|
In
a classic case of the sublime and the ridiculous, it is obscenity
that follows hot on the heels of the Legal Framework Order, on the
agenda of the six-party religious alliance, the Mutahidda Majlis-i-Amal.
While the MMA leadership was busy agitating against the LFO, the
local workers of the religious alliance moved against what they
considered "public obscenity."
Though the primary target of the MMA activists are the large
advertising signboards of multinational companies, in Gujranwala
city, the MMA went a step further and attacked cultural activities
as well. On May 30, hundreds of students of Islamic seminaries in
Gujranwala armed with sticks swooped down on a circus show, ransacked
it and beat hundreds of spectators. According to an eyewitness,
over a hundred students from Islamic seminaries and MMA workers
in Gujranwala converged on a local circus at a park near the Grand
Trunk Road. The circus, a common form of entertainment in the Punjab,
was showing motorcycle tricks, and the usual wild animal acts. However,
what infuriated the clerics were the dancing girls who were performing
to recorded music.
The mob, led by a local cleric and member of the National Assembly
from the MMA, Qazi Hameedullah, dismantled the circus tents and
torched them while shouting Allah-o-Akbar (God is great).
Hundreds of spectators were injured in the stampede which followed
the attack and many suffered from concussion when the students hit
them with clubs and sticks. The police resorted to charging the
crowd with batons to disperse the mob and the fire-brigade was called
to put out the fire. After this, the mob moved on to attack another
circus show in the city, but the police forced the show to close
to calm down the mob. The police also closed eight other theatres
to avert further destruction and disorder.
Qazi Hameedullah, who led the attack on the circus, said he had
warned the administration to close the circuses, which he described
as centres of obscenity and gambling, but decided to take action
himself when the police ignored him. However, he denied that his
men set fire to the circus tents.
Initially the police did not register a case against the accused
and it was only when it became an issue in the national press that
a case was registered against more than 100 MMA workers including
Qazi Hameedullah. More than 20 MMA workers were arrested, including
Jamaat-i-Islami's local leader, Hafiz Hameeduddin Awan. However,
fearing a reprisal from the MMA, the circus manager ran away refusing
to pursue the case. Finally, a local judge freed all the accused
since the plaintiff was missing.
Encouraged by the Gujranwala incident, a week later, the Jamaat-i-Islami
youth wing, Shabab-i-Milli, brought out a protest demonstration
in Multan where they blackened female faces on the billboards of
various multinational companies. Shabab-i-Milli leader, Saad Kanju,
said this was the first warning to these companies and if they did
not desist from displaying obscene pictures of women, they would
take serious action. Jamaat-i-Islami district chief, Ashraf Ali
Ateeq, said that this demonstration was to protest against the increasing
vulgarity and obscenity in the advertisement campaigns of certain
companies, especially those selling soft drinks, mobile phones and
cigarettes. He said his organisation had also written letters to
these companies not to display semi-naked pictures of women on signboards.
Though the police arrested some people allegedly involved in this
incident they were later freed on bail.
The Jamaat-i-Islami information secretary, Ameerul Azeem, told Newsline
that the campaign against obscenity on signboards was a grassroots
movement and the MMA leadership had not issued any orders to their
workers. According to Azeem, advertising billboards had offended
many people and for some time the companies had been asked to change
their policy but they did not respond. So the people took the matter
to the streets.
The fight against obscenity has been an old political theme for
the Jamaat-i-Islami and the recent campaign against signboards and
theatres shows the party line has not changed. Blithely ignoring
the major social issues of education, poverty, unemployment etc,
the party remains obsessed with propagating its own brand of moral
puritanism.
|