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Showing posts with label Pakistan Army. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan Army. Show all posts

24 Feb 2012

Inside Balochistan's dirty war

"Baloch secessionist leader Brahmdagh Bugti says he wants political engagement with Pakistan — but that its military wants war."

In recent months, assassinations of Baloch nationalist politicians and their kin have provoked growing concern.
The Hindu : Opinion / Op-Ed : Inside Balochistan's dirty war: Baloch politicians allege the murders, were carried out by Pakistan's intelligence services to send a message the region's largest secessionist party. General Musharraf had, in fact, helped precipitate the crisis.

Pakistan's government says one thing and we say another. Ever since 2004, the government hasn't allowed a single journalist into Dera Bugti and Kohlu independently. That should tell you something about who has something to hide.

Even though the Pakistan Army was able to crush tribal rebellions espousing Baluch nationalism, new generations of urban educated Baloch were drawn to their cause.

21 Jan 2012

The alternative to the slow boat of democracy in Pakistan is failure

"Before a democratic government can stabilise, the middle classes, schooled in the Pakistan Military Academy narrative, start aching for another saviour on horseback, but none exists."

The Hindu : Opinion / Op-Ed : The alternative to the slow boat of democracy in Pakistan is failure: General Zia-ul-Haq tried authoritarian rule, with dangerous personal Islamic vision. The narrative he chose to guide the state was incompatible with peaceful co-existence in the region and with democracy. It promoted jihadist militias and covert foreign adventures and undermined already weak democratic traditions and organisations. After he exploded, his vision continued inside a partly Islamicised, partly mercenary military high command and a spectacularly stupid public ideology that now floats somewhere between the Jamat Islami and the lunatic fringe.

If Zia-ul-Haq's Islamic vision were to be enforced at all, it would destroy the existing cultures of Pakistan and it would lead to an endless civil war and then to wider war in the region, undermining any possibility of serious economic development.

The fundamental problem with the army's vision and its "system" is that it repeatedly collapses before it can reach the Promised Land, each time leaving bigger problems behind. Then the "failed politicians" return, but without obtaining full power, especially over the army and its agencies. They are constantly harassed and "legacy problems" remain outside their purview, further undermining any possibility of real progress.

The question is not about democracy versus authoritarianism. It is about whether an "under-developed" state, such as Pakistan, can develop as a capitalist democracy without going through a fascist phase. It either stabilises as a democracy, or it violently fails.

Since there is NO good authoritarian alternative, it may be time to go the slow route of democracy!

19 Jan 2012

Slip Between Coup And Lip

Developments in Pakistan suggest the army's cloak of infallibility may be slipping


Slip Between Coup And Lip

-The Times of India, January 19, 2012

13 Jan 2012

Pakistan is in a state of flux...

Pakistan is in a state of flux...

Anyone who has missed the untenable situation that the Pakistan government has subjected itself into, may read this editorial and understand the haplessness of the present scenario...

The very confusion in the writing is the reflection of the Pakistan Government's apathy...

Rana Banerjee has expressed the situation beautifully in his editorial titled