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In an angry neighbourhood
Posted by Shyema in Featured Articles, Pakistan
10 20th, 2009
Weve been making people very angry lately. Not that Id like to call Pakistan the bad guy in any scenario but lets face it, we need to acknowledge the fact that weve been seriously ticking off our neighbours lately.
India and Pakistan have had a bitter relationship since the big breakup but the Mumbai attacks made things even worse. India keeps wanting us to hand over the bad guys, we keep asking them to handover the evidence and basically nothing gets done. Rehman Malik appears on our television screens looking frazzled but trying very hard to keep a calm face while he insists that Pakistan is doing everything it can obviously India doesnt think so. In fact India is not even willing to resume peace talks with us and why should it? Didnt we just dismiss the charges against Hafiz Saeed, the alleged mastermind of the 26/11 attacks?
Switch over to the other side and youve got angry Afghans asking us to stop facilitating the various Taliban factions. Afghanistan continues to accuse the ISI for aiding the Taliban and hence suicide attacks across the Durand Line are often blamed on foreign elements and we all know what they mean by that dont we? Granted Pakistan needs to continue its hard work to wipe-out these militants but in these troubled times, showing a bit of compassion to the neighbour would be nice too . We are still home to some 1.7 million Afghans arent we? And not that Im trying to perpetuate this blame game, but please do note that an Afghan national was involved in the attack on the Manawan police training school in March. However, it is only the Pakistanis who get all the fingers pointed at them.
As if pacifying these two neighbours wasnt enough, now we have a semi-steaming Iran too. Iran accuses Pakistans involvement in the bombing on Sunday, which killed more than 40 people. The statements given by Iran regarding the Jundallah group which it holds responsible, were followed by reaffirmations of good ties and brotherhood between the two nations necessary sugar-coating or sincere understanding between the two nations?
As this blog goes up, a blast erupts in Islamabads Islamic University. Comments after comments received on various blogs highlight the same idiom as you sow, so shall you reap. About time we move on from that rhetoric, no? Although we cannot forget and disconnect from acts of terrorism abroad which are blamed on Pakistan, we must also focus on the casualties we ourselves are suffering day after day. Our government continues to pacify the neighbours, US continues to condemn everything going down and our innocent citizens keep dying day after day. No doubt our A-team comprising Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Rehman Malik and the rest are trying very hard to address everyones concerns but cant our neighbours take Chinas cool silent stance for a bit while we try and sort things out? Or would that be asking for too much we are neighbours after all arent we?
Posted by Shyema in Featured Articles, Pakistan
10 20th, 2009
Weve been making people very angry lately. Not that Id like to call Pakistan the bad guy in any scenario but lets face it, we need to acknowledge the fact that weve been seriously ticking off our neighbours lately.
India and Pakistan have had a bitter relationship since the big breakup but the Mumbai attacks made things even worse. India keeps wanting us to hand over the bad guys, we keep asking them to handover the evidence and basically nothing gets done. Rehman Malik appears on our television screens looking frazzled but trying very hard to keep a calm face while he insists that Pakistan is doing everything it can obviously India doesnt think so. In fact India is not even willing to resume peace talks with us and why should it? Didnt we just dismiss the charges against Hafiz Saeed, the alleged mastermind of the 26/11 attacks?
Switch over to the other side and youve got angry Afghans asking us to stop facilitating the various Taliban factions. Afghanistan continues to accuse the ISI for aiding the Taliban and hence suicide attacks across the Durand Line are often blamed on foreign elements and we all know what they mean by that dont we? Granted Pakistan needs to continue its hard work to wipe-out these militants but in these troubled times, showing a bit of compassion to the neighbour would be nice too . We are still home to some 1.7 million Afghans arent we? And not that Im trying to perpetuate this blame game, but please do note that an Afghan national was involved in the attack on the Manawan police training school in March. However, it is only the Pakistanis who get all the fingers pointed at them.
As if pacifying these two neighbours wasnt enough, now we have a semi-steaming Iran too. Iran accuses Pakistans involvement in the bombing on Sunday, which killed more than 40 people. The statements given by Iran regarding the Jundallah group which it holds responsible, were followed by reaffirmations of good ties and brotherhood between the two nations necessary sugar-coating or sincere understanding between the two nations?
As this blog goes up, a blast erupts in Islamabads Islamic University. Comments after comments received on various blogs highlight the same idiom as you sow, so shall you reap. About time we move on from that rhetoric, no? Although we cannot forget and disconnect from acts of terrorism abroad which are blamed on Pakistan, we must also focus on the casualties we ourselves are suffering day after day. Our government continues to pacify the neighbours, US continues to condemn everything going down and our innocent citizens keep dying day after day. No doubt our A-team comprising Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Rehman Malik and the rest are trying very hard to address everyones concerns but cant our neighbours take Chinas cool silent stance for a bit while we try and sort things out? Or would that be asking for too much we are neighbours after all arent we?