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Why is Pakistan's army chief all over social media?

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Why is Pakistan's army chief all over social media? - BBC News

Why is Pakistan's army chief all over social media?
  • 15 November 2015
  • From the section Asia
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Media captionPakistan's army chief is suddenly very prominent on social media
Is the army general more popular than the prime minister in Pakistan and what does that means for democracy? BBC Urdu's Amber Shamsi investigates.
Just off the main road between the political capital and army headquarters lies a ramshackle set of houses.
They're new builds but shoddily constructed. The mosque is no different.
But it has a grand title - it has been named after Pakistan's current army chief General Raheel Sharif.
"We want General Raheel Sharif to help us catch the land grabbers and land mafia," says a young bearded man on his way to prayers.
Many Pakistanis seem to see General Raheel Sharif as a messiah who is saving the country from terrorism, corruption and all manner of social ills.
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Image copyright Social media
Image caption One of the memes on social media honouring the general
Wizened truck-art painter Habibur Rehman is one of them.
He has been decorating trucks in the traditional Pakistani way since 1955, where intricate patterns of flowers and birds are combined with political messaging.
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Image caption Truck art painter Habibur Rehman (seen here on the right) is being kept busy
I ask him who his favourite leaders are.
"Benazir Bhutto is my all-time favourite," he says, swiftly mentioning her father Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto as his number two choice.
He then lists former presidents and military rulers Generals Ayub Khan, Zia-ul Haq and Yahya Khan.
I ask whether General Raheel Sharif makes the cut.
He raises his hand as if to the sky.
"Given the demand for him now and if he keeps performing well as a leader, he could even surpass the other five."
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Image caption Political slogans have traditionally been painted on Pakistani trucks
All about Raheel
General Raheel Sharif is neither a prime minister nor president but his image is popping up across the country.
He appears in banners thanking him for restoring law and order in the chaotic city of Karachi, on the backs of rickshaws and his image has even been used by politicians running for local elections.
The general has also gone digital with the hashtag #ThankYouRaheelSharif appearing on Twitter and Facebook.
The hashtag first appeared after the attack on an army-run school in Peshawar on 16 December 2014.
The army chief seemed to lead the effort to catch and punish the militants responsible for killing 150 people, mostly schoolchildren.
Facebook pages, Twitter handles and memes praising General Sharif are now commonplace.
One mockingly shows Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, President Mamnoon Hussein and General Raheel Sharif sitting together, all with thought bubbles over their heads.
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Image copyright Social media
Image caption Left to right: Raheel Sharif, Nawaz Sharif and Mamnoon Hussein
President Mamnoon is thinking of a snack, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is concerned with business while the general is thinking of Pakistan.
In a recent cover story on the personality cult of General Sharif, published in The Herald news magazine, journalist Umer Farooq asks whether such campaigns are being deliberately orchestrated.
He quotes Brigadier AR Siddiqi, a former official in the army's public relations arm, the Inter-Services Publicity Relations (ISPR), who says such image building often "happens under official direction and with the full weight of the state authority".
The ISPR denies this.
But Umer Farooq says the personality-led focus of the campaign gives the army a "political colour" which is beyond the role and function of a professional army.
Social satire
And where there is reverence online, there will also be mockery.
One producer at a TV channel took it upon himself to document the minutiae of his day based on the hashtag.
"On my way to work, all the traffic lights were green. #ThankYouRaheelSharif."
One satirical twitter account @DrMajorlyPhD recently wrote: "Watched Mad Max Fury Road. The story is bizarre but the movie is fantastic!! #ThankYouRaheelSharif".
But supporters on Twitter want an end to the "lame jokes" about the hashtag and have reported them by tagging the ISPR's director general Lieutenant General Asim Bajwa.
It is under his leadership that the army's publicity offerings - dramas, music videos and documentaries - have come to dominate the mainstream media landscape.
He was recently promoted from Major General to Lieutenant General.
In the army town of Rawalpindi, I meet Malik Mohammad Yousaf who has his car covered with giant posters of General Sharif.
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Image caption Images of General Raheel Sharif can even be seen on car bonnets along with other Pakistani leaders
The general is set to retire next year and Mr Yousaf, who describes himself as a "disillusioned worker" in Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's party, says the general's term must be extended to continue the fight against terrorism.
This call has been echoed on social media.
And there is a precedent.
The previous incumbent, General Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, had his term extended without a social media campaign or public support.
But Ahmed Bilal, the president of the Pildat think-tank which promotes democracy, believes such talk weakens Pakistan's fragile civilian and democratic institutions.
He says Pildat opinion polls consistently show that Pakistanis no longer want military dictatorships despite supporting the army.
"A distinction needs to be made: military commanders are very popular but not as possible replacements for the current political leadership," said Mr Bilal.
But as Mr Yousaf lovingly oversees the final touches to his car, he has harsh words for politicians.
"If they continue like this, martial law is a better option."
 
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The times of #ThankYouRaheelSharif
November 17, 2015
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Marvi Sirmed


Those heavy moustaches, naughty eyes and an I-mean-it-dude smile are just everywhere. Even the BBC could not miss it. The civvies experienced the rather hard side of it after last week’s CCC issued a public rebuke of not doing enough of the needful. That was hardly news. That’s because this is how General B’s ISPR does it. In full public view. The real news was, the civvies actually got hold of a fragile spine of theirs and responded.
Much has been said and written about whether both sides should have done it. The media verdict – as was expected – was in favour of boys. The governance obviously is very poor. It is not even half as good as it used to be when the boys were ruling. Oh wait!
But then, it makes one appear ‘expertish’ to talk about governance issues under a civilian dispensation and rightly so. Civvies are after all accountable to the people who elect them. The luxury, not really available to khakis.
In its usual eureka moment, the CCC suddenly realized it was the ‘incompetent’ civvies who were responsible for all that could not happen under National Action Plan to counter terrorism. Something that did not occur a day earlier in a ‘high level meeting’. Or may be it occurred and was discussed too. But then, that was not enough you know. The B factor!
What the ISPR press release happened to highlight were these main points. One: the commanders did ‘exhaustive review’ of internal security situation (in the absence of Interior Ministry that is). Two: They were impressed with their own performance and achievements in the ‘ongoing operation’ (Zarb-e-Azb that is) and Intelligence Based Operations (carried out by the ISI that is). Three: The Chief gave a pat on the back of the #ThankYouRaheelSharif community – all of us that is – by acknowledging ‘nation’s support’ for the ongoing operations.
Oh wait, isn’t this the same nation, which was raising hue and cry over the US demand to hold military Op in North Waziristan just a couple of years ago? Isn’t it the same nation that was going gaga on the suggestion of talks with ‘our own brothers’ who, some of us thought, should have been given an office in Peshawar? Pardon me for going in minor and unnecessary details.
Anyway, continuing with the Press Release of the Month- the fourth thing that came out from it was, although the operations conducted by the mighty, were effective but would not be able to sustain long term effects and ‘enduring peace’ if the incompetent civvies are not able to offer ‘matching / complimentary governance initiatives’.
If deciphered for the benefit of all of us – and the CCC too – that would mean someone is seeing a strong possibility of the recurrence of all the mayhem in not-so-distant future. The press release comfortably predetermines the responsibility of that recurrence in public imagination. The Press Release pointed out three major factors that could result in the re-emergence of the possible bedlam: non-implementation of NAP, non-conclusion of JITs and lack of FTA reforms. All of which fall in the civilian domain in theory.
The theory and some portion of the practice too go against the civvies. Just when FATA reforms bill was on the floor of the House, political government found it convenient to form yet another committee to discuss the reforms further, that too without a single member from FATA.
Naked eye could see involvement of purse too. The moment FATA funds would be released, the equation would start getting better.
On NAP implementation too, the slackness of the civilian government might be understandable. They are being asked to use some magic wand and clear the mess, which was created in decades using full muscle of the state. One wonders who would have the heart to become Shuja Khanzada in the process.
On account of the ‘politics of reconciliation’ and of dharna agitation, even the parliament has not been able to question the NAP progress. Civil society of the ‘liberal’ kind has been reduced to defending itself against the attacks on their integrity in part by the civilian government (by calling them foreign agents and against the state) and in part by the establishment’s proxies in media.
The civil society of the kind the establishment supports and patronizes (the social welfare organisations run by the leaders of proscribed organizations) would be quite content if NAP is not imp0lemented at all. They thrive on radicalization and hate speech. Why would they want any action against that?
The JITs, which we are told are not being conclusive, work under full glare of Provincial Apex Committees, which are in turn dominated by not-so-civil(ian) faces. But again, in theory, they have to be under the civilian Chief Ministers. So there you go. But JITs are important for concrete action against the PPP and the MQM – the cases bothering the good generals are the ones against the corruption etc. of these two parties in Sindh – and the federal government is not seen doing enough to isolate these parties.
It so happens that more the boys are pouncing on the government, the more these parties are gelling together to ‘save the system’. This sort of public ‘treatment’ of the government, the boys think, is exactly the kind of pressure that might break the adhesive force between the firsts among the incompetents. That might actually happen. But then what?
If the issue is of shutting the tap of terror financing, then we might have to include the elephant in the room too. The so called ‘social welfare organizations’ run by Schedule Four material, which are still being propped and patronized by the state under the guise of ‘relief and rehabilitation’ of what the security establishment loves to call TDPs instead of internationally recognized terminology of IDPs. These are the same IDP camps under complete control of, once again, not-so-civilian faces.
The term ‘good governance’ also reminds of a smart thing called accountability. The same that is reserved for the civvies. In case the ‘good governance’ finally prevails and the queen accountability reigns, there would be unnecessary and uncalled for voices for the accountability of those whose negligence (or may be complicity?) ended up in ten odd terrorists killing 150 children of APS Peshawar.
The reforms, similarly, remind of the faulty criminal justice system. God forbid if this system is reformed finally, where would the justification of special courts (with all the powers gotten by the 21st Constitutional Amendment, Protection of Pakistan Act and Pakistan Army Act) fall? Oh and, there won’t be any privileged inmates in jails who are necessary for us to keep the balance with vicious neighbors.
If all of this happens, there won’t be any guarantee that any civilian government could survive another Memogate kind of a scandal. Quite a bumpy ride this NAP business is!

The times of #ThankYouRaheelSharif
 
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The simple minded people who do not have self esteem became fans and sycophants of another person. These idiots that a reating cult of by excessive adulation of Raheel. They worship the rising sun and have forgeten about their previous hero: Musharraf. When Raheel retires they will look for another hero to worship.
 
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Legal system has failed in Pakistan, it's corrupt and only support corrupt politicians.
These corrupt politicians have stolen over 50 billion dollars from Pakistan in last 30 years.
Our prime minster wants to build bullet train, metro bus and Nandipur power projects, while over 50% of countries doesn't have clean water to drink. One of the worst education system in Sindh and Balochistan.

Raheel Sharif has brought hope to the people of Pakistan.I hope NAP is successful and these looters and corrupt politicians are in Jail.
 
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Because he is delivering well in multiple fronts where Govt has yet to wake up from deep slumber. Its not the COAS they love but a guy named Raheel Sharif whom they consider their savior. May it be some calamity, security issue or foreign relations Gen Raheel is on the fore front. When actions speak louder than words, such things gonna happen naturally.
 
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He's hypied up..
Like imran khan and Musharaff kings of Facebook and social media....
Raheel Sharif must realize that if army chief try to become more famous then Prime minister its controversial and it reflects the negativity...having said that he's probably the most patriotic army general in history of Pakistan..

Nawaz Sharif selected Raheel sharif and made him work for his agenda...gererals are all same it's the political mind which gets the best of them...
 
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The simple minded people who do not have self esteem became fans and sycophants of another person. These idiots that a reating cult of by excessive adulation of Raheel. They worship the rising sun and have forgeten about their previous hero: Musharraf. When Raheel retires they will look for another hero to worship.
There is difference between your generals like DOSTAM and ours so better STFU

Pakistan has been in a state of since its independence and during war Generals leads not politicians
 
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