April 11, 2010
Kiamat (Doomsday) in Pakistan
By Saeed Qureshi
In 21st century, a country called Pakistan is slipping back to dark ages. In 
Pakistan, the electricity that runs every household, every industrial unit, 
moves agricultural implements; is a dire need for  schools, hospitals, street 
lights,  commercial enterprises, offices, bazaars, railways  and which  is an 
indispensible lifeline for a society goes off for as long as 20 hours a day. Is 
it possible to calculate the depth and level of harmful impact on the lives of 
the people of Pakistan? Disastrous is too slim an adjective to describe the 
horrendous spectacle with which the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is awash. 
Let us content ourselves by paralleling it with the euphemism of the scriptural 
“Doomsday” when the whole humanity would be running helter and skelter in a 
complete state of frenzy and in a climate that would be unbearably  hot because 
the  Sun,  according to dogma, “would  be as close to the earth as  the length 
of  a lance.” 
So the panicked, frantic, devil stricken people of Pakistan are raking, 
agitating, rallying, clamoring, blockading, protesting and finally finding 
nowhere to go. These crazy segments of humanity are outraged against damning 
spells of power shut downs, technically termed as load shedding, as if the 
electric power is in excess and its overload is being off-loaded. The callous 
indifference shown by the hypocritical, liars, thieves, inside traders, money 
grabbers, sitting in high offices at public expense, of the miseries of the 
grief stricken Pakistanis caused, is devastating and mind boggling. The People 
are turning mentally infirm because of the darkness, because their children are 
unable to prepare for examination, because of the silent fans in sizzling 
summer, because their patients cannot be operated upon and because their water 
pumps do not function.
One is reminded of the storming of the Bastille prison a symbol of royal 
tyranny, on 14th July 1789. This momentous event turned out to be the 
flashpoint for the French Revolution, and it subsequently became an icon of the 
French Republic. Thereafter, fired with the spirit of liberty and change the 
ordinary citizens of Paris attacked the elitist classes, the wealthy landlords 
and members of aristocracy paving way for the blissful French Revolution. Those 
who pioneered this historic change were ordinary, impoverished, dispossessed 
people, driven to rebellion by the ruthless and unbearable exploitation of the 
royalty, the feudal and aristocratic classes.
The 18th amendment is passed. The question is relevant and pertinent: what 
about the people’s problems that are devouring their lives and pushing them 
back to dark ages? I don’t pretend to be a messenger of doom and willfully 
paint a bleak picture of my country of origin. But no one even an imbecile or 
cynic can overlook the frightening state of affairs fast deteriorating in 
Pakistan. The Law is infringed with immunity, the courts are ridiculed, 
monstrous lies and fabrications are splashed by the leaders to bamboozle the 
citizens already innervated by the appalling civic utilities and poor social 
amenities. All the state run enterprises are ramshackle, primitive and in huge 
losses. During the past several years and even now national assets are being 
sold like peanuts. The magnificent word good governance is heard in Pakistan 
but practiced overseas in heathen and unislamic polities.
The Minister of Law and Parliamentary Affairs aggressively saber rattles 
against all those who talk of respect for law and propriety and decency. He is 
positioning himself like Genghis Khan, ambushing all those who dare come in 
front of his bullish head-on forays. He is aggressive, violent, and 
vituperative and a slur for the sublime virtue of law of which he is a 
minister. His freakish and   bellicose behavior has forced quite a few senior 
bureaucrats including the auditor general and his secretary to resign. And 
still the president showers accolades on him for facilitating the 18th 
amendment. Should someone have the courage including the prime minister and the 
president, to look into the accusations against him for taking hefty bribe from 
felonious businessmen?
The Supreme Court orders are being flagrantly flouted by the government and 
particularly by the law minister. He is reported to be turning hostile and 
vindictive against all those who refuse to become party with him in his 
delaying and dodging, machinations in regard to complying with the apex courts’ 
directives. Instead of bucking up the real architect of the 18 amendment, Mian 
Raza Rabbani, who burnt the midnight oil, the flamboyant president throws the 
credit for this magnificent feat in the lap of the law minister, who has been 
rather posed as an irritant during the formative stage of the 18th amendment 
draft.
 
We can see the mockingbird Minister of Water and Power sitting close to the 
prime minister in the National Assembly on the memorable day of passing the 
18th amendment bill in that he is feigning spurious and conspiratorial smile 
while talking to a bird of his flock.  Flatly and unabashedly reneging from his 
past myriad phony deadlines of ending power load shedding, he now claims he 
would never make such false promise. 
Close on the heels of the scandals engulfing the rental   power generating 
units another colossal gas purchase scandal is doing rounds in Pakistan. This 
time the kickback is guessed to be around one billion dollars. The trick is 
that first, an artificial shortage of food items and utility services is 
created by the factory owners and stockholders who are also holding ministerial 
posts and later the prices are arbitrarily raised. To escape starvation, the 
people forget the price hike and buy at the artificially contrived prices. In 
Pakistan, how easy it is for the powerful thugs to make huge profits. 
In his speech on the death anniversary of the founder of the PPP at Garhi Khuda 
Bakhsh, president Zardari, in a regal spirit, has arrogated to himself the 
royal prerogative of making any one a king or a beggar. Such is the height of 
arrogance and morbid drunkenness of power that an elected head of state who 
should be as humble as a saint, is casting himself into the role of a dynastic 
monarch. 
When PPP came into power, majority in Pakistan were happy and jubilant. The 
people of Pakistan pinned great hopes in PPP to revolutionize and reconstruct 
Pakistan as was done by ZA Bhutto after the dismemberment of Pakistan in 1971. 
But the people forgot that Zardari is made of a different stuff. He is a kind 
of a drawing room manipulator who jumped into the power band wagon because his 
wife and co chairperson of PPP died and that she in her will, appointed Zardari 
to be her successor. Now old habits die hard. Zardari’ penchant with increasing 
his wealth and favoring his friends and kith made him oblivious of the gigantic 
challenges of nation building.
The PPP, contrary to its élan and promises protected the status quo, gave a 
huge cabinet to the nation, and dithered on implementing the agreements made 
with other parties, restored the judges unwillingly and under the public 
pressure and demonstrated no inclination to investigate Benazir’s 
assassination. But what outraged people and other poltical parties is that 
while no economic charter and social contract is unfurled, the PPP rank and 
file indulge in rank nepotism and its ministers have earned the dubious 
distinction of being corrupt. The party on the whole was thrown into a vortex 
of sleazy scandals of misuse of power, profiteering and bribes. President 
Zardari kept his eyes shut to the allegations of malpractices against his 
ministers. 
Instead of a clean and efficient governance, the party in power remained locked 
in legal and constitutional battles. It fell back upon adhocism and short term 
measures to resolve such fundamental issues as provision of flour, water, 
electricity, law and order, education, health, and eradication of poverty, 
hunger and disease. The PPP as a major coalition partner suffers from trust 
deficit of the people because it failed to deliver its mandate of a 
socio-economic and civic revolution and turning Pakistan into an egalitarian 
society.  
President Zardari wasted the golden opportunity of refurbishing his tainted 
image of a corrupt person. On the contrary he has further tarnished it. The 
18th amendment though is a good threshold for parliamentary democracy, yet it 
came very late and at a time when power outrages have robbed the people of 
their peace of mind and when eking out two square meals has become a tall order 
for a common man.
 
For comments and to unsubscribe write us at qureshisa2...@yahoo.com


Saeed Qureshi

Website: http://www.uprightopinion.com

Reply via email to