|
For
those who traversed the roads of Sindh province during the 1980s
and '90s, the presence of the Sindhi dacoit posed a constant threat
to the safety of life and property. Trains, cars, buses and cargo
trucks were all looted and enough kidnapping cases resulted to scare
the provincial and federal government into action in the early 1990s.
Imdad
Hussain Sahito's work, Decade of the Dacoits, brings this period
to the fore with a well researched critical analysis of the history
and activities of the dacoits, as well as tackling the key issues
of the reasons for their emergence and the steps taken by the government
to combat them.
The
dearth of quality English language works coming out of Pakistani
universities is alarming . Sahito, a professor at Shah Abdul Latif
University, with a PhD in Criminology, has produced a model for
emulation with this book.
That
said, this book is by no means an easy read. What little flow exists
in the text is broken by the sub-headings on each page. Although
each section is linked to the previous and is a logical continuation
of the one preceding it, the demarcations make it seem detached
from the rest of the text.
Despite
these limitations the content itself is informative without being
dull. Sahito merges stories with analysis and produces rather poignant
accounts of the rise and fall of dacoits in Sindh.
He begins by placing the entire concept of highway robbery
and kidnapping in the region into a historical context. He talks
of the pirates that roamed the high seas before the British showed
up. He discusses the looting and plundering that took place in each
historical period in Sindh, with distinctions based on who ruled
Sindh at the time.
After
having established historical relevance, he moves onto the recent
epidemic rise and its causes. He implicates the social setup, the
tribal nature of rural life in Sindh, which fosters rivalries, the
political and tribal affiliations, the role of the state and judiciary
and the inefficiencies of the police. Sahito is particularly critical
of the law enforcement agencies and their agents in Sindh. He dedicates
large portions of his analysis to recording the inefficiencies and
corruption that were rife in the Sindh police force during the years
from 1984-1994.
In fact, police forces are directly implicated in the rampant kidnappings
of that ten-year period. According to Sahito, the police, as informers,
helpers and supporters of the dacoits and kidnappers, received a
cut of the earnings. Not only did police involvement provide official
cover for the dacoits and kidnappers, it also complicated the task
of bringing these outlaws to justice.
Sahito's
study shows that "a majority of the people were kidnapped within
a radius of one mile from the police station. Whenever possible,
the police avoided encounters with the dacoits." This was either
due to fear of repercussions-police officers themselves were killed
or kidnapped-or due to direct involvement on the part of these officers.
These
activities were not restricted to rural and backward areas of Sindh
but seeped into Karachi as well. Between 1984-94, Sahito lists a
number of incidents of kidnapping and dacoity that took place in
the city, including those that were aided and abetted by the police.
It
was only in 1992 that the government decided to step in and take
effective action against the perpetrators. Sahito discusses these
moves in detail. According to him, the most effective was Operation
Blue Fox in 1992 when the Pakistan army was ordered into Sindh to
combat the dacoits. However, he goes on to list a number of cases
in which the Rangers and police were both responsible for torture,
murder and rape of innocent civilians and the pillaging of towns.
This book, written after years of research by Sahito, is one step
in the direction towards exposing the corruption, lawlessness and
crime that pervades the province . With this book as a stepping
stone, it is now imperative that measures be taken to eradicate
the problems and provide relief to the people of Sindh.
As
an academic exercise, Sahito's work is comprehensively researched
and mostly well-written. Oxford University Press, Pakistan must
also be lauded for continuing to promote the publication of indigenous
writing and academic works.
|