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"Woman
is defective in intelligence but Queen Saba had enough common sense
to discuss Hazrat Sulaiman's letter with her advisors and send a
reply to the Holy Prophet (PBUH), after their consultation,"
says Hafiz Siraj in one of his daily radio broadcasts on an illegal
FM radio station set up in Masjid Habiburrahman in Mardan in the
heart of the conservative NWFP, where illegal radio broadcasts have
witnessed a mushroom growth.
"Woman
has been created for man's pleasure. She is inferior to man,"
Siraj says in another sermon, while interpreting verses from the
Holy Quran. He spews out dozens of similar outrageous anti-women
views in his widely popular, daily broadcast in which he interprets
the Holy Quran. A large number of people, particularly women, remain
glued to their transmitters during the broadcasts. The broadcasts
are so popular that they can be heard booming in the streets of
Mardan.
"Forgetting
the Holy Prophet's (Peace be Upon Him) Sunnah of four marriages,
is the main reason behind most of our present problems, because
as some people believe, four marriages don't bring poverty. Rather,
it is a way to end poverty. We should earnestly begin contracting
four marriages to revive this forgotten Sunnah and get rid of our
problems," says Siraj.
Maulana
Saeedullah Jan, who has set up his station at his seminary, Madrassah
Ijazul Quran, runs his FM channel in the evening. "My broadcast
is relayed for only half an hour," says Maulana Saeedullah
Jan. "I broadcast the daily afternoon sermon and avoid politics."
There have been reports of tension over FM broadcasts in Mardan
villages, but the situation has generally remained peaceful unlike
the Khyber Agency, where dozens were killed over broadcasts between
followers of two rival clerics who ran illegal FM channels.
Twenty-five people were killed and as many injured in gun-battles
between the followers of Mufti Munir Shakir and Pir Saifurrahman
in Bara on March 28. The clashes at Sur Dand area in Khyber Agency
started when supporters of cleric Mufti Munir Shakir laid siege
to the house of a staunch follower of rival cleric, Pir Saifurrahman.
Mufti Shakir and the Pir used abusive language against each other,
calling each other infidels. Though the rival clerics were ultimately
evicted from the area to restore peace, Mufti Munir Shakir's lieutant
continues to run the channel.
According to the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority
(Pemra), a total of 33 illegal FM channels are currently airing
broadcasts in the NWFP, including four in Charsadda, 15 in Swabi
and 14 in Malakand. The number of illegal radio channels in the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) is 18.
Earlier, Pemra field officers detected 88 FM stations in
various districts, including one in Peshawar, eight in Nowshera,
11 in Charsadda, 14 in Malakand, four in Mardan, 28 in Swabi, one
in Bannu, nine in Buner, four in Hangu, one in Karak, two in Mansehra,
two in Batagram, two in Swat and one in Kohat. When Pemra forwarded
the list to the Inspector General of police for action, the police
replied with a list of 87 channels that they claimed had closed
down. "When we compared the police list with our list, only
55 channels out of our list had been shut down. That meant 33 channels
were still on," says Javed Iqbal, Pemra's regional general
manager.
According to the Pemra list, eight channels out of the 18
in the tribal area are running in Bajaur Agency. Seven are functioning
in Khyber Agency, one in Aurakzai Agency and two in Mohmand Agency.
However, the number of such illegal FM channels in the NWFP are
actually far greater. At least two channels are broadcasting in
Mardan that are not mentioned in the Pemra list. The exclusion of
32 channels, which the police claimed they have shut down, implies
that Pemra has failed to make a correct assessment of all the illegal
stations.
According to Pemra officials, the reason for this is lack
of staff. There are only three field supervisors who look after
illegal FM operations in the entire province. "There is a move
from the President's Secretariat to hand over jurisdiction of FATA,
as well as the provincially administered tribal areas, to Pemra,
but we have almost no staff," says a Pemra official.
According to Pemra authorities, illegal channels distort
army signals, air traffic, police security signals, and disturb
the frequency of legal radio channels. Even more dangerous, however,
are the social and political consequences of these channels. With
diverse religious backgrounds, religious leaders are projecting
a narrow, fundamentalist view to the people in the NWFP and the
tribal areas. Already a conservative and backward region, these
myopic broadcasts are sure to have far-reaching and detrimental
effects. The Bara incident is a case in point.
Closing down these channels, however, has been a complicated
process. The broadcasts have a large following and closing them
down is a sensitive issue with the administration, as was proved
in the Khyber Agency.
"It is a sensitive issue. Religious people react if
we seize the equipment of these illegal channels," says a Pemra
official. "They start their operation in an adjacent house
if we take their equipment away."
Meanwhile, sureties from clerics or area notables that the
channels would stop operations were accepted by the police as proof
that the illegal channels had closed down. In very few cases did
the police physically ensure that these illegal channels were shut
down.
And since the cost of setting up an FM channel is modest
- Rs 5,000 to Rs7,000 for the small box - it seems that new illegal
channels will open as fast as they are shut down.
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