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The Diaspora’s Duty

VCheng

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from: The Diaspora’s Duty | Blog | DAWN.COM

The Diaspora’s Duty
by Waris Husain on January 20th, 2012


Some Pakistanis living overseas, belonging to the Diaspora community, are working tirelessly to import the democratic principles of their new-found homes to Pakistan. However, there are also those in the Diaspora community who either continually support military dictatorships or propagate conservative religious ideologies for Pakistan. These Pakistani migrants seem to mirror the words of Marie Antionette when she was informed that the French people were dying of starvation. “Let them eat cake,” is their mantra; as some in the Diaspora community stand silent when the democratic regimes or minorities of Pakistan suffer attacks from tyrannical bigoted forces.

While many have studied Pakistanis living in the Middle East and the conservative ideologies they imported back home, little has been said about the great number of Pakistanis living in Western democratic societies. With over 300,000 individuals of Pakistani origin living in North America and two million in Europe, and four billion dollars in remittances each year, one would think that there would be a similar exchange as with Mid-east migrants. However, many members of the Western Diaspora have not imported back ideals of secularism and democratic rule because they are “foreign to Pakistan.”

One could explain the imbalance of ideology imported from states like Saudi Arabia rather than the US by stating that Mid-east nations share an Islamic faith with Pakistan, rather than the ‘God-less’ secular West. However, in terms of sociology, the West has far more akin to Pakistan’s heterogeneous society than the Arab states of the Mid-East. One can compare the problems of Los Angeles with its race-based gangs to Karachi’s ethnic strife far easier than the issues of Riyadh.

However, many will reject any comparison between Pakistan and the US as impractical, because Pakistan is third world nation while the US is an imperial power. The US, despite popular opinion, cannot be described as one imperial blob, but rather a society divided by race, class, and other factors. Thus, within both the imperial power and third world nation exists a similar multitude of religious and ethnic minorities, who are all striving for the same rights.

A major difference between the Western world and Pakistan is the legal protections afforded to minorities that guarantee them safety and equality. There are hundreds of cases of racism against Muslims and Pakistanis living in Western countries. However, there are constitutional amendments and courts that actively prohibit discrimination and protect the right of all citizens to practice their religion openly.

The same cannot be said for Pakistan’s religious minorities who are brutally murdered or shamed in public without any type of actionable legal recourse. Last week, the church and homes of a Lahori Christian community were bulldozed by the Punjab Government without any care for the fact that Christians have long faced abuse in Pakistan. Asia Bibi still sits in a jail due to her religious beliefs and unsupported claims that she committed blasphemy. Ahmedis face a similar treatment as they are not permitted to call themselves Muslims according to a constitutional provision.

While the Shias, Ahmedis, Christians, and Hindus of Pakistan may be in the same numerical position as Pakistanis living overseas, there is little correlation between the rights each is afforded by their government and society. And while all these injustices continue to take place, there is little public discussion about these issues amongst the Diaspora community.

The other regressive element supported by some overseas Pakistanis is the nostalgia for military dictatorship. In recent months the chorus of pro-military Pakistani Diaspora members has reached a fevered pitch. This subset of the Diaspora community claims that Pakistan’s politicians are all corrupt criminals, and that the men in khaki are the only proper stewards of the country. Their words are a gross display of insensitivity to the thousands of voices silenced by Pakistan’s military dictators.

Further, since individuals are living in the West, they will never face the bullets or batons of military dictatorships. Thus, their prescription that military rule is the only one that will work in Pakistan seems hypocritical. One can agree that Western nations have given greater powers to their intelligence agencies and militaries in the era of terrorism, but all these institutions are subservient and pledge allegiance to their democratic orders.

The same cannot be said for the Pakistani military, which has perfected the art of sabotaging and brutally murdering democratic forces in the nation. Thus, the undying support of Pakistanis living abroad for the military as the only “guys that can get it done,” disregards the shadowy work of the Army and its intelligence agencies.

Not only are many oblivious to the backhand deals of the military, the rise of satellite televisions now beams conservative news networks 24/7 into Pakistani living rooms across the world. The more the media continues its siege on the Zardari regime (as it has done with every civilian regime in the nation’s history), the more the Diaspora community seems to believe in the power of the military. Thus, they are holding fundraisers and showing public support for ex-dictator Musharraf and military-approved Imran Khan.

Those justifying military rule for Pakistan cite to the criminal acts of Zardari, but from my recollection, Zardari never imposed martial law on the nation, Zardari never armed and trained the Taliban to kill Pakistanis, and Zardari never put the justices of the Supreme Court under house arrest. None of these outright illegal and brutal actions could be taken regularly by any military in the world, except Pakistan’s. Therefore, one should ask how dare some Pakistanis abroad attempt to paint military dictatorship as proper for Pakistan but improper for their own personal lives.

There is certainly a Diaspora duty that Pakistanis should become aware of. These groups should be petitioning their governments and speaking out in favor of the abused minorities of Pakistan, because they enjoy protection as minorities in the West. In that vein, many individuals belonging to the Diaspora need to do more in standing up for the democratic regimes that can bring the same order and peace to Pakistan as they have experienced in the West.

One recent example of a positive citizen involvement that lent support to the democratic regime in Pakistan was the letter sent to Hilary Clinton written by the American Islamic Forum for Democracy. This letter petitioned the US government to take notice of the unjust treatment of former ambassador Hussain Haqqani, as he faces charges lobbed by the deep state against him and has been reduced to veritable house arrest. As a signatory to this letter, I was able to use my rights as a US citizen to petition my government to defend those battling anti-democratic forces in Pakistan, as my fellow citizens can and should do.

The writer holds a Juris Doctorate in the US and is a researcher on comparative law and international law issues.
 
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Vcheng, If you posted this on an American Forum, they would love it. But to be honest, you're not fooling anyone here.
 
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I stopped reading after "import secularism"

No thanks, I don't want an aids infested, alcoholic, druggie, single parent nation.

What can Secularism give to Pakistan?
look what it gave to Turkey.
only oppression and destruction of their heritage.
It took a religious Muslim man to make Turkey progress.
 
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Democracy is not an end in itself; it is merely a tool to achieve an objective. In the wrong hands, even the best tool is dangerous. People who can't differentiate between the tool and the tool wielder are perhaps more dangerous than the criminals themselves, since they are easily manipulated by the shysters. One of the advantages of living in a true democracy like in the West, as opposed to the charade in Pakistan, is a better understanding of what democracy entails -- not on the voter -- but on the elected officials, viz. accountability and responsibility. "Leaders" who do not abide by their share of the democratic contract relinquish any claims on the protections of democracy.

When one understands the ground realities in Pakistan where 'democracy' is a farce in the hands of the feudal elites, it is naive to continue propagating the myth of democratic institutions in Pakistan. It is more than naive; it is downright criminal and treasonous, since it allows the bloodsucking feudals -- who are the single greatest threat to Pakistan's future -- to continue their charade at the expense of the country's well being. Is there anyone who can keep a straight face when Zardari and Gilani openly defy the Supreme Court itself in the name of 'democracy'?
 
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Cheng the Yank is trying to teach us, listen - worry about the declining hegemony that is your country and let us worry about ours. Thanks - come again.
 
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the point is very valid, I still cannot understand why on earth would anybody support a military dictator, I just cannot comprehend how their brains function? in what part of the world were they taught in their childhood or so??

still beyond my comprehension !! Its DISGUSTING...
 
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the point is very valid, I still cannot understand why on earth would anybody support a military dictator, I just cannot comprehend how their brains function? in what part of the world were they taught in their childhood or so??

still beyond my comprehension !! Its DISGUSTING...

What's more disgusting is the PTI.
 
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How many times are we gonna see these threads? Military dictators, army take overs and on and on. Those times are over, those days are over. There's not going to be a military coup.

You can argue, though, the army's influence over the civilians but the latest spat where PM went directly after Gen. Kiyani and Pasha indicates otherwise.

Whatever leftover influence army does have in politics will be reduced even further or completely disappear after the next election.

I don't know why then after all this people keep on posting same topics over and over. Army this and they control that. Get over it, it's new Pakistan now.
 
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Well, does the "new" Pakistan work exactly like the "old" Pakistan still?

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from: GHQ, ISI camp attacks: Fourth detainee found dead | Newspaper | DAWN.COM

ISLAMABAD: A civilian facing a court martial under the Army Act on charges of attacking the GHQ and ISI Hamza camp died mysteriously on Friday, a brother of the deceased, told Dawn on Friday.

Abdul Saboor, 29, is the fourth civilian detained in the case to have died in mysterious circumstances over the past six months — Mohammad Aamir died on Aug 15, last year, Tahseen Ullah on Dec 17, and Said Arab on Dec 18.

Their bodies were recovered from the Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar.

Abdul Saboor’s brother, Mufti Shakoor, said that an unknown caller asked him to collect the body of his brother from the Haji camp in Peshawar.

Saboor had been picked up by intelligence agencies on Nov 25, 2007, along with his younger brothers Abdul Basit and Abdul Majid from Lahore.

According to Mufti Shakoor, who lives in Lahore, the caller initially asked him to go to the Peshawar hospital, but later told him that he would find the body in an ambulance parked near the Haji camp.

Finally, he said, he found the body on the GT Road near the camp. By that time the cellphone of the caller had switched off.

Tariq Asad, a lawyer who had filed a petition in the Supreme Court on behalf of Ms Rohaifa — the mother of three detainees, Abdul Saboor (deceased), Abdul Basit and Abdul Majid — for their recovery, said he had already expressed fears about their unnatural death.

In the petition filed on Jan 6, the ailing mother made an emotional appeal to the Supreme Court to order intelligence agencies to immediately kill her sons and hand over their bodies to her if superior courts could not provide relief to common citizens of the country.

According to Advocate Asad, Saboor died when a petition about his recovery was pending with the Supreme Court, but the court was dealing with matters “more important than the life of a citizen”.

In the petition, Advocate Asad pointed out that the bodies of three detainees who had died earlier during investigation, showed clear signs of acute renal failure (ARF) apparently caused by slow poisoning.

He said military authorities had kept them in illegal confinement and contended that under the Army Act, civilians could be tried only in circumstances gravely affecting the maintenance of discipline in the army.


He requested the court to seek a report on causes of the death of three detainees and record of proceedings against survivors.

It may be mentioned here that the accused — Abdul Basit, Abdul Majid, Dr Niaz Ahmad, Mohammad Aamir, Mazharul Haq, Shafigur Rehman, Mohammad Shafiq, Said Arab, Tahseen Ullah and Gul Roze — were acquitted by the Anti-Terrorism Court in Rawalpindi on April 8, 2008, because the prosecution could not make out a case against them.

But before their release, the Rawalpindi DCO issued a detention order under the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance.

On May 6, 2010, it was extended for 90 days by the Punjab home secretary, but it was set aside by the Lahore High Court’s Rawalpindi bench on May 28, 2010.

The Superintendent of Adiyala jail, Saeedulllah Gondal, is reported to have handed over the detainees to ISI and MI.

But in May, 2011, the advocate general informed the apex court that the detainees had been formally arrested in the first week of April and a case under Section 2 (1) (d) of the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, was registered against them.

Raja Mohammad Irshad, the counsel of ISI and MI, told the court that the 11 men were among the 20 suspects taken into custody from operational areas.

He said the men were in the custody of law-enforcement agencies and they had been interrogated for their “close/deep links with terrorists operating in different areas of the country”.

He told the apex court that they were allegedly involved in attacks on ISI’s Hamza Camp, GHQ, defence installations, explosions at various places, killing of a three-star general and several other army personnel and civilians.

In August 2011, when the court was hearing a petition for the recovery of the three brothers, the Military Intelligence told the court that the detainees were in their custody and they had been kept “in accordance with the law”.

The military authorities also arranged meetings of the detainees with their family.

According to Mufti Abdul Baais and Mufti Abdul Shakoor their detained brothers had been brutally tortured and they could not stand because their legs were swollen.

Advocate Colonel (reted) Inamur Rahim, another counsel of the detainees, said he had also filed a human rights application in the Supreme Court for their recovery.

“I will try to take other like-minded lawyers on board on this particular issue because it is possible that the remaining seven detainees might experience the same fate,” he said.
 
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The same cannot be said for Pakistan’s religious minorities who are brutally murdered or shamed in public without any type of actionable legal recourse. Last week, the church and homes of a Lahori Christian community were bulldozed by the Punjab Government without any care for the fact that Christians have long faced abuse in Pakistan. Asia Bibi still sits in a jail due to her religious beliefs and unsupported claims that she committed blasphemy. Ahmedis face a similar treatment as they are not permitted to call themselves Muslims according to a constitutional provision.

While the Shias, Ahmedis, Christians, and Hindus of Pakistan may be in the same numerical position as Pakistanis living overseas, there is little correlation between the rights each is afforded by their government and society. And while all these injustices continue to take place, there is little public discussion about these issues amongst the Diaspora community.

The other regressive element supported by some overseas Pakistanis is the nostalgia for military dictatorship. In recent months the chorus of pro-military Pakistani Diaspora members has reached a fevered pitch. This subset of the Diaspora community claims that Pakistan’s politicians are all corrupt criminals, and that the men in khaki are the only proper stewards of the country. Their words are a gross display of insensitivity to the thousands of voices silenced by Pakistan’s military dictators.


The same cannot be said for the Pakistani military, which has perfected the art of sabotaging and brutally murdering democratic forces in the nation. Thus, the undying support of Pakistanis living abroad for the military as the only “guys that can get it done,” disregards the shadowy work of the Army and its intelligence agencies.

Not only are many oblivious to the backhand deals of the military, the rise of satellite televisions now beams conservative news networks 24/7 into Pakistani living rooms across the world. The more the media continues its siege on the Zardari regime (as it has done with every civilian regime in the nation’s history), the more the Diaspora community seems to believe in the power of the military. Thus, they are holding fundraisers and showing public support for ex-dictator Musharraf and military-approved Imran Khan.
So very true ; Pakistan in the 21st century has a 7th century mindset for governance and such parochial-minded diaspora think that a 5-year democracy term is a single fix for all problems galore. Nice to bring this article to notice VCheng.
 
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It would be better for indians to sort out their own problems and for us to sort out ours.
 
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It would be better for indians to sort out their own problems and for us to sort out ours.

wonder whats their problem ? I believe they are scum of India...psychopaths !! :lol:
 
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We the evil Indian love to leave you alone and move ahead....But you know the problem is that pakistan want some part of my country...So how can we leave you alone???...
 
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Unfortunately for the scum of India, they are the ones who sit in the US and calculate what Aid to give to Pakistan, while the scum of Pakistan decide which Square to blow up in the US.
 
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