Abu Zolfiqar
Rest in Peace
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i can't, in a sober state of mind, even dub this an article. It's prose.
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are the indians still denying that the perpetrator of the Samjhota train blasts included active indian army personnel? These were links which Hemant Karkare (who was 'conveniently' killed during the mumbai whole mumbai drama) was working to uncover.
Exactly. And because of that, if not successfully challenged it will remain after all the articles in the world have crumbled to dust.i can't, in a sober state of mind, even dub this an article. It's prose.
Exactly. And because of that, if not successfully challenged it will remain after all the articles in the world have crumbled to dust.
Pakistan hasn't handled it well at all. In the absence of demonstrable improvement at home, I guess your ambassador is wise not to even try.well i think Pakistan has handled it pretty well -
Pakistan hasn't handled it well at all. In the absence of demonstrable improvement at home, I guess your ambassador is wise not to even try.
Pakistan hasn't handled it well at all. In the absence of demonstrable improvement at home, I guess your ambassador is wise not to even try.
You have been impaled upon the horn of Abu Zolfiqar's sophistication, unicorn. Hitchens' article has nothing to do with nuclear security, the expression "goes nuclear" referring to his writing as an expression of anger. It was AZ who purposely confused this (once he found his position indefensible) with nuclear security itself.Talking about handling nukes from you makes me laugh.You should give some prove instead of writing just two lines dumbo.
You have been impaled upon the horn of Abu Zolfiqar's sophistication, unicorn. Hitchens' article has nothing to do with nuclear security, the expression "goes nuclear" referring to his writing as an expression of anger.
Pakistan (as noted in Grace Wyler's excellent interview with CFR's Daniel Markey) is expanding its nuclear arsenal rapidly. The fear is that one of those weapons will end up in the hands of terrorist organizations, which will in turn detonate one of those weapons in London or Berlin or Washington or New York.
Read more: Pakistan: a failed and treacherous state
It was AZ who purposely confused this (once he found his position indefensible) with nuclear security itself.
You may take this lesson to heart as an example of how easily and cynically Pakistanis are manipulated by their "betters".
PAKISTANIS trying to retain their pride despite daily developments in the country should read writer Christopher Hitchens’ latest article about Pakistan with caution.
He describes our country as paranoid, self-hating, duplicitous and “permanently mendicant” — and that’s when he’s being gentle. Elsewhere, he suggests that Pakistan is mired in self-pity because it has nothing to be proud of given that it is “virtually barren of achievements”.
This contention deserves to be challenged.
Contrary to what Hitchens argues, Pakistanis are incurably proud and patriotic.
Even those who no longer approve of the country’s trajectory will leap to defend it when pressed. This adamant pride can be blamed in part for the nationwide state of denial that is contributing to Pakistan’s current litany of woes — as a nation, we are just not hardwired for introspection and self-critique.
Not surprisingly, then, after the miseries of May — from OBL to PNS, retaliatory attacks and point-blank murders — the Pakistani blogosphere was littered with positive posts about those aspects of Pakistani society that one can still pride in. Adil Najam, blogging at All Things Pakistan, posted one of the more compelling versions of such a list.
He thinks the following phenomena should help Pakistanis sleep better at night: innovative and socially pertinent music; the vibrant, if freewheeling media; an activist youth; endless reservoirs of resilience that have helped the nation overcome natural disasters and the IDP crisis; and an awakening sense of responsibility for Pakistan’s problems, and less readiness to blame foreign hands for all that goes awry.
To Najam’s list I would add the revolution in the telecommunications sector, the growing numbers of women in the workplace and a strengthening culture of social entrepreneurship (Najam sees social entrepreneurship, along with philanthropy, as a manifestation of Pakistani resilience; I believe it is a trend that deserves emphasis in its own right).
List the abovementioned positive developments to hardened cynics such as Hitchens and they will guffaw. In their estimation, these evolutions are feeble and irrelevant in the face of Pakistan’s daunting problems: terrorism, water scarcity, economic kamikaze, endemic illiteracy, poor governance, etc. What can a few pop stars do to reverse Pakistan’s downward spiral?
Meanwhile, nitpicky analysts and journalists (such as myself, in previous columns) will take apart each of the positive developments, showing that things are not as rosy as they first seem. Coke Studio may have helped Pakistani popular music hit the high notes, but the rest of the industry is flagging.
The same can be said of the telecom sector: while the number of cellphone subscriptions in Pakistan hit the million mark last year, the industry has reached a saturation point. According to the Economic Survey of Pakistan, the industry contributed Rs2.5bn less to the national exchequer in 2010-11 than the previous year.
This may be true, but it detracts from the game-changing propensities of positive developments. Trends listed here have soft power, but they also have profound political implications.
The independent media is an obvious example. Created by the military establishment to help counter the reach of Indian programming, the industry has become a linchpin of Pakistani democracy. News programming has helped depose dictators, support an independent judiciary and generate public support against extremist violence.
More importantly, the media has initiated the national conversation we’ve been trying to have since our inception. In its own frothing-at-the-mouth way, it is addressing the existential questions at the crux of Pakistan’s socio-political problems: how should religion and the state interact? What role should the army play in governing Pakistan? What is the true extent of Pakistan’s geopolitical vulnerability?
Like the media, the music industry is helping to mobilise the public; songs increasingly carry political messages, and lyrics offer recommendations for social development. When the world thinks that Pakistan deserves a second chance (whether in the form of an economic lifeline, or the decision not to declare the country a terrorist state), it is responding to the images of what ought to be as projected by our musicians, artists and filmmakers.
Working women, for their part, have arguably evolved the Pakistani state’s sense of social justice. There has been a renewed commitment towards women’s rights by passing a bill against sexual harassment. More importantly, the powers that be are increasingly reluctant to see an Afghan Taliban regime reinstated in Kabul, realising the ramifications that would have on Pakistani society, and on the freedoms women enjoy in particular. Perhaps inadvertently, the increased presence of women in the public sphere is making Pakistan a better neighbour.
The telecom sector has played its part too. Access to improved communications technology has spurred cultures of entrepreneurship and revitalised the rural areas. It has also helped empower a justice-seeking citizenry: just think of the many human rights violations, from extrajudicial killings to floggings in Swat and mob violence that have been captured and circulated via camera phones.
The point is, there is little to be gained by undermining or ignoring the achievements Pakistan can boast. These should not, however, exacerbate our ostrich-in-the-sand reactions to the worsening security and political situation. Pakistanis should instead see the far-reaching implications of economic and cultural initiatives and double their efforts to have an impact.
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