Pakistan Elections 2008: Awam Express Has Arrived

Posted on February 28, 2008
Filed Under >Deeda-e-Beena, Politics, Society
20 Comments
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Deeda-i-Beena

Pakistan election 2008They were always there but nobody gave them any recognition. They waited patiently and long for their day and at long last when it arrived, they acted. Quietly they arrived in their millions, got their thumbs inked and had a line marked at the edge of their thumb-nails. They went into the privacy of the polling booths, stamped the symbol of their choice, performed their sacred duty and left as quietly as they had come. What each of them did as an individual, aggregated into a colossus.

The results we are now witnessing are not the result of any plan or a grand design. Simply put, they all thought like-mindedly and voted to that focus. By not giving any one party the run of the place, they have also created their own system of checks and balances – each keeping an eye on the other. With the maturity they have displayed this time; their message to their elected representatives and the political parties is loud and clear: “We will be watching.” Hopefully there will be a next time for them.

Carefully scrutinising the print media and TV coverages of people lining up to vote in the February 18th election revealed that a certain class of people were absent. Talking to scores of our “like-minded / looking” confirmed that many of them did not bother to vote. That is not to say that all of them were absent. This election their excuse was fear and security but for their preferred reasons they never vote any way. With a degree of pride, I have heard them also say that no one deserves their vote. Often enough they donot bother even to register as voters.

Amazingly the elite hiding behind euphemisms are now extolling what they as the so called “civil society” and the newly created category – “the stake-holders” – have accomplished. Who would like to stand for hours in long lines among all these Awam, await their turn and Vote in the cause of democracy so dear to us?

No one is giving credit to those, whom in a condescending if not disparaging manner we have been calling Awam. Yet it is these Awam who came out in multitudes and accomplished what we, the elite only talked or wrote about.

Another disappointment in the cause of democracy was very low showing in voting of the group of youth. The lowering of voting age to 18 years has not translated into enlarging the vote banks and the parties made little effort to encourage, reach out and include them. Add to that the miserable showing, even in some areas in the country, discouragement and banning of female voters. These factors must be added to the explanations being given for the low voter turn-out.

Let us look at these photos as a mirror and face the facts. Do we really see in these droves a reflection of ourselves?

What brought out the Awam in such numbers and a clear focus, that they could, in one fell sweep remodelled the entire dynamics of the system? When George H.W. Bush lost to Bill Clinton It was said: “It is the economy stupid.” Who can imagine this complex and sophisticated economics would be so clearly simplified and acted upon by these Pakistani commoners. Several factors could be cited for reaching that clarity, to name just two. Firstly, they were hurting in their pockets for long but did not come out on the streets and waited. Secondly, the proliferation of TV media played a pivotal role in creating an awareness and understanding of the issues. Let us remember they may not be literate to benefit from the printed word like us but, they can watch and listen and God has given them a brain to comprehend.

In this and other forums, I have often asked who “the Awam?” is I have also asked here on this Blog “Am I an Awam” and no one has so far responded. Is Awam the same as “the People” in Urdu? If so, then “We the People” would translate into “We the Awam” OR “Hum Awam” By accepting that it would eliminate the virtual Caste system that we sub-consciously practice all the time and in all our inter-actions with “Them.” And do we really wish that to happen?.

20 responses to “Pakistan Elections 2008: Awam Express Has Arrived”

  1. Pervaiz Munir Alvi says:

    Deeda-i-Beena: I take your questions ‘who the Awam is’ & ‘am I an Awam’ are rhetoric in nature. Right? You and I both know ‘who the Awam’ is. In Pakistani context Awam is group of population that does not belong to ‘Khwas’. You are Awam when you have to stand in line to buy a ticket and Khwas when you send your driver to stand in line to buy the ticket for you. And better yet; you are Khwas when the booking clerk comes to your house to deliver your ticket. And you are ‘Super Khwas’ when you need not to buy the ticket at all; your seat is left open for you till you get there. Have you never heard of VIP & VVIP. So why should Khwas stand in line like Awam. I am sure you have heard of ‘our poor Awam’. Have you ever heard of ‘our poor Khwas’? For Khwas it does not matter who gets elected. Khwas gets what Khwas wants no matter who the area MNA is. So why should Khwas stand in line and vote. Remember elections are for the Khwas; voting is for the Awam.

  2. Eidee Man says:

    “as they say, the worst democracy is better than the best dictatorship”

    Absolutely. People like Jamshed need to understand that those of us who are happy with the election (for the most part) are neither wholeheartedly endorsing previous track-records of PPP and PML-N, nor predicting that they will zap all of our problems away with a magic wand.

    The messy work of democracy needs to be given a fair shot, without any military intervention. If the victors do not deliver, the very same awam will once again go to the polls and kick them out with the same passion…they will keep doing that until they find something that works, provided they are allowed to. It’s not the most efficient system, yet it is the best system we know of. Consider Nawaz Sharif, just on the one-point promise of restoring the judiciary, he went from having no chance to gaining healthy second place…apparently a strong judiciary IS important to the awam.

    I am extremely perturbed when people from our “educated” elite classes imply that the awam does not have the capacity to figure out what is good for them….it’s funny how the same elite has welcomed military dictatorships, EVERY SINGLE TIME.

  3. Deeda-I-Beena.

    An excellent and a timely post, you are so right in lauding the great awaam of Pakistan. I echo your sentiments and wrote a post titled Pakistan Zindabad as my tribute to the awaam, please have a look (scroll down using link below)

    http://www.otherpakistan.org/archive.html

    Feimanallah

    Wasim

  4. umar says:

    as they say, the worst democracy is better than the best dictatorship! let democracy run and watch how it cleanses itself and produces better and cleaner leaders over time; this is the beauty of democracy.

    i am proud of the awam, especially nwfp, they way they have voted and taught the failed leaders a lesson! ANP must now prove what it is capable of, so should pml-n and pppp!

  5. Paki says:

    Awam is the one used to win elections but later forgotten.

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