Pakistan Will Stay and Prosper: No
Country How Overbearing That Might Be, Can Harm
12 June 2011
By Saeed Qureshi
We all know Pakistan is in deep quagmire. Yet I
believe Pakistan will come out of its daunting
challenges with flying colors. Since its inception,
Pakistan has witnessed and gone through several
conceivable trials and tribulations because of both
internal and external factors.
Barring the cataclysm of the cessation of East
Pakistan in 1971 that truncated Pakistan into two
parts, the rest of the problems were of similar import
as encountered by nascent nations.
Pakistan's strength lies in the patriotism of its
people, its untapped natural resources, its
hardworking manpower, its fertile and vast land, its
strong armed forces, resilience of its people to
overcome one crisis after another and undying will to
survive against odds.
I cannot side with the skeptics and dooms day
despondents who claim Pakistan was moving towards
disintegration and collapse. Such people are either
enemies of Pakistan or paranoid. Or else they don not
have the intention to wish well for Pakistan.
The refrain on this setback and that tragedy is the
favorite pastime of such individuals who with their
trumped up apprehensions sow dejection and despondency
to weaken or break the will of the people to live
together.
Admittedly there are myriad problems such as bad
governance or alloyed democracy or delicate law and
order, religious militancy, sectarian strife, poor
civic facilities, socio-economic irritants and so on.
But does that mean that we should disown the very
country and start tolling the bells for its demise?
These problems are much more ferocious and bounteous
in several other countries but no one talks about
there about the end game or the disintegration.
Look at whole Africa from North to South and Asia
minor immersed into a doom' day stranglehold. Is
Pakistan not better than the horrendous conditions
prevailing in those states?
Granted that in Pakistan the law and order is fragile
and there are murders, kidnapping, assassinations and
vendetta killings, bomb blasts and suicide bombings.
But can these incidents be compared with what is
happening in the entire Middle East and the civil war
raging and ravaging in African countries, like Sudan,
Somalia, Rwanda , Nigeria, Chad, Eritrea ,Ethiopia,
Niger, Senegal, Somalia, Sudan, Uganda, Western
Sahara.
No matter how flawed the system of government in
Pakistan is but fundamentally there is a democratic
form with three branches of state functioning
relatively free, albeit not as immaculate as we can
find in West Europe or the United States.
Those countries reached the stage of mature and
accountable systems and good governance after great
tragedies and crises and a prolonged period of time.
The American civil war alone is a grim reminder of the
destruction and horrendous manslaughter and
instability that took place during those wars.
Have we forgotten the ideological tussle between the
Catholics and Protestants after the onset of
Reformation era entailing the spine chilling
barbarities perpetrated by the Catholics against the
newly emerging breakaway Protestants?
My vision is that Pakistan despite its countless
problems including the oft repeated skepticism about
its viability and survival will stay and in due course
move steadfastly on the way to becoming a modern state
with all attending hallmarks.
The brighter side of the present the present day
Pakistan is that the women are more empowered, and
there is some kind of accountability although the
executive has not moved fast to take action against
the culprits.
A stage would arrive when civil society would be
vibrant enough to press for dire action against the
defaulters, outlaws, delinquents, bribe takers and so.
Notwithstanding the personal objectionable character
or the villainous volition of the individuals in power
in Pakistan, the fact cannot be ignored that it is
essentially an elected government. Still it is a
democratic dispensation that retains some semblance of
accountability and censure as exercised by media and
judiciary.
Instead of condemning or berating the government for
every major and minor fault, let us see it in a
broader context. At least it is being run by the
people's elected representatives. Let us strive and
wish that the incumbent government can move away from
its mistakes and follies, corrects its rudder, and
drives the country out of dire straits. The "worst
democracy is better than the best dictatorship", goes
the adage.
The grassroots revolution that is much wished seems to
be a far cry at the moment because there is no leader
that can motivate the people to come out in the
streets and create havoc against the privileged
classes. The army basically in Pakistan is not for
people friendly change as it comes in power to serve
the interests of its own cadres.
Starting from Imran Khan, down to a labor leader no
one has the charisma and the caliber to spur a
revolution that should be ruthless or if peaceful must
be thunderous to root out the morbid status quo.
The socialist or proletariat revolution would be
tenaciously resisted by the rightist groups and the
conservative bands. Similarly, the religion based
change a la Taliban would be narrow and would be hotly
contested by the rival groups professing different
faith from the mainstream torch bearers.
We cannot see a religious revolution in the
contemporary history. But if it takes place, then such
a society turns the clock back and remains far behind
the developed nations, in social and political terms.
Saudi Arabic is one example. Iranian revolution is not
essentially a religious change but bears the character
of a nation state.
Undeniably, there is an acute yearning for the change
and a burgeoning urge to crush the elite classes. But
such a pursuit cannot be attained as this is not the
era after the World War I. The communist or people's
revolution that started from Russia at the turn of the
20th century failed.
Therefore, its replay would be fatal and futile in the
present times when ideology hardly matters and nation
states have their own peculiar image and complexion to
stay and survive.
If a miracle happens and the genes of the present
Pakistani puppet rulers undergo transformation, and
they disassociate Pakistan from the ongoing war in
northern tribal regions of Pakistan, then that would
be the real day of deliverance for Pakistan.
This war that is thrust upon Pakistan by the western
countries has turned Pakistan into a traumatic land
where the criminals roam free to kill the people and
get away.
The Pakistan's administration demonstrates callous
indifference towards the lawlessness and contemptuous
disregard of the people's woes, recasting the
institutions and the crucial task of nation building
and aversion for the civil society and rule of law.
Doing good things for the welfare of the citizens is
alien and an anathema to the rulers who have entered
the realm of power by strange coincidence.
But if God is kind and gives them some modicum of care
for the Pakistan they should evolve and make such
plans that bring a turnaround in the economy of
Pakistan. Pakistan can learn and follow in the
footsteps of South Korea and Singapore and go headlong
for reconstruction of economy and make it booming.
Unlike South Korea and Singapore, Pakistan
geographically and demographically is a large country.
By recalling the army from the tribal belt and gearing
up a stupendous economic activity and reconstruction,
Pakistan has the ability and potential to outclass
many developing economies of the world?
Why Pakistan cannot do things that serve the people
well and make the country strong both economically and
socially? Why have Pakistan earned the stigma and
odium of a crony and client state of the United
States, though we were always forsaken when the job
was done?
Pakistan can survive without foreign aid and alms. If
we persist and adhere to our national honor and work
assiduously for economic uplift and a civil society
and functional genuine democracy, no country how
overbearing that might be, can harm us.
If Taliban remain confined to Afghanistan let that
government deal with them. At best we can stop and
block the infiltration of the militants into Pakistan
for which not the armed forces but our tribal
population is enough and effective.
It is foregone that once we wind up our partnership in
regional wars, the radicals and extremists would call
off their anti-Pakistan operations and activities.
They can later be persuaded to join the nation
building task by democratic and civil means.
The writer is a senior journalist and a former
diplomat. He can be reached at qureshisa2003@yahoo.com
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add Comments