Terrorists Hit Lahore with a Suicide Attack: We Must All Take This Personally

Posted on January 10, 2008
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Politics, Society
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Adil Najam

Militant suicide bombers brought their mayhem and murder to Lahore today. The well-planned terrorist attack has left at least 26 people dead and some 70 injured.

Suicide Blast in Lahore Pakistan

Suicide Blast in Lahore Pakistan




According to Dawn:

A suicide bomber blew himself up among police outside the Lahore High Court building Thursday, killing at least 22 policemen and 4 civilians, and wounding over 70 others, minutes before a planned anti-government protest rally of the lawyers latest reports said.

“There were about 60 to 70 policemen on duty when a man rammed into our ranks and soon there was a huge explosion,” said police officer Syed Imtiaz Hussain who suffered wounds to his legs and groin. TV footage showed at least four mangled bodies on the ground close to a destroyed motorbike and a piece of smoking debris. The blast fired shrapnel as far as 100 meters away. It also shattered windows in the court house and set off volleys of tear gas shells carried by the police, witnesses said. Lahore’s chief of police operations Aftab Cheema said the bomber had run up to a barrier manned by police and blew himself up. He said 20 policemen and two civilians were killed. More than 70 others were wounded, including civilian passers-by, officials said. “It was a suicide attack,” Lahore police chief Malik Iqbal told Dawn News TV adding that 22 policemen died in the attack. He said police were “definitely” targeted.

An Associated Press photographer at the scene of the attack saw the severed head of a man with long hair and beard, possibly that of the suicide bomber. Police constable Jameel Ahmed said the attacker was a man aged about 25 who had arrived outside the court building on a motorbike. “He parked his bike and walked up to the police and blew himself up,” Ahmed said. Police bomb disposal experts estimated the bomb contained up to 14 kilograms of explosive. The police had been deployed in front of the court premises ahead of a weekly lawyers’ protest against the sacking of Supreme Court judges in November. The rally had been due to start about 15 minutes before the bomb went off. About 200 lawyers were inside the High Court at the time of the blast, and others were marching from a nearby district court.


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Given that the seat of the government and the military lies here and also the upheaval in the wake of the Lal Masjid crises, the epicenter of much of the militant suicide bombings in Pakistan, until recently, was the twin cities of RawalpindiIslamabad. I have deep emotional attachments to both. I was born in did much of my schooling in the other.Karachi, of course, has been cursed with near unending bouts of violence for much longer. This roshniyoun ka shehr that holds such a special place in my heart and that of other Pakistanis, and where I lived for a number of years as a schoolboy, has been cursed with violence in ways that pain the heart deeply. Aisee nazar laggi hai kay maar he dalla hai! Other places from the once scenic Swat to the frontier towns of Quetta and Peshawar – whose bazaars I have roamed so frequently and authenticity and vigor of whose sounds and smells and feels I am so very fond of – have also been the victim of this wave of violence and death that has descended on our country.

But Lahore, as they say, is Lahore. I guess it was. Lahore is always dearest to me not only because of my own roots in the city but also because it hosted me through my wonderful University days there. It is not that Lahore was unfamiliar to political violence and murder. Far from it. But it has not been in the cross-hair of these suicide murders like many other places were. Now it is.

I have gone through my own connections to all these place as a form of catharsis for myself, but much more than that because even if I sit far away from them today, I take each of these attacks personally. I can feel the hurt, and feel – quite literally – like screaming out in pain. These attacks are not just attacks on cities and people in cities that I am fond of. These are attacks on the principles that I stand for, the ideals that I wish for, and the aspirations that I hope for. These are attacks on me. On my Pakistan. On my Pakistaniat.

I fear that there are too many of us who have internalized the violence. This is “how things are.” We have made ourselves “get used to it.” We have depersonalized the pain. Someone else died; somewhere else. Sad, but life must go on. We have made ourselves numb to the destruction and in the process legitimized the violence of the terrorist with the argument is that somehow the violence was done to make a point.

But that is the point. Violence is never an argument. It is a verdict. There is nothing more pitiful than a society that “gets used to” violence. I fear that this is exactly what is happening to us.

I realize that I have gotten a little carried away in my emotions here. But, maybe, we should all get carried away in our emotions now and then. I know that the hurt and the pain I feel is not just my hurt and pain. It the hurt and pain of far too many Pakistanis. For many it is much much more than my own because they have to live the hurt and pain every day in the neighborhoods they live in.

Maybe we should all take this personally. Maybe we should all not just feel the outrage but express the outrage. And do so without the violence and without the mayhem that the terrorists express their own outrage in. We as a people have to learn somehow to express our hurt without feeling the need to hurt someone else.

Violence feeds not only on the anger of those who are violent, but also on the silence of those who are not. We must not remain silent in the face of systemic violence.

76 responses to “Terrorists Hit Lahore with a Suicide Attack: We Must All Take This Personally”

  1. JMA says:

    “Keep the zinda dilli of lahore alive by ensuring that this does not happen again in Lahore”

    Well said but how we do this…..we must get rid of all who are so determined to destroy Pakistan including the Bhutoo family, Nawaz and all other crooks and most importantly the Islamic extremists who are so called muslims killing their own…no where in Islam it says to kill inocent people….get rid of all these and we will have peace
    The most important think we can do is to educate our people so they can tell the difference between right and wrong and not try to elect the same crooks who will never do any thing good for Pakistan

  2. Khuram says:

    Lahore terror attack should be taken personal by all Lahories and resolve to get to the bottom of it.If it was so easy to eradicate this bane, then perhaps by now it would have been dead.No one in his comment has given any remedy.Stop pitying yourself and start to act by ensuring to suspect everyone around you.It may be your new neighbour who is a potential perpetrator.Get out of this habit of expecting the “government” to do all.It can do nothing unless it has ears and eyes in every street and house. Keep the zinda dilli of lahore alive by ensuring that this does not happen again in Lahore.

  3. Parvez says:

    Zia, you are right about Wajihuddin interview, I fully support his points about rule of Law.
    Let me caution those who propose that killing this group or that group would solve the problem. Any state that kills its own people without legal process and justification will not stand for long. GOP has been doing this for six years and it has not improved law and order. Army should back to defending the borders and internal security should be given to provinces and local governments.
    I don’t think it is going to turn around even with elections.

  4. zia m says:

    Just listening to Justice Wajihuddin gives me hope and pride.
    Please visit pkpolitics.com to listen to his interview.

    Long live Lawyers movement.

  5. meengla says:

    1) I think, as today’s Dawn editorial http://www.dawn.com/2008/01/12/ed.htm hints at, unless we take full account of foreign factors (which, to me, is not exclusively blaming foreign elements) we will be ‘beating around the bush’ discussing tragedies like in Lahore. In this connection, I think ATP is perhaps all-to0-Pakistaniat.
    2) The “we” here assumes a coherent thought-process which would agree on major issues. The only coherence I see even in this highly-respectable (by Pakistani stadards) blog is to ‘kill the mullah’ while we a lot of us remain divided on major issues. To some because Ayub Khan’s era saw a lot of progress/development that is enough to approve of him. Sadly, the reality is that between 1969-1971 there is only a 2-year period where A. Khan’s ‘decade of development’ unravelled–blame for some of which must lay on A. Khan himself; this leads me to #3
    3) Politicians are almost universally reviled; as are lawyers. But if we look around the globe we see that in most countries of the world these two kind of people are the one who are running countries. Despite their faults, a democratic process that ‘lesser evil’ of less obviously ‘corrupt’ politicians are brought as replace, if nothing else than at least being fresh blood. But in Pakistan, since 1977, the army led establishment has managed to convince even highly educated Pakistanis to condemn ‘politics’ itself. General Zia ul Haq not only made Pakistan a ‘client State’ for foreigners, bred the Jihadis which are haunting us, but also managed to de-politicize Pakistanis. His remarks like ‘Politicians are nothing but dogs who will come to me if I throw a bone to them’ (paraphrased) manages to reverberates through the informed blogs like these.
    4) There is another Pakistani ‘Defence’ site online where, no less than a Moderator, is hoping for a ‘bullet’ or ‘suicide’ attack for Asif Ali Zardari for Zardari’s remarks that Pakistan cannot survive without achieving peace with India. Yes, this is an example of our ‘educated class’ which is not satisfied with BB’s murder.

    Long Live General Zia!!!

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