PTI – Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf

Entries categorized as ‘Articles & Reports’

Politics keeps Imran busy in 2007

January 17, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Vinod Sharma
Lahore, January 17, 2007

It is politics, not cricket that keeps Imran Khan occupied in this year of the general elections and the election of the General to the Pakistani presidency.

But the former test all-rounder wants Pervez Musharraf back to the pavilion.  He compares him with Hosni Mubarak, the US-propped military ruler who is also the president of Egypt.

“The Opposition has a huge responsibility to ward off attempts to impose a Mubarak on Pakistan. The Egyptian leader also holds elections but they haven’t ushered in genuine democracy in that country,” Imran told the Hindustan Times in an interview.

For him, genuine democracy is about dismantling the system fathered by the Pak President: “There can be no compromise or a deal with Musharraf. His policies are potentially destructive of Pakistan.”
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Categories: Articles & Reports · Pakistan · Politics

New Human Rights Watch report drubs Pakistan

January 13, 2007 · Leave a Comment

WASHINGTON: Human Rights Watch (HRW) says in its annual report issued this week that President Pervez Musharraf’s government did little in 2006 to address a rapidly deteriorating human rights situation.

The report’s “ongoing concerns” include arbitrary detention, lack of due process, and the mistreatment, torture, and “disappearance” of terrorism suspects and political opponents; harassment and intimidation of the media; and legal discrimination against and mistreatment of women and religious minorities. However, the human rights watchdog group calls the passage of the Women’s Protection Bill a significant development, besides the North Waziristan peace deal with “Taliban supporters” and reconstruction efforts in Azad Kashmir after the earthquake, though the later were marred by allegations of corruption.
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Categories: Articles & Reports · Dictatorship · International View · Pakistan

Democracy and the uniform

January 9, 2007 · Leave a Comment

President Pervez Musharraf’s remarks made in a speech to a public meeting in Dera Ismail Khan on Saturday that his army uniform has nothing to do with democracy and in fact may have strengthened democracy need to be taken with a pinch of salt. The fact is that democracy and its advocates, whether they happen to be in Pakistan or overseas, do not think that it can mix with military rule, or a president who also happens to be the professional head of a country’s army. Take the case of America where according to that country’s constitution, the president is the commander-in-chief of the US military. However, the distinction between that and our example is obvious — the US constitution does not envisage a military soldier as commander-in-chief although some American presidents, especially in the nineteenth century, made a name as military generals before they decided to stand for public office. However, they first retired or left the military and competed as a civilian.
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Categories: Articles & Reports · Pakistan

Dangerous business of looking back

January 3, 2007 · Leave a Comment

The year 2006 was a continuum of what has been happening since the 2002 elections: crucial national security targets were not achieved to cement the economic base of the country; and the high level of national discord over major issues of survival did not come down. Looking ahead, the prospect is bedimmed by the expectation of confrontation and further instability because of the 2007 elections and their ‘foretold’ lack of ‘free-ness and fairness’.

Nothing has gone forward from the leftovers of the 2005 agenda. The trouble in Waziristan has become further complicated after three years of military operations. Now GHQ has agreed to call off the whole strategy of trying to get the ‘foreigners’ out. The main problem remains lack of political support for what President Pervez Musharraf has undertaken. A ‘pact’ was signed with North Waziristan after which the trouble did not abate. It was merely a stratagem to get the army out of a place where it had got bogged down and was taking casualties.
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Categories: Articles & Reports · Pakistan

معاشی صورت حال اور حکومتی دعوے

December 29, 2006 · Leave a Comment

پاکستان میں گزشتہ سال معاشی ترقی کے حکومتی بلند بانگوں دعویوں سے قطع نظر اقتصادی ماہرین بڑھتے ہوئے تجارتی خسارے اور بجلی کی پیداواری صلاحیت میں عدم توسیع کے تناظر میں آئندہ چند برسوں میں معاشی مشکلات کی پیشن گوئی کررہے ہیں۔

اقتصادی ماہرین کے لیئے پاکستان کا تجارتی خسارہ جو پاکستان کے زرمبادلہ کے ذخائر سے زیادہ ہو گیا ہے اور گزشتہ سات سالوں میں ملک کی بجلی کی کل پیداواری صلاحیت میں ایک میگاواٹ کا اضافہ بھی نہیں ہوا دو ایسے اہم عناصر ہیں جو ملک کی معشیت پر منفی اثرات مرتب کر سکتے ہیں۔

Continue reading on: BBCUrdu

Categories: Articles & Reports · Economy · Pakistan

The Quaid’s unrealised vision

December 25, 2006 · Leave a Comment

By Shamshad Ahmad

Have we been able to make Pakistan “a bastion of inner strength, political stability, economic self-reliance, social cohesion and national unity” that our leaders, over the years, have been show-casing to their people as their destiny?

THE Quaid-i-Azam did not live long to personally steer Pakistan to be what he thought and aspired will be “one of the greatest nations of the world.” A full generation’s life-time is now behind us as an independent nation.

Many of us who belong to the first generation that saw and experienced the formative phase of Pakistan and its creation as a dream of its founding fathers, are indeed discomfited at the thought of what the Quaid-i-Azam had envisioned this country to be and where we actually stand today as a nation and as a state.

Within the first year of our independence which woefully happened to be the last of his life, the Quaid-i-Azam had presciently foreseen the coming events. He was disillusioned with the scarcity of calibre and character in the country’s political hierarchy which was no more than a bunch of self-serving, feudalist and opportunistic politicians who were to manage the newly independent Pakistan. Political ineptitude was writ large on the country’s horizon. The Quaid’s worries were not unwarranted.

Less than a month before his death, the Quaid addressed his last message to the nation on August 14, 1948, in which he reminded his people: “the foundations of your state have been laid and it is now for you to build and build as quickly and as well as you can.” On his own part, to quote Richard Symons, “in accomplishing the task he had taken upon on the morrow of Pakistan’s birth, Jinnah had worked himself to death, but had contributed more than any other man to Pakistan’s survival.” Indeed, he died by his devotion to Pakistan.

Continue reading: Dawn Editorial

Categories: Articles & Reports · Pakistan

Economic might of Muslim world

December 24, 2006 · Leave a Comment

The key terms are ‘information society’, ‘knowledge based economy’ and ‘new growth theory’.

By Dr Farrukh Saleem

The 57-member Muslim-majority OIC held its third extraordinary session of the Islamic summit conference at Makkah Al Mukarramah. The world didn’t even take notice. The 22-member league of Arab states held its 28th Arab league summit in Khartoum. No one took notice. The six-member Arabian Gulf cooperation council held its twenty-sixth session in Abu Dhabi and the GCC supreme council made a ‘closing statement’. Did the world outside the GCC take notice? Has anyone even heard of the five-member Arab maghreb union?

Next. Does anyone know that there is the Islamic chamber of commerce and industry and that its HQ is in Karachi ? How many have heard of the organisation of Islamic capitals and cities, the sports federation of Islamic solidarity games, the Islamic shipowners’ association, the Islamic conference youth forum for dialogue and cooperation and the world federation of international Arab-Islamic schools?

Conclusion: One billion five hundred million Muslims, 23 per cent of humanity, have lost relevance to the productive world. Muslim political organisations don’t matter neither do our economic or social ones; as if we just don’t matter anymore.

Reason: Ninety-one per cent of world GDP is produced by non-Muslims (23 per cent of humanity produces less than nine per cent of the world GDP).

Continue reading on: The News

Categories: Articles & Reports · Economy

کب دستخط فرمائیےگا۔۔۔

December 4, 2006 · Leave a Comment

پاکستان غلامی کے خاتمے کے بین الاقوامی کنونشن مجریہ انیس سو انچاس کو تو تسلیم کرتا ہے لیکن آج بھی ہمارے اردگرد بھٹہ مزدوروں، نسل در نسل قرض میں جکڑے ہوئے کھیت مزدوروں اور گھریلو ملازموں کی شکل میں لاکھوں غلام اور لونڈیاں موجود ہیں لیکن ہمیں نظر نہیں آتے۔ سرکاری و نیم سرکاری ملازمین اور صنعتی کارکنوں کے حقوق و مراعات کاغذی سطح پر ہی سہی لیکن قانونی دستاویز کی شکل میں کم ازکم موجود تو ہیں۔ مگر اس دائرے کے باہر جتنے غلام ہیں ان کا کوئی پرسانِ حال نہیں۔

Continue reading on: BBCUrdu

Categories: Articles & Reports · Pakistan · Poverty

Too much of loose talk

December 3, 2006 · Leave a Comment

By Anwar Syed

I MAY have said this before, but if I have, it will bear repeating that we as a people, and particularly our politicians and government spokesmen, talk too much. Excess necessarily makes for extravagance, and leads to loss of precision, coherence, and relevance.

General Musharraf told a group of officers in Lahore (November 26, 2006) that “temporary upheavals in the country’s security environment should not arouse public concern, because the turmoil had been caused by the government’s own steps taken to rein in anti-state elements.” He went on to say that whichever way the government settled major issues, some disturbance was bound to occur. In any case, his government intended to “take the bull by the horns.”

The general would have made good sense if he had said only that certain anti-state groups were making trouble, and that his government meant to deal firmly with them. But he wouldn’t be content with brevity and discretion. He admitted that “upheavals” had indeed erupted, and that they threatened national security. Strangely enough, he added that they were not anything for the people to worry about. Common sense will tell us that upheavals can be extremely unsettling. How, then, can anyone in his right mind say that the people, whose lives and fortunes are bound to be affected, should not be concerned about them?

Continue reading on: Dawn

Categories: Articles & Reports · Dictatorship · Pakistan

Ensuring education for all

December 2, 2006 · Leave a Comment

PAKISTAN’S education policymakers are in for a shock. Unesco, which has been monitoring the performance of countries in the school sector, has released its report for 2006 and the findings on Pakistan are dismal. All the tall claims made by the government notwithstanding, the intake of children in school is not increasing. Nearly 6.5 million children in the age group five to nine years in Pakistan are out of school — they are either helping their family with housework at home, or are part of the child labour force or are loitering in the streets. This is not taking the country anywhere close to the millennium development goal of education for all. It is not boosting the literacy rate either. As the chief of the policy review team in the ministry of education disclosed, the enrolment ratios can be quite misleading. Though 59 per cent of the children are enrolled in primary schools, on an average the boys spend only 3.8 years and the girls 1.3 years in school instead of the conventional five years. No wonder, the drop-out rate is phenomenally high.

Continue reading: Dawn Editorial

Categories: Articles & Reports · Education · Pakistan

An interim set-up for free polls

December 1, 2006 · Leave a Comment

The problem with an interim government is that under the present civilian-military mix, it is the military that holds the rod, and an interim set-up, even if established by a consensus, will not be all that free to ensure a fair election if the generals do not go along. The military’s interests lie in a continuation of the present set-up in which Gen Musharraf is both head of state and army chief. This duality ensures the army’s control of the state’s civilian apparatus and the subservience of the elected government to it. In practical terms, thus, an independent election commission and an interim set-up will be of little value in ensuring a fair and free election unless the military and its intelligence agencies decide not to interfere with the electoral process and do not think it is their duty to ensure “positive results” and a compliant parliament.

Full Article: Dawn Editorial

Categories: Articles & Reports · Elections 2007 · Pakistan · Politics

Ideas-2006: what did it achieve?

November 29, 2006 · Leave a Comment

What is a cause for greater concern is the failure of our defence managers to understand that Pakistans policies are too defence-centric for our good.

By Zubeida Mustafa

THE government has billed the much hyped up Ideas-2006, the fourth exhibition of defence equipment to be held in Karachi last week, as a big success. The grand display of various weapon systems with indigenised names was said to be good for the countrys image. If nothing else, it was claimed that the exhibition proved beyond doubt that Pakistan had advanced technologically and could manufacture tanks and aircraft.

In the absence of technical evaluation from independent sources we cannot be sure how much of the defence manufacturing is local and how much it involves merely the skill of assembling various parts manufactured abroad as our car industry is doing. But Ideas-2006 had a negative impact in one important respect, apart from the traffic woes it created for the citizens of Karachi. It has focused attention sharply on the imbalance in the governments financial and policy priorities. Concern was voiced frequently in the talk shows held by television channels that the government is spending heavily on defence while the social sectors are being neglected.

This is not a baseless concern. Let us first take the argument that is directly related to Ideas-2006. An air vice marshal boasted in one programme that Pakistans arms exports will receive a fillip thanks to the exhibition. He said that we are exporting 200 million dollars worth of arms and that will offset somewhat our defence spending. One may well point out that the quantum of our exports is no more than a drop in the ocean being Rs 1.2 billion, even if we do not adjust the amount we spend on the import of parts and raw material for the manufacture of the exported weapons. And what is our defence budget? It was Rs 241 billion in 2005-06 and will rise to Rs 250 billion in the current fiscal year in fact it will be more when the revised figures are announced in June 2007.

That was the least worrying argument presented in defence of Ideas-2006. What is a cause for greater concern is the failure of our defence managers to understand that Pakistans policies are too defence-centric for our good. They always start with the premise that India is our enemy and if we do not build a feasible deterrence in the shape of a credible war machine and a nuclear capability we will make ourselves vulnerable to foreign aggression implying an Indian attack and destruction. One retired lieutenant general even said that this kind of security calls for a sacrifice from the people when they are denied facilities like health care, education and housing. The icing on the cake was his claim that the people are giving this sacrifice very willingly.

Continue reading on: Dawn

Categories: Articles & Reports · Economy · Pakistan

More of Keynes, again

November 28, 2006 · Leave a Comment

By Shahid Javed Burki

WE in Pakistan — and by that I mean those who make economic policies and those who comment on them — are not given to deep reflection. Why? There are several reasons. The country’s colleges and universities don’t teach economics, political science, sociology and anthropology the way they should be taught.

Consequently, those who enter public service either as politicians or government servants are poorly equipped to handle economic and social issues. Those who write on these issues from outside the government are equally ill-equipped to correctly analyse the situation or events on which they comment.

Continue reading on: Dawn

Categories: Articles & Reports · Economy · Education

لگڑبھگا جانتا ہے۔۔۔

November 26, 2006 · Leave a Comment


پاکستان میں پچھلے چھ برس کے دوران اسٹیبلشمنٹ کا لگڑبھگا سینکڑوں لوگوں کو منہ میں دبا کر لے گیا اور اب بھی لے جارہا ہے۔ کیا کسی نے سوچا کہ پہلے ادوار میں لوگ زیادہ تر گرفتار ہوتے تھے مگر اب ہر ہفتے کسی نہ کسی کے غائب ہونے کی اطلاع اتنے تواتر کے ساتھ کیوں آتی ہے۔

اسٹیبلشمنٹ کے لگڑبھگے پر یہ راز پوری طرح کھل چکا ہے کہ سول سوسائٹی کے جتنے بھی نمائندہ ادارے یا افراد ہیں وہ دیکھنے میں تو بظاہر ہزاروں، لاکھوں میں ہیں۔ لیکن ان میں اتنا ہی ایکا ہے جتنا کہ قصائی کے پنجرے میں بند مرغیوں میں یا چیتے کا سامنا کرنے والے جنگلی بھینسوں کے غول میں یا بھیڑیے کو دیکھنے والی بارہ سنگھوں کی ڈار میں ہوتا ہے۔

Full Article: BBCUrdu

On the same topic:
وہ جو لاپتہ ہیں۔۔۔

پاکستان یا غائبستان

 

Categories: Articles & Reports · Dictatorship · Pakistan

How democracy works in Pakistan

November 24, 2006 · 2 Comments

29 – 9 – 2006

The authorities in Islamabad have many ways to ensure the right result in elections. Irfan Husain tells some tales from the polling booth.

The circumstances surrounding the destruction of a madrasa in Bajaur which killed up to eighty-five people on 30 October 2006 demonstrate yet again the tricky nature of President Pervez Musharraf’s current balancing-act. In particular, the involvement of the United States in the assault, and the nature of the protests in its aftermath, reveal Musharraf to be caught between the hammer of Washington’s demands and the anvil of his people’s rising anger.

Continue reading on: www.opendemocracy.net

Irfan Husain is a columnist with Dawn newspaper in Pakistan.

Categories: Articles & Reports · Corruption · Dictatorship · Elections 2007 · Politics

Pakistan: Reforming the Education Sector

November 24, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Asia Report N°84
7 October 2004

Pakistan’s deteriorating education system has radicalised many young people while failing to equip them with the skills necessary for a modern economy. The public, government-run schools, which educate the vast majority of children poorly rather than the madrasas (religious seminaries) or the elite private schools are where significant reforms and an increase in resources are most needed to reverse the influence of jihadi groups, reduce risks of internal conflict and diminish the widening fissures in Pakistani society. Both the government and donors urgently need to need give this greater priority.

Recent attempts at reform have made little headway, and spending as a share of national output has fallen in the past five years. Pakistan is now one of just twelve countries that spend less than 2 per cent of GDP on education. Moreover, an inflexible curriculum and political interference have created schools that have barely lifted very low literacy rates.

In January 2002, President Pervez Musharraf’s government presented its Education Sector Reform (ESR) plan, aimed at modernising the education system. A major objective was to develop a more secular system in order to offset mounting international scrutiny and pressure to curb religious extremism in the wake of the 11 September 2001 attacks. But Pakistani governments, particularly those controlled by the military, have a long history of failing to follow through on announced reforms.

Executive Summary & Recoomendations: www.crisisgroup.org

Full Report

 

Categories: Articles & Reports · Economy · Education · International View · Pakistan

Musharraf’s predicament, Pakistan’s agony

November 24, 2006 · Leave a Comment

5 – 9 – 2006

The 9/11 attacks made Pakistan the frontline of the global war on terror. But it has all been downhill for Pervez Musharraf since then, writes Iftikhar H Malik.

The events of 11 September 2001 transformed the position of Pakistan in world politics, and offered its leader General Pervez Musharraf a frontline role in the “war on terror” the United States announced in their aftermath. Five years on, what has the country under Musharraf’s leadership made of the responsibility – and the opportunity – it was then presented with?

The phone call from the US’s then secretary of state Colin Powell that woke Musharraf with the news of the attacks in Washington and New York offered him a straight choice: Washington or the Taliban. For Musharraf, it was more than an easy decision – it was a godsend. Since his dismissal of an elected government in October 1999, the military ruler had become a pariah in the west, and the 9/11 attacks were a quick route to recover lost (or never gained) legitimacy, as well as a vanguard role in the unfolding war.

Continue Reading on: OpenDemocracy.net

Iftikhar H Malik is professor of history at Bath Spa University, England, and is also associated with Wolfson College, Oxford. His forthcoming book, Crescent between Cross and Star: Muslims and the West after 9/11 (2006) is being published by Oxford University Press.

Categories: Articles & Reports · Dictatorship · Pakistan · Politics

’انٹیلیجنس ریپبلک آف غائبستان‘

November 23, 2006 · Leave a Comment


وطن عزیز جہاں اغوا برائے تاوان ایک صنعت کا درجہ حاصل کرچکی تھی وہاں اب ’اغوا براۓ گمشدگی‘ کی وارداتیں ریاستی ہنر و حرفت کا اعلیٰ نشان بن چکی ہیں۔ ’باطل سے دبنے والے اے آسماں نہیں ہم۔۔۔۔‘

 

رکھوالوں کی نیت بدلی گھر کے مالک بن بیٹھے
جو غاصب محسن کش تھے صوفی سالک بن بیٹھے
جو آواز جہاں سے اٹھی اس پر تیر تبر برسے
ایسےہونٹ سلے لوگوں کے آوازوں کو بھی ترسے

احمد فراز کی آواز ہر دور کی حکومتوں کے لیے درویش کا اپنی جوتی میں بھیجا ہوا رقعہ ہے۔

Read full article on: BBCUrdu

Categories: Articles & Reports · Dictatorship · Pakistan

Promoting tourism in Pakistan

November 23, 2006 · 1 Comment

By Anwar Kemal
RECOGNISING the potential of tourism as a means of boosting national income in a relatively short time, the government has declared 2007 as “Visit Pakistan Year”. It has also set in motion a number of useful changes, including a liberal visa policy for visitors from “tourist friendly countries” and a generous depreciation allowance of 50 per cent for new investment in tourism.

Pakistan has an attractive coastline, three of the highest and most scenic mountain ranges in the world, cities that offer a variety of interesting products for sale, river plains, colourful deserts and many interesting historical and cultural sites. Our people are traditionally friendly and hospitable to strangers. So why is Pakistan one of the least frequented and most under-appreciated tourist destinations in the world?

The reported presence in Pakistan of some of the world’s diehard terrorists may have something to do with the dearth of tourists. A reputation for religious and cultural intolerance, undeserved by the population as a whole, does not help either. The third deficiency is that Pakistan lacks the infrastructure that a modern tourism industry demands. Power failures are common, speeding buses on crowded highways are a menace to passengers, pedestrians and smaller vehicles, the railway system is old, decent accommodation is scarce and costly, and the natural environment is becoming degraded.

Not surprisingly, in 2004 only 648,000 foreigners visited Pakistan, generating revenues of $186 million, as compared to India’s 3.5 million visitors who generated receipts of $6.1 billion. In 2006, the number of visitors to Pakistan increased to 798,000 but earnings, surprisingly, remained the same. The reason for the small volume of receipts is that a large proportion of the visitors are overseas Pakistanis, not genuine tourists.

Pakistanis, who frequently travel abroad, may wonder why countries with similar cultural and religious backgrounds are able to attract so many more tourists. For example, Egypt hosted 8.6 million tourists in 2005, who spent $6.5 billion, in spite of deadly bombing attacks in the Sinai, while over 17 million tourists are expected to visit Turkey and generate $16.5 billion in 2006.

Full Article: Dawn Editorial (21st Nov 2006)

Categories: Articles & Reports · Economy · Tourism

We must address the root causes of this terror

November 20, 2006 · Leave a Comment

by Imran Khan

The terrorist attacks have nothing to do with religious faith and everything to do with genuine injustices. Until the US addresses the root causes and its own double standards, the bombings will increase

Published: 24 July 2005

As a Pakistani, it has been a bad week to be in London. Not only could one’s relations or friends have been blown up, but those who committed those hideous crimes justified them in the name of Islam. Even worse for me was the news that three of the four terrorists had been to Pakistan. But neither Islam nor Pakistan has anything to do with these atrocities. Nowhere does the Koran justify attacks on innocent people. Pakistan is being blamed for fostering terrorists, yet Pakistan has been a victim for the past 15 years.

Some history is in order. After the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, the US used Islam to counter the occupation. It sponsored an international jihad in the Muslim world and encouraged volunteers from Muslim countries to join in it. Thousands, including Osama bin Laden, flocked to Pakistan, where US-funded training camps were set up under CIA supervision. These plucky mujahedin were glorified in the West. But once the Soviets were defeated, both Afghanistan and the mujahedin were abandoned by the US. Afghanistan descended into chaos, from which the Taliban emerged.

Pakistan paid a heavy price, being left with sectarian militant groups trained in terrorism and four million Afghan refugees. We were swamped with drugs and Kalashnikovs. Meanwhile, those Muslims glorified as heroes for dislodging the Soviets now turned their attention to other countries where Muslims were being oppressed. As this brought them up against the US, they went from being heroic jihadis to “Islamic terrorists”. The culmination of this was 9/11.

But rather than trying to understand why 9/11 had happened, Bush and his colleagues took refuge in such inane expressions as “they hate our freedom, our way of life, our democracy” and, even more ridiculously, “they love killing”. The main stakeholders used 9/11 to pursue their own agendas for which it was convenient to conflate Islam and terrorism. Hence wherever Muslims were involved in a freedom struggle, they would become “Islamic terrorists”. This is no mere semantic point. Ariel Sharon used the excuse of terrorism to use his formidable military might against the civilian Palestinian population. Similarly Russia would use the magic word al-Qa’ida to squash all accusations of genocide and human rights abuse in Chechnya. But the chief grievances were political, not religious.

Then India claimed that “Islamic terrorists” were operating in Kashmir when that freedom struggle dated back almost 150 years. George Bush would use the term to attack Afghanistan weeks after 9/11, making war a first option rather than a last resort. And later he would use the same pretext to invade Iraq.

Yet the perception in the West remained that somehow Islam was connected to militarism and terrorism, that all Muslims believe that all suicide bombers go straight to heaven. No one mentioned that before 9/11 70 per cent of suicide bombings in the world were committed by the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka, who were Hindus. No one blames Hinduism, nor do they blame Shintoism for the Japanese Kamikaze pilots. Where religion is particularly strong, political martyrdom gets cloaked in religious terminology.

Thus Islam was put on the defensive. Heads of all Muslim countries went hoarse giving statements that suicide bombings were not allowed in Islam. General Musharraf went further, making Pakistan a frontline state against Islamic extremism and terrorism. He invented the term “enlightened moderation” in the hope of encouraging Muslims to avoid militancy. Now there is deafening clamour for him to close madrassas (religious schools) given that it has emerged that three of the four 7/7 bombers had visited one. But there are almost a million madrassa students in Pakistan. Are they all terrorists? Of course not. And why did the madrassas not produce any militants before the Afghan jihad when they have existed in the subcontinent for centuries?

The state school structure in Pakistan is in a mess. Madrassas are the only means through which poor families can educate their children. In my constituency in Mianwali, 70 per cent of the state schools are closed, mainly because there are no teachers. What are the people supposed to do there if they do not send their children to the charity-run religious schools? Certainly some madrassas do preach hate against other sects, and they should have been closed a long time ago, And there needs to be modernisation of the syllabus of Pakistan’s entire education system, madrassas included. Unfortunately, General Musharraf’s hands are tied. He is seen as a stooge of the anti-Islamic Americans. He lacks the moral authority to reform the madrassas or take on the sectarian militants. Sadly, he is more likely to exacerbate both militancy in our society and anti-American feelings.

In Muslim countries where the government is perceived to be a US puppet, there is a rise in both anti-Americanism and terrorism (eg Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Afghanistan). Suicide bombings in Pakistan started only after the Iraq invasion when both the Prime Minster and President were targeted. And where the government is thought to derive its power from its own people (and not from the US), like Iran and Malaysia, there is no terrorism. Mahatir Mohammad was able to clamp down on extremism in Malaysia with great success because he had popular backing.

The war on terror will never be won as long as we do not address the root causes – as long, for example, as the leadership in the US and UK denies that the horrific London bombing had anything at all to do with Iraq. The great danger is that sooner or later some suicide attacker will get hold of chemical or biological weapons and cause far greater damage in the US or UK than we have seen to date. When episodes such as Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib are broadcast widely, the Muslim perception grows that it is not a war against terror but a war against Islam. The risk is then that the terrorists become “defenders of the faith”. For that cause they will have no shortage of recruits.

By not addressing the issues that give a perception in the world of unjust US policies (like Palestine, Iraq, Kashmir) and by using the pretext of democracy to invade Iraq, while backing a military dictator in Pakistan or a tyrant in Uzbekistan, the US double standards cause further Muslim alienation. The US and Israel are leaning on Mahmoud Abbas to curb Palestinian militancy, but this will achieve nothing unless the root cause is addressed. Similarly, they can lean on Musharraf as much as they like to close the madrassas which preach militancy and stop infiltration of insurgents in Afghanistan, but he will be equally ineffective. In short, the Americans are impotent in this war on terror.

Source: The Independent

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