Military, Musharraf and Magic

Oct 9, 2002
Magical, Mythical Pakistan

Political experts can opine all they want. They can criticize Musharraf, the and the short-term nature of US support. Long-winded arguments about how Musharraf has not adhered to his reformist agenda and what should, must or ought to be done grace the pages of all the English papers in . Then the other —the shout of ‘Press freedom is being curtailed’—the press is always sensitive to the of its perceived power. After that the latest doings of Nawaz and Benazir and the neutered nature of the upcoming are the topics of most thoughtful commentaries on Pakistani politics.

Pakistani society and politics is not so complicated or difficult to understand. If we pour the teapot of Pakistani politics, the catastrophe counters and complainers shift aside—a whole pile of rubbish; the actions that emerge are as follows:

1. Once in power, no-one in the history of has gone peacefully. Many articles can just investigate the facts around these.
2. There is a graphical region of intense change at regular intervals. Two to five years is all that democratic has been able to handle. power has earned upto a decade or more of rule by one man. Again articles can investigate this interesting fact.
3. Everybody talks big and does little. Now this is a huge playing field for writers.
4. and its interpretations form the bulk of political reason. Anything that is construed as non-Islamic is the enemy of . Arguments to and fro can delightfully waste everybody’s time.

Obviously, all those who critique politics in will find large amounts of fodder. It is easy to complain and criticize, since there is so little that goes well at the best of times. What is usually missing is and a balanced view. Either it is ALL Bad or Always Bad, or It Must be Bad, since heck we are talking about and how can anyone do anything right in that country.

Much like Garcia’s village in the book ‘100 Years of Solitude’, occupies a magical, mythical space and time, where oppresssion of every kind is the order of the day. All leaders are mad and all ideas are Neanderthal. This excitingly wrong society provides the likes of Rushdie, Hamid and countless others with grist for criticism and obscure literary insights.

If only for that— sure is an interesting place in space, way more interesting than the still orderliness that Pakistani migrants have chosen in their search for greener pastures.


Articles on the Web that inspired this piece:

Editorial TFT: Najam Sethi ‘Don’t Do It General Sahib”

Editorials and Columns from The Daily Dawn of 08 October 2002