Where
in Pakistan’s Constitution is it stipulated
that every new head of state must pay his respects
to the US President after taking oath of office?
And that he must take his cast of hundreds along?
And
yet this homage-paying ritual is repeated, ad nauseam,
by every incoming Pakistani ruler.
Where
was the need for Prime Minister Gillani to fly off
to Washington to lunch with (and be lectured by?)
Mr. Bush, when a crisis of mammoth proportions is
brewing inside the country which requires the leading
stakeholders’ undivided attention?
It
is scary, the lackadaisical manner in which the
present set of politicians is conducting –
or rather not conducting – the business of
governance. They seem to have no clue about the
gravity of the situation nor of the urgent need
to tackle it.
The
leading lights of the two main political parties
spend most of their time in Dubai and London –
ostensibly for personal reasons – and continue
to quibble on the issue of Justice Chaudhry’s
reinstatement and Musharraf’s impeachment.
The task of conducting the war on terror has been
passed on to the army and those in the hot seat
do not seem to want to assume ownership of the policy
on terrorism.
That
is probably the most convenient stance to take when
conditions seem to be spinning out of control. The
burnings, the beheadings and the bombings rage on.
The militants continue to threaten and extend their
frontiers day by day. The ANP government is under
threat from the militants. And the Jamia Hafsa is
raising its troublesome head, once again.
The
editor-in-chief of the Urdu daily Aajkal, Najam
Sethi, has to move around with armed commandos.
Hafsa has threatened him with decapitation: the
letter sent to him carried a chilling photo of a
beheaded man. They are seeking revenge for the publication
of a cartoon showing Ms Umme Hasan preaching jihad
to children.
Kidnapping,
assaulting and confining women on charges of immorality
by the Jamia Hafsa brigade was a “holy”
act in Ms Hasan’s estimation, but a relatively
innocuous cartoon in a newspaper is tantamount to
“blasphemy,” punishable with death.
Are we playing God here? Cartoons lampooning politicians
and other sections of society are carried by the
print media on a daily basis. So, should all those
caricatured, demand beheading of editors?
We
don’t need the spectacle of another Jamia
Hafsa. We already have our hands full, with the
regular threats being issued by the likes of Maulvi
Fazlullah and Baitullah Mehsud. The politicians,
both inside and outside the assemblies, need to
close rank, and get their act together in order
to establish the writ of the state.
Presently,
the country seems to be running on autopilot, giving
all self-seeking adventurists the courage to challenge
the government with brazenness. The monster of militancy
needs to be reined in before it devours the whole
nation