Five weeks
of bloody violence and anarchy, five bomb blasts, 60
plus people killed, hundreds injured, banks and private
properties looted, several dozen cars gutted - and investigators
are still groping in the dark. There are no clues, no
culprits, only conjecture. Al-Qaeda, sectarian outfits,
extremist groups, intelligence agencies, American agents
- who is behind these dastardly acts?
For
a city that contributes 70 per cent to the national
exchequer by way of taxes, and is touted as the country's
economic lifeline, Karachi has been treated like an
outcast, and allowed to go to seed by those who remote-control
it from Islamabad.
After
foisting a bunch of incompetent men on Sindh, some of
them yesteryears' murderers and thieves by the government's
own reckoning, the power-brokers now talk of reinstating
the party with the majority vote, the PPP, whom they
had wilfully kept out, in a 'consensus' government.
The
MQM is livid and threatens to resist any move to poach
on its territory. The last time it felt threatened,
there was blood on the streets of Karachi. Twelve people
were killed in the recent bye-elections to the Sindh
and National Assembly seats, and the Jamaat accuses
the MQM of killing nine of its workers; the MQM also
lost three party workers in the violence.
The
battle shows no signs of abating, and energies that
should have been invested in improving the city's infrastructure
and solving its multifarious problems, are being wasted
in waging a futile war that has brought this city of
14 million people to the verge of collapse.The centre
cannot afford to take sides; it needs both the MQM and
the Jamaat-led MMA for the hodge-podge it has carved
out in the name of democracy.
Meanwhile, the city of dreams has turned into
a war-zone for self-seeking vested interests: from extortionists
to land-grabbers to gun-runners to drug-smugglers, everyone
wants a slice of the pie.
Adding to Karachi's grave problems is the network
of extremist jihadi and sectarian groups operating out
of Karachi that has turned the city into a haven for
terrorists who strike and then disappear into the darkness
of the night. Musharraf's half-hearted war against terrorism
has failed to rein in the extremists who continue to
haunt him with their firepower and their reach.They
have even managed to infiltrate the rank and file of
the army and the country's police and intelligence network.
That being the case, Karachi's law and order
situation will continue to pose a major problem. And
given that its political dispensation is being remote-controlled
by the czars of Islamabad, the city's return to normalcy
seems like a distant dream.
In a recent column for The Washington Post entitled
'Enlightened Moderation,' President Musharraf wrote:
"The suffering of the innocent multitudes, particularly
my brethren in faith - the Muslims - at the hands of
militants, extremists and terrorists, has inspired me
to contribute towards bringing some order to this disorderly
world
Something has to be done quickly to stop
this carnage in the world and for Muslims to stem the
downward slide
"
Karachi is a good starting point, Mr. President,
a disorderly world that could do with some semblance
of order. For starters, it needs a representative government,
an efficient government and an effective government,
not a bunch of ineffective cronies who are simply interested
in waging wars to retain their turf. If Karachi is Pakistan's
lifeline, let's bring it back to life...