Guest Post By Irum Sarfaraz
If the current situation in Pakistan is a source of concern for the rest of the world in the sense that it is increasing the already existing instability of the country, chances are it is less so for the 165 million in the country. For Pakistanis the current martial law translates into the instability of the past decade coming to a head. The martial law imposed by Musharaff is nothing new to a country used to living under military dictatorship; what is new is Pakistan’s current status as the most volatile ‘sitting bomb’ on the face of the earth.
According to Newsweek Oct. 29, 2007 cover story, ‘Where the Jihad Lives Now’, ‘Today no country on earth is arguably more dangerous than Pakistan. It has everything bad guys could ask for: political instability, a trusted network of radical Islamists, an abundance of angry young anti-Western recruits, secluded training areas, access to state-of-the-art electronic technology, regular air service to the West and security services that don’t always do what they are supposed to do’. If this wasn’t enough just add a devious, confirmed nuclear program to the explosive concoction and the world has a global concern on its hands that deposes Iraq, Afghanistan and Iran in its ratings for potential disaster.
Martial Law is ‘been there’, ‘done that’ for Pakistanis. For more than half of Pakistan’s history, the country has been ruled by military dictators with Musharaff the fourth ruler to seize power from a civilian-led government. The excuse for every Martial law has always invariably been that corrupt politicians were endangering the security of the country. At this particular juncture in Pakistan’s history however the security of the nation was already in peril before Musharaff’s martial law with the stamp of the ‘sitting bomb’ on it by the West. Pakistanis aren’t so foolish as to deny that the real threat is that this label of extremism is what is going to sink it, whether it is under the martial law or under any other democratically elected government of Musharaff or Benazir or anyone else. At this point there is no obvious solution to the extremist issue that has developed like a formidable disease over the years from the ‘inherited’ catastrophic Afghani genes that sunk the neighbor Afghanistan. So at this point, who cares about a Martial law when war, civil or external, is imminent? It might seem a very pessimistic view but unless even the pessimistic sides of the picture are acknowledged, they cannot be fixed. One might ask why now with this particular martial law would Pakistanis be suddenly concerned with the issue of national security, particularly from external elements? The answer is not too complicated. The US had given Musharaff, and Pakistan in retrospect, much leeway due to his full cooperation in the ‘war against terror’. Much as the majority of Pakistani resented the interference of the West in the internal policies of the country they were forced to, even if resentfully, acknowledge that keeping the US happy helps to keep the charade of security running. With Musharaff suddenly changing gears by imposing Martial law, the US and its allies are suddenly not so thrilled anymore. It would be hard to imagine how under the development of these severely dissatisfying circumstances, the US would be still be willing to let this charade continue. Musharaff had taken on the dutiful job of searching out Bin Laden and had reassured the West that the task would be handled satisfactorily. With Musharaff running in reverse gear now, who is going to take over the role of the dutiful pet? Much as the truth hurts, the US just might decide to complete the job itself that Musharaff got sidetracked with in his ambitions to continue his rule by imposing martial law. The martial law is not the ultimate calamity here; it just might be that proverbial last nail in the coffin or the straw that broke the camels’ back.
Then the question why these concerns now if the county is as used to martial law and political instability as evident from it history? Pakistan is a weak nation still struggling to get properly on its feet even 60 years after independence from India, insomuch as being declared a ‘failed state’. It is at the top of the second annual, ‘Failed State Index’ list compiled by The Fund for Peace and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The definition of a failed or failing state according to the index is ‘one in which the government does not have effective control of its territory, is not perceived as legitimate by a significant portion of its population, does not provide domestic security or basic public services to its citizens and lacks a monopoly on the use of force. The status of Pakistan being a failed state poses more an issue for the people within the borders as that is the one prime weakness that opens all doors for outside elements to strike to free themselves of any fears that they face from Pakistan, whether it is India forever adamant to resolve the Kashmir issue or whether it is the US and its allies trying to seek out Bin laden and to douse the storm of extremism in the area. The current upheaval in the ‘constitution-less’ country makes it an easy target for a wide range of external elements to gain ground. The current state of rebellion, chaos and disorder in the country is the result of already present internal elements such as the militant Islamist groups originally recruited, trained and armed by Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI). These groups are now considered Islamabad’s deadliest enemy nearly succeeding twice in assassinating Musharaff who used to among their strongest supporters. Pakistanis are used to these internal ‘anarchists’. It is the external ones they dread and this current state of political upheaval leaves the country ‘free for all’.
Critics claim that any hope for Pakistan out of its present situation is a swift return to an elected government and the return of the army to its barracks by taking into account the history of bitterness of the people repressed and betrayed by the unaccountability of the former military dictators. Though for these critics the only solution out of the present quagmire is to embrace democracy and a politics governed by the priority of meeting the long denied needs to the people, it needs to be realized that it may be too late for all these fairy tales.
Pakistan is no longer an isolated island in the middle of nowhere the problems of which can be fixed by clear cut solutions such as offered by ‘democracy’, ‘elected government’ and ‘ousting dictators’. Pakistan is a sitting bomb with its pin half out, ready to explode in the face of Washington. Pakistan is an issue to which half the world is demanding urgent solutions as it is jeopardizing their own safety and placing their security in peril. Needless to say, the current Martial law is the least of Pakistan’s worries at this point
About The Author: Irum Sarfaraz is a free lance writer from California.
Photo Credits: Title photo is by Abro
How to take a holiday in Pakistan
By Hugh Sykes
BBC News, Pakistan
Suicide bombs, battles in tribal areas, and states of emergency tend to put off casual tourists. But the impression such events convey can often be misleading and unrepresentative of a country as a whole. A few days ago I was sitting in a cafe sipping best Italian espresso and reading a news magazine. The front page was full of furious faces and clenched fists under the headline, The Most Dangerous Nation in the World isn’t Iraq, it’s Pakistan.
The cafe was in a smart bookshop in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. I sighed and turned to the article inside.
It was a revealing analysis of some penetration of a few places in Pakistan by the Taleban and al-Qaeda. I pondered the magnifying-glass effect of dramatic news coverage. The suicide bomb attack on Benazir Bhutto’s homecoming parade in Karachi in October, which killed an estimated 140 people, and the assault on a Taleban pocket in the Swat valley, a tourist destination, took place while I was in Pakistan. But neither event had a noticeable effect on the general sense of security and stability where I was in Islamabad or on the road.
The notion that Pakistan is more dangerous than Iraq is absurd.
Until recently suicide bombs, murder, and kidnapping were routine in Iraq. And there is no way I would do there what I have just done in Pakistan: take a holiday. Never alone I hired a car in Islamabad and headed out onto the partially completed M2 motorway that will eventually connect Lahore (near the Indian border) with Peshawar (the last city on the road to the Khyber Pass and Afghanistan). But motorways are boring, so I left the M2 and re-joined the ancient Grand Trunk Road, which links most of the main towns of northern Pakistan. For much of the route it is lined with eucalyptus trees, their almost-autumn leaves and silvery bark shining in the clear October sun as I drove along. Driving in Pakistan is fast and sometimes chaotic, but not competitive. They even hoot politely. And one great danger at home you hardly ever have to contend with in Pakistan is drunk drivers and people with concentration blurred by hangovers. My destinations were Chitral, an isolated valley in the far-north-west on the Afghan border and Gilgit, close to China and Tajikistan.
The round-trip was more than 1,200 miles (nearly 2,000km) and included mountain passes almost half as high as Everest. And although I was driving alone, I was hardly ever on my own. There is public transport but not a lot. So, people walk long distances along these high stony roads and if a car passes, they hold out a hand hoping for a lift. One morning, 12-year-old Kashif sat with me for a while. He had been expecting to walk for more than an hour to the nearest town, to buy a new pair of shoes. He showed me the pair he was wearing. The right shoe’s upper was half split away from the sole. Kashif spoke almost perfect English, good enough to warn me as we turned a tight bend, “Be careful, uncle, road badly damaged round next corner from earthquake.”
Earthquake damage from 2005, still unrepaired. I spent the night at a hotel next to the old fort at Mastuj, near the snowy Hindu Kush peak Tirich Mir which is 7,690m high (25,200 feet). The hotel consists of small timber and stone cabins set in a wood of walnut trees and poplars and a plane tree reputed to be 200 years old. I woke to autumn colours every bit as wondrous as anything I have seen in Kew Gardens or New England. My next hitch-hiking companion was Mohammed, an English Literature student at Peshawar University. “So you study Shakespeare?” I asked. “Yes, and Wordsworth.” And John Donne, I wondered? “Ah, John Donne,” he raptured. “John Donne… the poetry of love.”
I do not know any Donne by heart but when I attempted Shakespeare’s Seven Ages of Man from As You Like It, Mohammed completed every line as we bumped along the dusty road. Parts of Pakistan are deeply conservative, devoutly Muslim places, and I was not signalled for lifts by many women. But there were some. A mother and grandmother, sitting in the back, their heads covered but not their faces and one-year-old Anis and his father Samir in the front with me. He protested when I took a photograph of the two women but they did not object and posed happily as they waited for the flash. When I delivered them to the Gilgit hospital where the little boy had an appointment with a heart specialist, his father was so pleased and grateful he gave me a bear hug, and a massive smile that erased his earlier stern objections to taking a picture. I gave lifts to more than 20 people, learned how to say “You’re welcome” in Urdu (Koi Batnahi), and had to hold back tears when two children said thank you for their lift and offered me money to help pay for the petrol. From Our Own Correspondent was broadcast on Saturday 10 November, 2007 at 1130 GMT on BBC Radio 4. Please check the programme schedules for World Service transmission times.
Story from BBC NEWS:Published: 2007/11/12 16:26:32 GMT
Its getting hot here !!
Iram,
An interesting article, you touch on important issues vis a vis extremism and our heads in the sand attitude and response to it. Much of the problem is that as a nation we are not on board with the struggle thanks to the division Mush has created.
I value your efforts even though you have been lambasted for them due to the Newsweek links, yet you have tried to provide a spotlight to key issues, lets create an ‘other’ Pakistan, see how you can help at http://www.otherpakistan.org/archive.html
Feimanallah
Wasim
“Persona non grata est”
-this standing is being used by some about Pakistan, referring to Pakistan as a person.( by some it regards `some few institutions` amongst some Western countries).
Due to Pakistan having gained access to nuclear capability (read; nuclear arsenal), they want to have `control` over
Pakistans sovereignty. – As if Pakistan is not able to be a good boy/girl in the class .
I do find it relevant that Irum Sarfaraz has heighlighted the fact that “some” find it unappropriate, to such an extent, that they are able to work for an agenda by which they can achieve `their`mission. …….Just hope it is MISSION IMPOSSIBLE for those forces from abroad.
Thank You Iram `Jee for this article.
Harvard Law School ‘Medal Of Freedom’
http://www.law.harvard.edu/news/2007/11/13_pakista n.php