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COMMENT: The republic of fear Dr Syed Mansoor Hussain
It is this fear-based environment that allows the terrorists to work their evil so successfully. They realise that the safety and welfare of the average Pakistani is not really the major concern of the ruling elite
A few weeks ago I wrote in these pages that one of the major problems in Pakistan is a lack of respect. Respect for each other as well as that for institutions and this lack of respect even extends to how different institutions of state feel about each other. As I have thought more about it, it seems that what holds this society together is not respect but fear. Fear is what motivates most people as well as their actions in the present environment.
It might seem a stretch but the more I look at the situation in Pakistan, the more it resembles Thomas Hobbes state of nature where life as he described was solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short. Written more than 300 years ago, these words described a society where there was no rule of law. The enlightenment philosophers developed the notion of a social contract between the rulers and the ruled that eventually produced some order and predictability in the life of ordinary people.
Perhaps what we are seeing happen in Pakistan is the breakdown of this social contract if it ever indeed existed. A drive down almost any city street illustrates this point perfectly. The traffic is utterly disorganised and it is literally every man for himself. It is not respect for any traffic rules but fear for personal safety that prevents accidents. The same ethos pervades the rest of our society.
The great disappointment is that even with an elected government in place that supposedly governs by the will of the people, what we see is an ascendant feudal attitude. The ruled and the rulers are completely divided and those that rule us are imbued with the idea that they are superior and as such the laws that apply to ordinary people do not apply to them. As far as they are concerned the law is an instrument available to them to coerce people into complete subservience.
Pakistan is really governed today as it has always been by the permanent superior bureaucracy including the police forces. This is a gift to us from our former British masters. Before independence, the Indian Civil Service the precursor of the present day senior civil service ruled India and Pakistan in the name of the King Emperor and even though it had towards the end many native officers, these Indians were entirely subsumed by the ruling ethos of the superiority of the rulers and the inferiority of those that they ruled.
As far as the feudal classes are concerned they also thrive on the memories of the rights they were given during the times of the Raj when every feudal lord, big or small, could function literally like a monarch in his domain. Even though most of the royal states and big feudal estates have disappeared, that noxious ethos of inherited superiority still exists and has as a matter of fact poisoned the well of public life.
Almost any person who does well financially now takes on the airs of a feudal lord, lives with a retinue of subservient servants and drives around with a private army of armed guards. This includes many of our liberal elite as well as our maulanas the modern princes of the church.
The feudal ethos and the bureaucracys inherited disdain for the ordinary people now permeates society at all levels. Even our supposed representatives elected by the people, once elected, fall into this mind set. That many of them are descendants of the once ascendant feudals does not help the situation. As far as the rest of the people are concerned, the poor and the disadvantaged can expect neither any protection nor help from the powers that rule them and therefore essentially live in a world where fear is their daily bread.
It is this fear-based environment that allows the terrorists to work their evil so successfully. They realise that the safety and welfare of the average Pakistani is not really the major concern of the ruling elite and as such they can terrorise the people and the rulers will not really come down hard against them as long as they themselves are safe. Personal safety of our rulers is guaranteed by the retinue of armed guards that they surround themselves with and that also at public expense.
Often I have wondered what it is exactly that the terrorists want. There are the usual explanations. Some on the Left think that the terrorists want a truly Islamic society; others of a more conservative bent insist that the terrorists are really foreign agents bent upon undermining the existing order so that the Pakistani nukes can be taken over by infidels and this the bastion of Islam left at the mercy of marauding invaders.
The truth is probably simpler. The terrorists as well as their fellow travellers in the religious establishments are just taking advantage of the breakdown of the social contract to drive the proverbial wedge deeper into the existing chasm between the rulers and the ruled. Once all semblance of law and order disappears, society they hope will then descend into a state of chaos. And from this chaos will in their opinion arise a system that they will control.
Interestingly, in this precarious environment the two forces that can possibly pull us back from the brink are the Pakistani army and the superior judiciary, two institutions that do not have a very pristine past. But in the present situation, the army is for all practical purposes totally committed to fighting the terrorist threat and the superior judiciary seems to have finally woken up to its responsibility as the arbiter of the rule of law.
If these two institutions continue to perform their appointed functions then the previously ineffectual civil society can perhaps find the gumption to reinvigorate the social contract and restore the right of all Pakistanis to be treated as equals under the law. But then, if wishes were horses...
Syed Mansoor Hussain has practised and taught medicine in the US. He can be reached at smhmbbs70@yahoo.com
It is this fear-based environment that allows the terrorists to work their evil so successfully. They realise that the safety and welfare of the average Pakistani is not really the major concern of the ruling elite
A few weeks ago I wrote in these pages that one of the major problems in Pakistan is a lack of respect. Respect for each other as well as that for institutions and this lack of respect even extends to how different institutions of state feel about each other. As I have thought more about it, it seems that what holds this society together is not respect but fear. Fear is what motivates most people as well as their actions in the present environment.
It might seem a stretch but the more I look at the situation in Pakistan, the more it resembles Thomas Hobbes state of nature where life as he described was solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short. Written more than 300 years ago, these words described a society where there was no rule of law. The enlightenment philosophers developed the notion of a social contract between the rulers and the ruled that eventually produced some order and predictability in the life of ordinary people.
Perhaps what we are seeing happen in Pakistan is the breakdown of this social contract if it ever indeed existed. A drive down almost any city street illustrates this point perfectly. The traffic is utterly disorganised and it is literally every man for himself. It is not respect for any traffic rules but fear for personal safety that prevents accidents. The same ethos pervades the rest of our society.
The great disappointment is that even with an elected government in place that supposedly governs by the will of the people, what we see is an ascendant feudal attitude. The ruled and the rulers are completely divided and those that rule us are imbued with the idea that they are superior and as such the laws that apply to ordinary people do not apply to them. As far as they are concerned the law is an instrument available to them to coerce people into complete subservience.
Pakistan is really governed today as it has always been by the permanent superior bureaucracy including the police forces. This is a gift to us from our former British masters. Before independence, the Indian Civil Service the precursor of the present day senior civil service ruled India and Pakistan in the name of the King Emperor and even though it had towards the end many native officers, these Indians were entirely subsumed by the ruling ethos of the superiority of the rulers and the inferiority of those that they ruled.
As far as the feudal classes are concerned they also thrive on the memories of the rights they were given during the times of the Raj when every feudal lord, big or small, could function literally like a monarch in his domain. Even though most of the royal states and big feudal estates have disappeared, that noxious ethos of inherited superiority still exists and has as a matter of fact poisoned the well of public life.
Almost any person who does well financially now takes on the airs of a feudal lord, lives with a retinue of subservient servants and drives around with a private army of armed guards. This includes many of our liberal elite as well as our maulanas the modern princes of the church.
The feudal ethos and the bureaucracys inherited disdain for the ordinary people now permeates society at all levels. Even our supposed representatives elected by the people, once elected, fall into this mind set. That many of them are descendants of the once ascendant feudals does not help the situation. As far as the rest of the people are concerned, the poor and the disadvantaged can expect neither any protection nor help from the powers that rule them and therefore essentially live in a world where fear is their daily bread.
It is this fear-based environment that allows the terrorists to work their evil so successfully. They realise that the safety and welfare of the average Pakistani is not really the major concern of the ruling elite and as such they can terrorise the people and the rulers will not really come down hard against them as long as they themselves are safe. Personal safety of our rulers is guaranteed by the retinue of armed guards that they surround themselves with and that also at public expense.
Often I have wondered what it is exactly that the terrorists want. There are the usual explanations. Some on the Left think that the terrorists want a truly Islamic society; others of a more conservative bent insist that the terrorists are really foreign agents bent upon undermining the existing order so that the Pakistani nukes can be taken over by infidels and this the bastion of Islam left at the mercy of marauding invaders.
The truth is probably simpler. The terrorists as well as their fellow travellers in the religious establishments are just taking advantage of the breakdown of the social contract to drive the proverbial wedge deeper into the existing chasm between the rulers and the ruled. Once all semblance of law and order disappears, society they hope will then descend into a state of chaos. And from this chaos will in their opinion arise a system that they will control.
Interestingly, in this precarious environment the two forces that can possibly pull us back from the brink are the Pakistani army and the superior judiciary, two institutions that do not have a very pristine past. But in the present situation, the army is for all practical purposes totally committed to fighting the terrorist threat and the superior judiciary seems to have finally woken up to its responsibility as the arbiter of the rule of law.
If these two institutions continue to perform their appointed functions then the previously ineffectual civil society can perhaps find the gumption to reinvigorate the social contract and restore the right of all Pakistanis to be treated as equals under the law. But then, if wishes were horses...
Syed Mansoor Hussain has practised and taught medicine in the US. He can be reached at smhmbbs70@yahoo.com