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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, October 31, 2001 |
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In the shadow of a heinous crime
PAKISTAN'S CIVIL SOCIETY faces a qualitatively new challenge in
the aftermath of the gruesome murder of 16 worshippers and a
security guard at a church at Bahawalpur in the country's premier
province of Punjab on Sunday. It is obvious that the present
regional context may only magnify the international concerns
about the possible escalation of social-political trouble in
Pakistan, whatever might have been the actual motives of the
gunmen themselves or their masters, if any, who plotted the
carnage itself. However, the reality check is one that Pakistan
itself should devise. For several weeks now, civil society in
Pakistan has found itself being sucked into the vortex of an
enormously complex identity crisis, which certainly is not of
Islamabad's own making. Now, official Islamabad is continually
rocked by the rumblings of some high-voltage popular discontent
over the emergence of Pakistan as the only conspicuous `frontline
state' in America's ongoing military operations in Afghanistan.
The well-orchestrated popular anger against the U.S. and official
Islamabad may not enjoy a huge constituency within Pakistan
itself. The social order in Pakistan is under tremendous strain
at present following the decisively swift manner in which the
President and Chief Executive, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, recently
pushed the `Islamic republic' into an open alliance with the
U.S.-led West in genuinely volatile circumstances. An
obscurantist Taliban regime in Afghanistan and its notorious
ally, Osama bin Laden, a radicalised `Islamic' ideologue, are
currently the prime ``enemies'' of the U.S. So, the pressure on
Pakistan's social cauldron has risen immeasurably, especially on
account of the country's highly proactive segment of Islamic
fundamentalists on the fringes. It is this overall social milieu
that might define Pakistan's new challenge of reassuring its tiny
Christian minority about its security.
Gen. Musharraf, who represents the moderate face of Pakistan, has
lost no time in not only condemning the ``heinous act against the
tenets of Islam'' but also recognising the mayhem as an act of
terror. One aspect that will doubtless exercise the minds of
international pundits, especially in the West, is whether the
Bahawalpur tragedy could be the handiwork of some amateurish
proponents of a ``clash of civilisations'' in the particular
context of the current U.S.' operations against Osama bin Laden.
Regardless of any particular line of investigation and criminal
justice, Pakistan's socio-political dilemmas can only be solved
on the basis of the country's own basic ethos. A variety of
historical factors account for the current virulence of extremism
within pockets of Pakistan's overwhelmingly Islamic majority. The
Musharraf administration's task of safeguarding the stability of
Pakistan is clearly cut out, and his responses indicate that he
is seized of the magnitude of the problem. The nation's blasphemy
laws and, more importantly, their judicial and political
interpretations have sometimes led to a backlash from the
fundamentalists. Pakistan's religious minorities, very small in
size, have often been caught in such social storms, and the
country's human rights activists have also not fought shy of
turning the spotlight on such issues with a view to improving
social harmony. For Gen. Musharraf, a careful crackdown on the
religious hawks is an indicated course, while India should let
the Pakistani leaders and people know that it wishes them well. A
stable Pakistan is in the enlightened interest of India's
pluralist society.
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Section : Opinion Previous : Highly retrograde Next : The court and the political order | |
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