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A
young boy is kidnapped by a group of his peers - his own schoolmates
- and driven to a deserted part of the beach. Once out of the sight
of passers-by, he is beaten so severely that when his corpse is
discovered a week later, he is found to have suffered multiple fractures
and a broken back. His crime: going out with a girl that one of
his assailants was interested in. To compound the horror, the facts
that emerge subsequently. Autopsy reports determine the youth did
not die immediately: he was tortured for approximately a week, probably
beaten intermittently and kicked mercilessly before he succumbed
to the injuries inflicted on him. The murder was a warning other
kids are not likely to take lightly.
In
an elite Karachi school, a 12-year-old boy is sodomised in the boys'
bathroom by a 'senior' he is acquaintanced with - a 14-year-old
who is also a member of one of Karachi's elite youth gangs. No charges,
however, are levelled by the victim who, shamed into silence, merely
pleads ill health after the incident, only to return to school a
week later and face knowing glances and innuendos from his classmates
as news of the rape spreads like wildfire. The perpetrator of the
rape meanwhile, remains untouched and continues to strut around
school.
Even until a couple of years ago, horrific incidents like
these among Karachi's elite youth were rare, and when they did occur,
incurred the wrath and shock of the whole community. Today, however,
teen violence is almost common fare - like natural death or taxes
- ugly though it may be. While many of us may scoff at the idea
of our kids being involved in a teenage gang - "not my children
- why would they resort to crime? They are not denied anything"
- increasingly, large numbers of affluent youngsters are choosing
to group into formations resembling American street gangs - but
with a twist. While gangs from the ghetto almost exclusively comprise
disenfranchised and disillusioned youths of black, Asian or redneck
origin, their Pakistani counterparts are often affluent and from
influential families.
Many
boys have no pattern of delinquent behavior, but some are loners,
and others may be obsessed with guns and firearms. And although
the anti-social behavioral patterns of the privileged Pakistani
youth have received little press in a nation already numbed by state
and underworld aggression, instances of drug abuse and gang violence
among elite kids are on the increase, often with disastrous consequences.
Plenty of kids this side of the Clifton bridge are members of unruly
groups glorifying brute force, and while the 'fun' may begin as
a harmless bit of 'boys will be boys' machismo, it can have fatal
consequences, not only for others, but for the youths involved themselves.
"Most boys in Pakistan have some sort of mental problem,"
admits 20-year old Ali aka Biskit, a former leader of an elite street
gang. Ali could be one of your children - he is polite, articulate
and lives in a large white-washed house in Defence Phase V.
As we approach his house, Ali emerges, dressed casually in
jeans and a t-shirt. He is accompanied by a friend. Together we
proceed to Déjà vu. Ali is eager to tell us about
his life He seems confident for a man his age, unabashed about his
past, almost too self-assured, in fact. En-route, pointing to the
graffiti scrawled on the sidewalks of main Zamzama Commercial Area,
he explains what the cryptic letters mean. "Look at this sign
on the road, 'PSUBGS' - those are all initials of gang leaders.
These are kids from big wadera families of Sindh and Balochistan.
They have their own guards and gunmen. Smokers, Next, Demons, LAPD,
these are other big gangs and their top leaders are kids from 'decent,'
affluent backgrounds. One of the gang leaders is the son of the
denim king of Pakistan. But some gang members come from middle-class,
conservative families."
"What binds this disparate group of youngsters together?"
we ask Ali. "Burgers (affluent children from respectable business-class
families) won't fight each other even if there has been some provocation,
for fear of wrecking their reputation in their own circle of friends,
and also, because they are too afraid to fight on their own. So
they join gangs," he says. The wadera youth gangs, for their
part, want to make inroads with the burgers - to be known and feared
by them. "They want to be invited to parties, and enjoy the
same pseudo-western lifestyle that the burgers enjoy," he says.
With the mushrooming of western and Indian cable channels,
churning out more sex, drugs and violence than ever before, it was
only a matter of time before youngsters, especially those with more
cash than dash, were sucked into a culture they do not really understand,
primarily because of the glamour factor. Ali points to the loudspeakers
at the restaurant blasting out an Eminem track. "Listen to
the words," he says. What are Tupac's songs all about, if not
sex, drugs, alcohol and addiction. And nasha (addiction), he continues,
matter of factly, "is really the nucleus of the groups."
His friend adds, "All gang members usually have some form of
addiction. In Pakistan this addiction is mostly drugs and alcohol.
And those who are smart enough to abstain from these, have another
kind of addiction - sex." Ali interjects, "It is not easy
for a kid with a reputation for being a trouble-maker to land a
girlfriend. This necessitates the services of prostitutes, which
requires contact with pimps. This is why people join gangs. Gang
leaders are usually on good terms with dealers that cater to all
these addictions; they may even provide these services and pleasures
to their friends and gang members for free." Interestingly,
many drug dealers come from respectable, middle class backgrounds
- not exactly society's victims or individuals with any criminal
affiliations.
Are gangs all-male affairs? Says Ali, "Girls in gangs
are essentially there because of their boyfriends who are gang members."
We had met some of these girls. Many come from troubled
homes. One of them had told us she was her parents' so-called 'love
child' - conceived while her parents were separated. After attempting
a reconciliation for a few years, they divorced. "My mother
is liberal and lets me go out till 3 a.m. in the morning,"
said Ameena. She spoke about her boyfriend - the leader of a gang
- and her perception of gang life. "The kids in a gang have
an almost symbiotic relationship with each other. They may come
from different backgrounds, but the mailas (conservatives), and
the burger kids, use each other to get what they want. A lot of
the times it's just about proving how macho they are - fights are
pretty much just an extension of power and domain. It's all rather
stupid if you think about it. Thankfully, my boyfriend has given
it up now, I think because of me. I believe he has realised that
challenging rival groups to fight is a stupid way to pass the time,"
Ameena told us.
But there are hundreds of others still attracted to the
'gang scene.' And increasingly, it has acquired a far more chilling
dimension. "While fights used to take place on a small-scale
and drug use was limited a few years ago, the difference now is
that everything is taken to the extreme," says Ali. "There
is a lot of drinking. It is becoming more and more acceptable for
kids to drink. Drugs are going designer, and are very accessible.
Weapons are becoming much more sophisticated. Kids used to fight
with sticks and bats, now they have KKs and TTs."
And while Karachi is no stranger to student violence - be
it from tanzeemi groups or student groups of the big political parties
- elite youth gangs differ in their modus operandi: student groups
fights are usually confined to campuses, but the city's numerous
roads and alleys belong to gangs. Gang 'hangouts' include the G-spot
in Darakhshan market, close to Greenwich Institute, as well as Boat
Basin in Clifton. These youngsters, dressed in jeans and t-shirts,
sporting distinctive bandanas, knee pads on for protection and wielding
knuckle-dusters and other more lethal weapons, driving the latest
model most sooped-up cars with Tupac or Eminem tracks blasting from
surround speakers, are easy to spot. Says Ali, "It's basically
all about competition - whose car is more sooped-up, who is the
most fearless. Each gang wants to rule the streets. If a fight takes
place, gang members want their peers to know who is the most powerful."
The
levels of violence youth gangs are willing to resort to, vary. Take
for instance, the gang which rules one of Defence Society's commercial
areas. "The gang leader belongs to rural Punjab and comes from
a clan of fighters," says Ali. "His boys take on fights
with everyone - and it doesn't matter if they're old men or women.
While some of them fight as a show of strength, and others to help
their friends out of a situation, some do it just for fun. In the
process, sometimes kids get stabbed. Some have their heads bashed
in." And most of the time the perpetrators get away with it.
Ali
relates a chilling story. "Recently a judge and his son were
beaten up by gang members. The judge filed an FIR against them.
The gang members in turn fired upon their own car in Boat Basin
and threw the pistol into the judge's car. They then filed an FIR
against the judge, forcing him to withdraw his FIR." He also
recounts the story of the recent kidnapping by a gang of a young
man who was lured to the spot he was picked up at by a girl he met
on the internet who had made an assignation with him. As it turns
out, she was the gang leader's girlfriend.
Given
that connections, influence and a corrupt system result in few trouble-makers
ever being brought to book, parental involvement and punishment
are lacking, and peer pressure is immense, it is not difficult to
understand why so many youths are going the gang way. "These
are not bad kids," says a psychologist at the Aga Khan University.
"They could be your kids. They are intelligent, precocious,
even articulate. A lot of them just want to vent misplaced anger."
Ali,
however, seems acutely aware of the trouble venting this anger could
get one into. "If you take drugs you cannot study or work,"
he says, and cites the case of two of his friends. "They were
from middle class backgrounds, but they became failures because
they got hooked on drugs. In the end, unable to get decent jobs,
they became dope dealers."
Today
Ali is drugs-free and enrolled in a local college. Just as we start
to think this is one story with a happy ending, a waiter laden with
food and drink appears at our table. "Compliments of the manager,"
he says. "The first time this happened to me I was embarrassed,
especially since the manager couldn't stop telling me how honoured
he was to meet me," says Ali with a sheepish grin. And judging
by the respect he is afforded, it won't be easy for Ali to leave
his past behind . 
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