Hello,
is anyone in charge in this country? The 'holy spirits'
are raising hell in the federal capital, but the men
in uniform do not appear to be unduly concerned.
Their
failure to handle the Jamia Hafsa issue with an iron
hand has emboldened the veiled brigade to further test
the waters.
After
occupying the children's library, some of the Jamia's
baton-wielding women are venturing into the field to
spread their brand of Islam. Accompanied by menfolk
(whatever happened to the concept of namehram?), they
have been making the rounds of music and video stores,
demanding that they be closed and, worse, acting as
the custodians of everybody's morals. In short, playing
God.
In
a shocking display of unwanton behaviour, they took
three women - reportedly the wife, sister and mother
of a government employee - hostage, accusing them of
running a brothel, and released them only after they
read out a written confession before the media. Incidentally,
two police mobiles that went to rescue them were confiscated
and set free only when some of their jailed colleagues
were released. Now the puritans are threatening to take
the women captive again if the authorities do not release
another six of their colleagues, including a former
ISI official.
Elsewhere in Tank in the NWFP, worse things are happening:
children are being kidnapped from government and private
schools and moved to undisclosed locations to train
them for jihad against NATO and US forces. A conscientious
principal, who resisted the militants, has been kidnapped
along with his brother and is being threatened with
capital punishment. Tank has now been reduced to a ghost
town, with the militants calling the shots and the police
proving to be totally ineffective against this brutal
assault.
So,
are we to assume that Musharraf and his men are losing
the battle against Talibanisation? Or is it that they
are far too preoccupied with the other battle front
they've opened up - the judicial reference against Justice
Iftikhar Chaudhry. Incidentally, while they've handled
the Jamia Hafsa issue with kid gloves, they went ballistic
vis-à-vis the lawyers, politicians and civil
society. They tear-gassed and lathi-charged them, and
even resorted to putting them behind bars. Fortunately,
the media was on the spot, giving a blow-by-blow account,
much to the discomfiture of the government, which then
decided to hit back with a vengeance.
Channels
were taken off the air for showing clips of lawyers
bleeding from police-inflicted injuries, programmes
were banned and Geo Television's Islamabad office was
vandalised. And true to its reputation, the government
continued to feign innocence and ignorance.
The
acting chief justice should take suo moto notice of
all the lies this government has fabricated to cover
its tracks, the last one being that the attack on Geo
was a "conspiracy" against the government
and that the police official who ordered it is "absconding."
Asked by the channel's anchorperson, if he was contemplating
resigning, Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani
hummed and hawed.
Unfortunately,
not everyone has the moral courage to resign. In a show
of maturity, Inzamam-ul-Haq, captain of the Pakistani
cricket team, Wasim Bari, chairman, Cricket Selection
Committee, and Nasim Ashraf, chairman, PCB, all decided
to call it quits after Pakistan's dismal showing in
the World Cup. Why, even the chairman of the national
airliner handed in his resignation after questions were
raised about his competence following the EU's ban on
a certain segment of PIA's fleet.
Perhaps
Geo anchorman Kamran Khan should've gone a step further
in his wide-ranging interview with the chief executive
of Pakistan and addressed the same question to him.
If this government cannot establish the writ of the
law, shouldn't it be vacating the seat for somebody
who can?