Another Dark Day, But Hope Persists

Posted on May 13, 2007
Filed Under >Fawad, Politics, Society
179 Comments
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Guest Post by Fawad

The details emerging out of Pakistan are still somewhat sketchy but some facts are clear; more than 30 people are dead and over 115 injured. The Chief Justice of Pakistan was unable to address the Sindh Bar Association and was forced to go back to Islamabad and the private television station Aaj TV, which has been in the forefront of covering pro-judiciary and anti-Musharraf protests, was attacked by armed gunmen. This is indeed another dark day in the checkered political history of Pakistan.

It is now well past time for the Musharraf regime to go. This government has now lost the last shreds of moral authority required to govern. I salute the men and women of the civil society of Pakistan and the courageous independent media who are leading this struggle for the supremacy of the law and freedom of expression at grave risk to their life and limb.

As tragic and sad as events in Karachi are, this political moment is of historic import for the people of Pakistan and even on this day of darkness I see some hope for a better future. Since the sacking of the CJP on March 9th, the heroic struggle of the lawyers has germinated greater democratic desire and decisively strengthened Pakistan’s civil society and its beleagured independent media.

In the face of relentless governmental coercion there have been heartwarming displays of peaceful resistance, none more evident than in the historic journey of Justice Chaudhry through the heart of Punjab. Those in Pakistan and abroad who desire an eventual constitutional democratic polity rooted in a rule of law have to be encouraged by these developments. The conclusion of this episode, however, remains highly uncertain because no political sagacity can be expected from those who have brought us to this pass.

This grassroots peoples’ movement has also forced the politicians of all hues to make a choice; they either stand on the side of the rule of law or for the perpetuation of a dangerously unstable, one-man military banana republic. Mainstream politicians (despite all their historical shortcomings) clearly seem to grasp the national mood and the King’s men who are standing up for the present dispensation to save their personal fiefdoms will hopefully pay a steep price whenever they face the electorate in a fair election.

MQM more clearly exposed itself today than it ever has in its sordid history (thanks to private TV channels). The party that started with great hopes, rooted in the educated middle classes has over the years just become a collection of vicious thugs. It is wielding its fascistic tactics on behalf of people who seem to believe they have a divine right to perpetual power and who originally nurtured this party as a counterweight to PPP. MQM has shown itself the mirror image of the worst of MMA; both groups want people to acquiesce to their ideologies by force. Neither believes in nor has any fundamental respect for a constitutional rule of law.

Pakistan stands at a critical juncture as it has so many times in its unfortunate 60 year independent history. I would urge all Pakistanis and their well wishers to lend thier support to the struggle of Pakistan’s revitalized civil society. Let’s hope that the forces of peaceful democratic activism led by the country’s courageous lawyers ultimately emerge victorious and we can close this latest chapter of the military’s recurring era of authoritarian and unconstitutional misrule without further human suffering.

Fawad is a California-based literati-at-large and writes the blog ‘Moments of Tranquility,’ where a version of this was first posted.

179 responses to “Another Dark Day, But Hope Persists”

  1. Waheed says:

    If Imran is the best bet you have, then you have no bet.

  2. Kruman says:

    [quote comment=”47575″]tut tut , why does it have to end in a bout ?
    that is our typical mentality , make two teams , watch them fight , applaud for the winning side , but when it wins , cry foul and smell a conspiracy theory.
    Why cant we for once fight for Pakistan and its betterment and survival ?
    by the way… all this media freedom, musharaf govt bashing , politician interviews, live coverage of events like lahore/karachi rallys etc … due to the liberal policies of the present regime.
    Gentlemen …Round one to Musharaf !![/quote]

    Musharraf summons the CJP in the GHQ and in the presence of other generals tries to bully him into resigning! What else do you call it if not an assault on Judiciary? Yes it is a fight for the supremacy of law in Pakistan against a corrupt, callous and a conscience-less establishment led by the COAS. Except for the cadres of Altaf Hussain’s terrorists and naive observers the entire nations is backing the CJP.

    Round one to Musharraf, for a shameless and a malafide act. Even Zia, Yahya and Ayub couldn’t have done it better!

    As for life after the dictator, suffice to say that let the judicairy be independant and let there be free and fair elections. It will be the dawn of a new bright beginning where the law and constitution will be supreme, not a corrupt general.

  3. IMRAN says:

    Let me try to get this back to the real topic please.

    I think the author is right. These are signs of hope. The change is that things that Musharraf coudl earlier get away with (for example, Bugti) he cannot get away with now. That is the real hope that people are speaking up.

  4. Zakintosh says:

    Have no intention of continuing the debate here because I am really scared now that Omar R. Qureshi has threatened to ‘expose’ my profession (especially since I am now gainfully unemployed) … but this line from Michael Moore’s latest mailing was just dying to be quoted here.

    Speaking about his latest movie, Sicko, he says, “… no laws were broken. All I’ve done is violate the modern-day rule of journalism that says, “ask no questions of those in power or your luncheon privileges will be revoked.”

  5. Fawad says:

    From today’s Daily Times:

    CJP crisis adds to pressure on media

    http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007 5\18\story_18-5-2007_pg7_9

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