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I am part of the Sialkot lynch mob

Ali.009

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The brutal two-hour long lynching of two young brothers in Sialkot at the hands of a mob, inclusive of policemen and children is so horrifying that it truly merits the questions some visitors to The Express Tribune website have been asking:

Are these people animals?

Is this the true face of a nation so despicable that even God has forsaken them?

While I do not believe in the latter argument, I can understand where such a profound sense of grim despair comes from. In a country afflicted with back-to-back political and civil strife, war, terrorism, poverty and natural disaster, violent extremism (in all forms) is bound to flourish, nay become an outlet for venting the utter helplessness individuals feel at a personal level. And none of us are immune to its effect.

Those two boys in Sialkot were sacrificed (murdered) in the name of this national burden, and in an act which is no different than the public beheadings the Taliban carry out. In both instances we ask ourselves the same questions:

Are they human?

Are they Muslim?

Are they really Pakistani?

In the case of the Taliban, it has become easy to deny reality and answer no to all of the above. We can always turn to the process of dehumanisation, conspiracy theories, ethnic and racial prejudice or simply avoid the question and blame the system which perpetuates, prolongs and aggravates the problem i.e. the US War on Terror being fought on our soil. In such a scenario, we shrug off responsibility and blame either the US or the Taliban (our so-called political left and right stances) and relieve ourselves of the burden of examining the reality of the situation.

In the case of the Sialkot lynching, it is not as easy, because in such a scenario it becomes clear that we are our own enemy. However, the truly frightening aspect of this realization is not the acceptance of the fact that those boys beating their fellow human beings to a pulp are humans, Muslim and Pakistani – it is the far more serious question: if this is our true reflection, what is to be done?

The simplest solution and the most superficial is to pinpoint an enemy and punish them mercilessly in the hope that the problem will never rear its ugly head again. This is the defacto approach the US has taken with the Taliban and its equivalent is Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry’s edict demanding that the police be held accountable and that the culprits involved in the Sialkot lynching be arrested.

This is a necessary first step, but it is superficial because it does not address the totality of the problem, and if adopted in the long term, it turns into a farce. Just how many times will the Chief Justice have to take suo moto notice before we recognise that our champion of justice is carrying out near-futile ‘drone attacks’ against an enemy which is 170 million strong?

Yes, there have been thousands of opinion pieces generated from Pakistan which cite that ‘we are the problem’ but the message has not broken through the surface of our collective delusions yet. This is in part because the scale of the problem is seen in macro-level societal behavior (public lynching, beheadings, rape, murder, corruption and violence all-sorts) but springs from individual experience, beliefs and attitudes – and as we cannot relate to each individual (or various sections of our fragmented society), we distance ourselves from them by labelling them ‘evil’ or ‘the others’.

In order to address this problem, we can only plead to each other that a dialogue must begin to reshape our identity, and the first place it has to begin is within our own hearts and minds, where there is always a choice to be made – the one place we are not completely helpless, though we may sometimes feel that way.

Step two would be to turn our choices into action, and introduce change within all spheres, public and private. With holistic change in the thinking of an individual one can begin to hope for holistic change in society, and the strengthening of institutions will follow suit.

So let’s end the blame game. Let’s stop pointing fingers and saying the Taliban are to blame, we aren’t putting enough money into education, drugs are the problem, political parties are the problem, the elite are the problem, the police and the army are to blame, a global conspiracy is afoot; all of these are true, but there is only so much drones, money, policies and political reform can do without support from the public and more importantly, the values and attitudes which guide each person.

I will be the first to admit that I have made some terrible choices in my life, and I am part of the problem which results in a public lynching in my country, the violence perpetuated in the name of religion, the sad state of our education system, the ill treatment of women and minorities. It is not easy to see (or admit to) how these are all linked to who I am, but they are. I am part of that mob in Sialkot.

Let us also not be burdened by the guilt, but build off of it, else all the dead bodies, all the suffering and even our act of realisation will have been in vain. Despair is easy, hate is easy, apathy is easy, but for the sake of two brothers in Sialkot, we should try to change by effectively addressing the corruption within us. It is either that, or stand alongside the mob to watch on.
 
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Good article.

Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry’s edict demanding that the police be held accountable and that the culprits involved in the Sialkot lynching be arrested.

This is a necessary first step, but it is superficial because it does not address the totality of the problem, and if adopted in the long term, it turns into a farce. Just how many times will the Chief Justice have to take suo moto notice before we recognise that our champion of justice is carrying out near-futile ‘drone attacks’ against an enemy which is 170 million strong?

This is where I disagree with the author. I think an effective rule of law would greatly eliminate these kinds of incidents. Vigilanteeism thrives when people lose faith in the judicial system.
 
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Good article.



This is where I disagree with the author. I think an effective rule of law would greatly eliminate these kinds of incidents. Vigilanteeism thrives when people lose faith in the judicial system.


True there, i also believe that such incidents can only be stopped by STRONG and MUCH BRUTAL punishments, and all of them standing there should be punished equally, they all are freaking murderers! Hell!

Vigilantism thrives not when people loose faith, its thrives when people have no fear of the judicial system. Just look at the cops standing there, they are part of judicial system but people have no fear of them. People think they can do anything and get away with it. This god damn trend has to stop!
 
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Sialkot lynching: Roots of extremism run deep

I first heard the news on Facebook – I caught a friend ranting about a video of two boys in Sialkot getting brutally beaten to death in my feed. The internet has done its fair share of damage to most people’s minds morbid curiosity drove me to see what the video was about. It wasn’t exactly hard to find since violence has the potential for instantly going viral on the net.

The video depicts two kids getting beaten up by almost everyone that could fit into the view of the camera. Around the end, there is even what appears to be a 9-year-old child, who takes a shot at one of the wounded bodies. The video itself did not really affect me but what I found most disgusting is the train of thought that led to an instance of brutality that would put all of Fred Vogel’s filmography to shame.

Apparently, the two boys in question had gotten into a fight over a cricket match the previous day and just as they were headed out for another match after Sehri the following day, they were ambushed and once the townsfolk and the police noticed, the perpetrators blamed them for theft so they could get out of it. The police and townsfolk, in a fit of moralistic glory, decided they would let it continue and join in. The video probably originates from one of those knights of morality.

It is not hard to make random generalizations about the whole of mankind and philosphise that humanity has breached yet another boundary seeing how most people reacted to the video. Right there in the comments section on both Youtube and Facebook, I could see people questioning things like whether Pakistan deserved independence at all. Some people went as far as to chalk the recent floods up to our alleged immorality.

Although, I will refrain from making any meta-narratives out of this myself, I will say this; the video really does put things like the recent bombing of the Ahmadi mosque in Lahore and the tide of religious violence in Southern Punjab into perspective for us. We have always been quick to ostracise anyone that demonstrates the weakness of our perfect little world and branding the perpetrators animals will not solve anything. We need to own up to the fact that the perpetrators arose from amongst us.

As I mention earlier, we must consider the train of thought that led to the incident. With the media projecting on to people that all hell has broken loose and that there is no law, it is not surprising that people would react this way. The conduct and the subsequent images of the police does little to help things, of course. With popular religious opinion by people’s side, I think the perpetrators found good reason for subjecting the two “filthy dakoos” to divinely sanctioned justice. After all is said and done, as long as a majority of the country, willingly or unwillingly, shuns reason in favour of this extremist sense of morality and justice, it is likely we will see such a tragedy again.

Sialkot lynching: Roots of extremism run deep – The Express Tribune Blog
 
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Pakistan is on the path of disintegration where forigen power will neccisate its invasion or even nuking to save themselves from Pakistani originated ills. May Allah save us from Pakistanis is a prayed coming soon to your nearest mosque / church / synanouge / temple.

No one around there stopped or discouraged the shabby act of the barbarians. The two brother was killed on a cricket dispute. This is really alarming situation and a big question mark on Pakistan government and Pakistani police. What goes wrong to the police.

I am really ashamed to be a Pakistani.
 
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Disintegration my ***! All this so called disintegration can stop in just matter of 2 days! Its not hard to tame corrupt animals who call themselves humans. Someone just need to make an example of few people who committed this incident, including police officers, my idea is to burn them alive in the same spot where they murdered two kids, and burn them alive in mass public including everyone who watched it.

Do that and you wont see any god damn disintegration for next 500 years in this land again.
 
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Sialkot tragedy

Pakistanis have expressed shock at the brutal mob-lynching of two teenaged brothers in Sialkot last Sunday. But horrific as the incident may be, it did not come out of the blue.



Mob justice has been quite the norm, in Sindh, in Punjab and elsewhere in the country. The killings in Sialkot are a reminder that these murderers are getting more brutal, more dehumanised with each incident. The causes behind the madness that led to the lynching are still being probed. What is clear, however, is that the police were involved. Video footage of the incident shows policemen who seem to be part of the mob. The Supreme Court has taken notice of the double murder. The SHO ‘concerned’ has been arrested and a case registered against 14 people. The IG Punjab has suspended a few policemen in Sialkot and Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has also woken up to the situation. As he castigated the police the chief justice remarked: “What message have you given to the world about Pakistan?” One could say, with due respect to the judiciary, that the act would have been bad enough had it remained hidden from an international audience.

The agents who promote such despicable acts of violence must be identified. Those in the media must introspect and see how much they have contributed to the sense of desperation found among Pakistani citizens today, while the police must be taken to task along with rulers who encourage the law-enforcers and the general public to play judge and executioner. The very day newspapers reported the Sialkot double-murder, they also carried a news item about the awarding of the Tamgha-i-Imtiaz to the DIG Gujranwala, Zulfiqar Cheema, for “maintaining law and order”. The police officer, in whose jurisdiction Sialkot also falls, appears to do his job in a manner that is condemnable. There are serious allegations that under his watch people have been killed in encounters and their bodies paraded through the streets. When the state rewards such actions, it is actively creating conditions for incidents such as the one that took place in Sialkot. The state is no less guilty than the SHO who has been booked.

DAWN.COM | Editorial | Sialkot tragedy
 
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Is this person out of his mind ???:hitwall::hitwall: He too is far from being sensible.......after every 2-3 seconds he is using abusive languages......is that the way you protest ????
Shame on this guy !!!:disagree:

yes he is. if he is in Germany then he and his brother both are psycos .

they send trash abusive emails to people in Pakistan and also blackmail by posting as girls .


please Ali delete the link dont promote criminal psychos
 
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Pakistani Police needs an over haul

Training of new 200,000 police force is needed
Ideally Age 18-22

At Academy level Nationally - and then police officers are assigned randomly across country

Budget of 200-300 million dollars on polcie improvements

* Better Training along lines of Army training
* Better Education
* Better Salaries
* Adavce training continued training - on yearly basis
* Mandatory Martial Arts Education to create brave police force

Police equiped with proper Assault Rifles & Helicopter force to patrol
big cities

The present police force is ill equiped and ill trained for policing

Police Needs to be able to write up fines for
a) Improper car documentations fine 1000 rupees (Paid to GOP)
b) Improper writing on walls in neighbourhoods 1000 rupees (Paid to GOP)
c) Tour neighbour hoods if spot "kunda electricity choori" write fine of 2,000 rupees
d) Improper condition of cars or honking fine 1000 rupees (Paid to GOP)
e) Investigating , price hikes in food stores (under cover) write up fines

Police should operate to collect 100-200 million USD in fines/ year from violations
if they can't they are not doing their jobs
 
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Please put a ban on all feudal politicians simple as that.


Police specially in Sindh and Punjab is like a terrorist outfit always on payroll of feudal lords.

Jana..the feudal politicians are not on defence.pk for the Mods to put a ban on him.:lol:

Unfortunately it is us,the common man who elects these feudal politicians and we have only ourselves to blame. No one else.

Im posting this because the situation is India is also not very rosy ,though these feudal idiots are limited to only a few states and not a rule
 
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Jana..the feudal politicians are not on defence.pk for the Mods to put a ban on him.:lol:

Unfortunately it is us,the common man who elects these feudal politicians and we have only ourselves to blame. No one else.

Im posting this because the situation is India is also not very rosy ,though these feudal idiots are limited to only a few states and not a rule

I was addressing the circles in Pakistan who can do that.

Here in Pakistan these feudals are a shame for humanity.

This is not the first incident of its kind where these police pithus of feudals are killing innocent people
 
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