Moving onto Secularism ! If by it a complete disassociation of religion from politics is implied...then I'm afraid we can't do that because we're Muslims. And certain injunctions are made incumbent upon Muslims when they constitute a community with enough a presence to justify a political voice. Those injunctions, depending upon one's interpretation, range from everything like Family Laws to Laws of Inheritance to the formulation of a Financial System in which Ri'bah is taken out of the equation etc. Pakistan, as I have understood it to be, wasn't supposed to be a Secular state but a religiously and legally plural state with complete impartiality in its Governance....which is to say that unlike a Secular state where one cannot table a resolution in the Parliament with a religious connotation i.e a resolution demanding the formation a committee to formulate a Financial System that conceptualizes and institutes an alternative to the Ri'bah riddled one that we currently do have with the raison detre of the resolution being because Islam prohibits Ri'bah, would be unconstitutional. The religious and legal pluralism implies that there will be no discrimination on the basis of religion and one may have their own religiously derived family laws. The impartiality implies that because a Muslim has the prerogative of tabling a religiously inspired resolution in the Parliament then so shall a Hindu, a Sikh, a Christian etc. and that the President and the Prime Minister of the country will be eligible for election on the basis of his competency, patriotism and his adherence to the ideology of the State (i.e Pluralism and Impartiality) not on his religious affiliations. In essence what Pakistan was supposed to be was a democratic state with freedom for all and favours for none and that the Muslim Majority will exist by virtue of their numbers to safeguard our Muslim Ideology ! In my understanding of Jinnah, I found this to be the most suitable explanation as to why he talks about equal rights and obligations for all on one hand and yet mentions over and over again on how the vast majority of us are Muslims and we must evolve a system of our own as per our Islamic Ideology, on the other hand !
Frankly, Pakistan hasn't achieved an iota of what it was supposed to be but Secularism, in my humble opinion, would be taking a step-back ! We should instead aspire towards Pluralism and Impartiality as Jinnah wanted us and the preservation of Islamic Ideology as Iqbal wanted us whereby Ijtihad (or Human Reasoning to form a legal opinion) would be conducted by the Parliament to reinterpret Islam in the light of Human Evolution and the changing dynamics of the world we find ourselves in.
However the current woes of Pakistan aren't because of the religiosity or the secularity of the State because most of our laws are a hybrid of the two and provide more than enough of a working framework to run the country successfully. The reason why it isn't going so well is because of a collapsing system of Governance because of unbridled corruption, nepotism and war ! And besides Secularism or Islamism aren't a bunch of magic wands whose one flick would put everything else in order as soon as we adopt either...take care of the Governance and the rest will take care of its self ! So...talking about whether Pakistan should be more Secular and less Religious or the other way around is just a moot point because, to use a generic example, neither religion nor secularity condones the ill-treatment that is meted out to that widow who stands hours in the line, at the bank near my place, to collect her deceased husband's pension...something that is lawfully hers !
Just my two cents !