this helps some, but one keeps wondering if it really makes a difference to the big picture?
Even if it is not, it is clearly worth doing. But can more be done? What? How? We would like to hear from our readers on that. Please let us know what is already happening as well as suggest what more could happen.
Are there to many petitions going around; so many that they might lose their efficacy? Are some of us crossing the line between that which is anti-Musharraf and that which is anti-Pakistan? Even if they mean the same thing, strategically would a message that is pro-constitution, pro-democracy, pro-Pakistani resistance be better than one that is anti-individual? How can one best support those lawyers and students and others who are on the front-line of action, especially those who are not physically there? What, if any, are the dangers of focusing our attention too much of external actors rather than those in Pakistan itself? How does one explain to the media and policy-makers abroad that the events we are seeing is not the failure of a nation (the Pakistani people) these are the failure of a person and a particular government? (I personally have been saying to friends and to the media that I remain bullish on Pakistan and bearish on Musharraf).
These and many others are the questions that boil in ones head. There must be other questions too. Share these with us, but more importantly point us towards answers. Share with our readers what you are doing. How others can help. What should be done.
Note to commentors: My own views on the subject have been pretty clear and I feel no compulsion to either defend them or amend them. While I consider thsi emergency an anti-Pakistan and anti-Pakistani act, I do not doubt the patriotism or integrity of those who disagree. Pakistaniat is based on the premise that there can be, have to be, multiple views and they all must be respected, even when we disagree with them. Those of us who resent the emergency because it has tried to silence certain voices cannot then silence or disempower those who disagree with our views.
I say all this because over the last few days we have had to moderate out too many comments. More, in fact, from people we might agree with than those who we do not. One realizes that the moment is tense and passions are flared, but we stand committed to implementing our comment policy as best as we can. We have moderated, and will continue to do so, not because of content but because of infringements of our comment policy. We are, and will remain, especially careful about inappropriate language, personal attacks, inflammatory and disrespectful tactics, uncivil and slanderous language, and irrelevant diatribes. Please help us in not moderating your comment out by resisting these things. (And, please stop sending us notes about why you can misbehave because someone else did; we try to catch these things as best as we can and even if we miss them sometimes that does not give others a liscence to misbehavior). We remain committed to having a civil discourse and no matter whether we agree with you or not, no matter if you are an old friend or anew acquaintance, we will do our best to maintain that civility. If and when we feel that we are unable to do so, we are more likely to just close down the blog then to give in to people’s tantrums and badtameezi.







































I am in Karachi and there is very little happening. There was only one protest at the Press Club and that ended before it even started.
Please, tell me who is organizing action in Karachi? The students of LAhore and Islamabad put us Karachiites to shame
I fully agree with Ayesha Sajid…The only innocents in Pakistan are the ones who have no involvment in politics.Sadly they just like me ,have become complete cynics.I am amazed at the amount of Pakistanis who support these Political parties with incredible zeal.They are all guilty of incessant greed and complete disregard for the common man.A den of thieves!
When Benazir wants the average man to protest ,where is Asif Zardari, Where are the Sharif Family ,surely on or two can muster the courage to go out and protest as they want the rest of us to do.WHAT WE CAN DO TODAY AS PAKISTANI’S TODAY IS CHANGE OUR THINKING and stop believing in these demagogues.Stop believing in cults of personality.
Please also have a read of my latest post titled’ Musharraf the movie’ available now at http://www.otherpakistan.org/archive.html
Feimanallah
Wasim
Come on people, let’s be realistic here. What earthly difference does Musharraf declaring a state of emergency actually make? So what if democracy is derailed? Did any one actually think if Benazir Bhutto were to become Prime Minister anything would change? Have we forgotten her last two stints as PM? And the less said about Nawaz Sharif, the better.
I agree completely that Musharraf has been a massive disappointment but having him as President is certainly no worse than having Benazir or Nawaz as PM. Now, if someone was to suggest that Gen. Kiyani ask Musharraf to step down, kick out BB and NS permanently (or better yet jail them for corruption) and install a ‘caretaker’ govt a la Moeen Qureishi for 2-3 years, that would get my support.
I agree with Nasar and Ayesha Sajid on most of their observations about the actors in the current crisis. Still, I feel Musharraf has let us down. He should have handled this situation better without having to resort to this martial law.
The current crisis may in the end turn out to be generated by forces that want to force Benazir upon the Pakistani people without any of us realizing what happened. If things keep on the current path, she will have a land slide victory in the polls.
Regardless of all that, the government has wronged and it needs to be pressurized towards restoration of normalcy. I talked to my family in Lahore and Islamabad. They haven’t seen any signs of protest anywhere. At work and amongst friends they see no signs of any discomfort with the government. So, for the moment it seems the protests are limited to lawyers (stamp paper pimps), and the cable media.
It is a confusing situation if there was any
Asia Society is pleased to announce a special Emergency Town Hall Meeting on the Crisis in Pakistan – to take place Thursday 11/8 at 8:30 am eastern. The speakers include Robert Templer of the International Crisis Group, Saeed Shafqat of the Centre for Public policy and Governance, and Daniel Markey of the Council on Foreign Relations—all of whom recently returned from Pakistan. By teleconference we will have Asma Jahangir, Chairperson, Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and Advocate, Supreme Court of Pakistan; Awaz Amir, columnist with DAWN; and Pakistani lawyer Zahid Jamil. Najam Sethi, chief editor of The Friday Times will hopefully join as well. Details are included in the attached document.
For those who can not attend, plan on listening via live webcast on http://www.asiasociety.org starting at 8:30 AM ET. Internet listeners will be able to ask questions and offer comments via email during the webcast, by emailing moderator@asiasociety.org.
To join the webcast simply go to http://www.asiasociety.org just before 8:30a where you will see a prominent “live webcast” link. You can also go to http://asiasociety-live.streamguys.us/live.m3u (you will not hear anything until the event actually starts).
Archive audio from this event will be available On Demand on Asiasociety.org shortly after the event ends.
The thing is our politicians are not trustworthy. They were given more then 10 year but they brought the country to the bankruptcy. Musharraf must be given more time. One must remember that every nation has some bad times. And this is bad time for Pakistan. If Musharraf isn’t there it will be very hard to manage Pakistan at this time.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/thestatewithin/about/
A must see to understand what may be going on.