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Why So Many Pakistanis Hate Their Nobel Peace Prize Winner

There, thank you for being straightforward.
I agree with you on this. The efforts aren't achieving enough. We need to make more effort, and the people need to wake up, see their own faults and work on improving themselves. The cell of society is an individual person. The problems of a society reflect the problems of its people. Inshallah, the people will improve. Mindset is already changing for the better, thankfully.

I have perfectly straightforward all along Sir. I also have my doubts about the claim that mindsets are changing for the better:

The claims of any change are likely quite false:

VIP culture: 'Those who ride motorbikes may be shot dead' - Blogs - DAWN.COM

VIP culture: 'Those who ride motorbikes may be shot dead'
By Badar Iqbal Chaudhary
Updated about 6 hours ago


Back in 1965, Abida Riaz, better known by her stage name 'Neelo', tried defying the orders of a VIP.

The governor of West Pakistan, Nawab of Kalabagh and a man with a thousand other titles to his credit – ‘Malik Amir Muhammad Khan Awan’ summoned her to dance privately for a party hosted in honour of the Shah of Iran, Light of the Aryans, and a man with a thousand other titles to his credit – ‘Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlavi’.

Neelo refused to comply.

The governor then sent his private guards to lift her from the safety of her house to do as ordered – dance on the commands of the inheritors of the world, like the poor of the wretched realm do.

Abida tried committing suicide en route, the only dignified response available to the lowly. The attempt saw her being taken to the hospital, where she was saved and spared the agony of 'mujra', though she was bedridden for quite some time.

Reminding her of her duty and her status in the world, Jalib wrote:

Tu k nawaqif adab-e-ghulami hai abhi
Raqs zanjeer pehn ker bhi kia jata hai


['You, that are unaware of the etiquette of slavery - know that slaves dance even in chains']

One would think that 49 years later people would have learned their lessons. But no, this nation is as obstinate and unchanging as they come.

They think they can take out a few rallies out here and there, raise a few slogans against thepanjandrum, throw a couple of ministers off an airplane, and voila - VIP culture has ended.

Not so easy, sire.

In lawless countries, power is the only legal principle. There's no hypocrisy in sentencing the poor for the same crimes for which the rich would not have served a single day. Must we be reminded time and again that against our idealistic whims and wishes, the lords of the world walk free, every time?

To remind you:

  • What transpired in the bakery-beating case, incriminating Ali Imran Yousaf (Shahbaz Sharif’s son in law)?

  • What happened in the Shahzeb murder case?
They walk free because the law has loopholes. They go scot-free because they can afford to.

They are freed because the poor are somehow the only ones who take Diyat, falling for the lofty ideals of ‘Fi Sabilillah’ (more often than not, it is an offer which cannot be refused).

The rich and powerful are exonerated because the evidence is always smudged, and the witnesses either turn hostile or refuse to testify at all (no points for guessing why).

The proletarians cross the drawn lines, and then the patricians, rightly, put them back in place. Thus, good on you Abdul Qadir Gilani, for reminding Malik Tahir and the like, that the commoner ought not to overtake the cruisers of VIPs.

Faiz Ahmed Faiz would have scoffed:

Yeh galion ke awara bekar kuttay
K bakhsha gya jin ko zoq-e-gadai
Zamanay ki phitkar sarmaya in ka
Jahan bhar ki dhutkar in ke kamai


[These useless stray dogs (refers to working classes), which were born mendicant, inherit only the drubbing of the society, and earn merely the chastisement of the world.]

Good on you, Mr Gilani, that you reminded the underclasses of this place of theirs, in a truly fitting manner.

Next, the influential should lobby for a law analogous to the ignominious crawling order of General Dyer. Unlike the General’s orders which were restricted to a single street, though, this law must order all plebs to start crawling as soon as they see a VIP.

This would serve as a potent reminder to the nation that they were never truly liberated.

In his defence, Abdul Qadir Gilani may have been a little over-paranoid, extra-cautious after his brother’s abduction.

Tahir, meanwhile, forgot that in Pakistan, debates of reasonable response or sanity take a backseat where the VIP are concerned.

The naysayers may question if this 'VIP justice' was the only viable option. They will haggle over the various details of the incident and intricacies of law.

  • Was Gilani present in the vehicle?

  • Isn't the guard solely to blame? Isn't his confession enough?

  • If this is standard protocol, shouldn't the blame lie with the motorcyclist who "irritated the guards"?
The truth is, these questions are too petty to ask.

Only a single person was murdered, just one son of a lesser God; an insignificant number from an undistinguished heritage in the Pakistani game of death sums; to infuse such a valuable lesson – don’t let the western ideals, or even Islamic ones, pollute your minds.

It's ideals like these which caused David Cameron, Prime Minister of United Kingdom, to bethrown out of the hospital wards by a concerned surgeon for not observing hygiene protocols.

To think we can do the same to our PM – what rubbish.

To think one was emancipated merely because he had heard a certain discussion about it in the media, and seen the defenders of human rights get some talk-time – what gibberish.

To think we had inherited 'democracy', the saviours of which were going hoarse in the recent past in assemblies, of true American form – what absurdity.
 
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