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The Politics of Boozing

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The Politics of Boozing

By Uwe Buse

The front line of the struggle against fundamentalism in Pakistan isn't in the mountainous border regions. It's in the country's permit rooms. Alcohol is sold there -- and customers dream of the West.



The Politics of Boozing

By Uwe Buse

The front line of the struggle against fundamentalism in Pakistan isn't in the mountainous border regions. It's in the country's permit rooms. Alcohol is sold there -- and customers dream of the West.


Devout Muslims call it "a disgrace for the city," Ilyaz Rassar calls it "an opportunity" and Pakistan's government bureaucrats call it a "permit room." This permit room, one of about 60 scattered throughout the country, is in downtown Multan, a city of shrines and mosques in eastern Pakistan -- a city otherwise known as the City of Saints.

he men behind the bars are selling alcohol to non-Muslims, a practice that's entirely legal and sanctioned by the government. Under a system that could be dubbed Prohibition Light, this permit room sells four brands of beer, vodka, Silver Top gin, Doctor's brandy and malt whiskey. There is a purchase minimum for beer -- five cans -- at 200 rupees, or about €3 apiece. A bottle of the cheapest whiskey goes for about €30.

All of the alcoholic beverages sold here are produced in the country. The beer is brewed at the "Murree Brewery" near the city of Rawalpindi, the country's only brewery -- a holdover from colonial days and a concession to Pakistan's Christians and Hindus. This domestic liquor industry sells its products in the country's permit rooms from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m., every day except Friday.

Memories of London


It's 11 a.m. and half a dozen men wait at the two windows -- a civilized group who know and greet one another, speaking in hushed tones. Ilyaz Rassar is a Christian with a Pakistani passport, a short, stocky man with thinning hair waiting in line and holding two folded-up moving boxes. Rassar, who visits the permit room once a week, says he is "mainly a businessman," and that he has relatively little interest in religion.


Rassar comes to this place to do business, of course, but also because he knows that he can speak freely here. He says he has never seen a fundamentalist here. In fact, coming here feels a bit like being back in the West. He once visited London, a place he says he liked, especially the pubs and the beer. The permit room, which he says brings back memories of his time in London, serves as a European outpost and a tiny glimpse of a future Rassar and others like him would love to see become reality in Pakistan. Rassar is a member of two minorities here in Pakistan: Christians and fans of the West. :rolleyes:

Rassar keeps a stamped permit issued by the Pakistani government in his jacket pocket. It allows him to buy 100 bottles of beer or 5 bottles of liquor each month. When he reaches the first window, he presents his permit and gives the man his order. The man disappears behind the bars and Rassar goes to the second window, pushes a bundle of money through the hole and returns to the first window, where 30 bottles of liquor are standing on a table. Rassar unfolds his boxes.

And the extra bottles of liquor?

"Oh," says Rassar, "they trust me here. I'm also buying for Christian friends." He says that he'll present their permits later. Rassar smiles, and the man behind the bars smiles with him. Nobody really believes the story about the friends and the permits -- it's likely just a tacit agreement between two businessmen trying to make the best of an imperfect situation.

"Eat, drink and be Murree"

Laws severely restricting the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages were introduced in Pakistan in 1977, and liquor smugglers and dealers have been turning a profit with contraband alcohol ever since. Trucks bring vodka in from China across the mountains along the country's northern border, while ships unload cargos of beer and Scotch whiskey from Europe on its southern coast. In the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, diplomats from African countries run a discreet service, turning the contents of their embassies' liquor cabinets into cash. Permits -- for those who need them -- aren't hard to come by. In fact, there's even a market for permits. :coffee:

The Pakistani state has always turned a blind eye on the practice, especially now, under the country's current pro-Western President Pervez Musharaff, although a ban on alcohol advertising remains strictly enforced. Indeed, the head of the Murree Brewery assumes that although 99 percent of his customers are Muslims :eek: , hardly anyone is likely to know his company's advertising slogan: "Eat, drink and be Murree."

Ilyaz Rassar and his accomplice on the other side of the bars say Musharraf is a "good man" :wall: -- that he even drinks the occasional glass of Scotch in the evening, after a long work day. :eek:

"We must help the man wherever we can," says Rassar. He's referring to the threat to Musharraf's power from the country's strongest opposition party,
:frown: which is controlled by fundamentalists. Musharraf, says Rassar, has absolutely no control over tribal regions in the western part of the country. Under these circumstances, he adds, drinking alcohol is a political statement in Pakistan, a declaration of one's opposition to growing fundamentalism -- in short, an act of patriotism. Those who drink, he says, smiling again, are in fact expressing their support for the president, freedom and the West, and their opposition to terrorist leader Osama bin Laden.

Then he packs his bottles into his two boxes, and two helpers carry the merchandise out to his car. Rassar says: "We will win. We will convert the Muslims to alcohol."

He could be right.

In its most recent annual report, the Murree Brewery reported a 37 percent jump in hard liquor profits over the previous year.

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan


© SPIEGEL ONLINE 2006
All Rights Reserved
Reproduction only allowed with the permission of SPIEGELnet GmbH
 
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Its too easy to call.

Can't you see an open propaganda?
 
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BS.

he adds, drinking alcohol is a political statement in Pakistan, a declaration of one's opposition to growing fundamentalism -- in short, an act of patriotism. Those who drink, he says, smiling again, are in fact expressing their support for the president, freedom and the West

not sure but i think that this guy was drunk when he said this :lol:
 
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Hey, if they wanna drink, let them drink. Not hurting me or my family in anyway, so why should I care?
 
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Hey, if they wanna drink, let them drink. Not hurting me or my family in anyway, so why should I care?

Pakistan has banned Alcohol; it was meant to be an Islamic state. People should respect the law & stop drinking; or get fined/jailed.
 
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The ban from Alcohol needs to be lifted so Pakistan's economy makes money out of the goods coming from China. Right now it's happening and we aren't even getting any money from it.

Never drank a sip of alcohol, yet I support Musharraf! It's about granting freewill than drinking. I'd tell everyone over here not to drink, but I won't put a gun over their heads for it.
 
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BS.



not sure but i think that this guy was drunk when he said this :lol:
Yeah it does more damage to Musharraf supporters than help them. He's a dumbass transporter. Probably a truck driver/salesman. Can't really compare with the majority of us who can see the errors of Mullah-giri in Pakistan with or without alcohol.

To support Musharraf we have to support freewill.
 
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Alchool is bad, be it muslim or non-muslims. For once maybe we should'be try to be like the west and should be smart. The governemnt should ban it.

Hey, if they wanna drink, let them drink. Not hurting me or my family in anyway, so why should I care?

It certianally hurts the families of those who drink. Studies also show that 99% of the rapes commited are by those who are drunk. It's a useless thing and should'nt be encouraged
 
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The ban from Alcohol needs to be lifted so Pakistan's economy makes money out of the goods coming from China. Right now it's happening and we aren't even getting any money from it.

Never drank a sip of alcohol, yet I support Musharraf! It's about granting freewill than drinking. I'd tell everyone over here not to drink, but I won't put a gun over their heads for it.

Drinking alcohal is only way to support free will..?

sir it comes under the "Hadood"..(Hurmaat)..These are the laws made by Allah.

We have no right to touch them.And In the Time of Prophet(PBUH) alcohal was banned.And it was banned bay the Prophet(P.B.U.H) by the orders of Allah.Then who we are to change the laws made by Allah.
 
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Drinking alcohal is only way to support free will..?

sir it comes under the "Hadood"..(Hurmaat)..These are the laws made by Allah.

We have no right to touch them.And In the Time of Prophet(PBUH) alcohal was banned.And it was banned bay the Prophet(P.B.U.H) by the orders of Allah.Then who we are to change the laws made by Allah.


I am not really sure about the huddod ordience thing since most scholars say that it's man made. But i do know that alchool is haram is islam.
 
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There are other things that we can do to support free will or to support musharaf.
Pakistan is an ideological islamic state.And the purpose was to implement islamic laws.And to make an ideal islamic society not to a pro-western society.

See any Qoute from Quaid-e-Azam or Allama Iqbal...
 
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I am not really sure about the huddod ordience thing since most scholars say that it's man made. But i do know that alchool is haram is islam.

i am not talking about Hadood ordinance...I am talking about Hadood-ullah

these are the laws made by the Allah and stated in Holy Quraan.Every muslim have to follow the laws whether he like or not
 
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