Even
before the dust had settled on the Nawab Bugti incident,
the Musharraf government kicked up another raging storm.
The missile attack on a madrassah in Bajaur, in which
83 people died, has drawn a wave of criticism and questions
from various quarters. The government had no ready answers,
and neither was it willing to allow the press into the
area to carry out its own investigation.
What
seemed to make no sense was the timing of the attack.
A peace deal, on the pattern of the one in North Waziristan,
was to be signed between the army and the tribal leaders.
So who scuttled it?
Is
it true that the American drones carried out the deadly
mission in a show of displeasure against the increase
in Taliban strikes against NATO forces following the
deal. If so, to what extent are we going to compromise
our sovereignty to serve US interests in the region?
Musharraf
insists it was the Pakistan army that undertook the
mission to eliminate the jihadis who were being trained
to carry out strikes in Afghanistan and Pakistan. If
indeed that were the case, why is the army fighting
shy of presenting the evidence to stop the rumours that
are doing the rounds.
General Musharraf is finding it increasingly difficult
to juggle his domestic and international policies, which
often present glaring contradictions.
On
the one hand, he does not wish to annoy his partners
in the war on terror; on the other, his desire to secure
himself another term will not allow him to totally sever
his links with the mullahs, unless he is able to strike
a rapport with his erstwhile enemies among the mainstream
political parties.
The
manner in which the General's right hand man, Chaudhary
Shujaat, continues to reassure the MMA that the Hudood
Ordinances will not be amended, gives an inkling of
the double game that continues to be played in the corridors
of power. The General wants to keep his options open.
Meanwhile,
Karachi is witnessing a game of another sort involving
top guns and big bucks. Karachi's coastline is being
sold for peanuts, ostensibly in the name of public development
and benefit. The federal government will reportedly
be dishing out millions of dollars to provide the infrastructure
for what are essentially elitist projects, which would
make most public beaches off-limits for the general
public.
The
least the centre can do for a city that contributes
60 per cent to the country's exchequer is utilise those
millions of dollars to provide basic civic amenities
to Karachi's long-suffering masses. 