What is there to celebrate? By Roedad Khan

jimpack

Minister (2k+ posts)
Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The writer is a former federal secretary

I was born in slavery. On August 14, thanks to the iron will and determination of Mr Jinnah, I was a proud citizen of a sovereign, independent country. It was a wondrous moment. Cheers rang out and many wept. We had entered a new era, blissfully unaware how the pendulum of history will swing. Mr Jinnah could not have foreseen what would happen when he passed his torch to his successors.

Many nations in the past have attempted to develop democratic institutions, only to lose them when they took their liberties and political institutions for granted, and failed to comprehend the threat posed by a powerful military establishment. Pakistan is a classic example. Today it is neither sovereign, nor independent, nor even democratic. Today it is not just a "rentier state," ill-led, ill-governed by a power-hungry junta and a puppet government set up by Washington. Sixty-two years after independence, are we really free?

The kind of Pakistan we have today is a ghost of its former self. The contrast between Pakistan in 1947 idealistic, democratic, progressive, optimistic and Pakistan today could not be sharper or more disheartening.

What is there to celebrate? There is absolutely no reason to celebrate! But there are myriad reasons to reflect. We lost half the country in a suicidal civil war in 1971. Like the Bourbons of France we have learned nothing and forgotten nothing. Sixty-two years after independence, we have a disjointed, dysfunctional, lopsided, hybrid, artificial, political system a non-sovereign rubberstamp parliament, a weak and ineffective prime minister, appointed by a powerful accidental president.

As we look back at all the squandered decades, it is sad to think that for Pakistan it has been a period of unrelieved decline and the dream has turned sour. Once we were the envy of the developing world. That is now the stuff of nostalgia. The corrupt, especially those occupying the commanding heights of power, are doing breathtakingly well, while the large mass of people is struggling hard just to keep its head above water.

What has become of the nation? Its core institutions? The militarised state has destroyed the foundations of all our political institutions. The army has been enthroned as the new elite. The level of fawning and jockeying to be merely noticed and smiled upon by any pretender in uniform speaks of a nation that is pleading to be crushed underfoot. Today we feel ourselves unable to look our children in the eye, for the shame of what we did, and didn't do, during the last 62 years. For the shame of what we allowed to happen. This is an eerie period. The heart of the nation appears to stop beating, while its body remains suspended in a void. Today the Supreme Court, the Guardian of the Constitution, is the only ray of hope in the darkness that surrounds us. After years of subservience, it is on its feet and holding its head high. Sadly, in spite of a strong and independent judiciary, the present corrupt order may survive because both the Presidency and the parliament are dysfunctional and out of sync with the spirit of the times.

The sovereignty of the people is a myth. To apply the adjective sovereign to the people in Pakistan is a tragic farce. Whatever the constitutional position, in the final analysis, de facto sovereignty in Pakistan resides neither in the electorate, nor the Parliament, nor the judiciary, nor even the Constitution which has superiority over all the institutions it creates. It resides where the coercive power resides. Even when an elected government is in power, as is the case today, it is the army which is the ultimate authority in decision-making. It decides when to abrogate the Constitution, when the Constitution should be held in abeyance, when an elected government should be sacked and when democracy should be given a chance.

The independence of Pakistan is a myth. By succumbing to American pressure, we managed to secure a temporary reprieve. But at what price? Today Pakistan is splattered with American fortresses, seriously compromising our internal and external sovereignty. American security personnel stationed on our soil move in and out of the country without any let or hindrance. Pakistan has become a launching pad for military operations against neighbouring Muslim countries. We have been drawn into somebody else's war without understanding its true dimension or ultimate objectives. Nuclear Pakistan has been turned into an "American lackey," currently engaged in a proxy war against its own people.

Parliament is one of the chief instruments of our democracy. Today it is cowed, timid, a virtual paralytic, overpaid and under-employed. Parliamentary membership is the key to material success, a passport and a license to loot and plunder. No wonder, it is not a check on the arbitrariness of the executive and nobody takes it seriously. Today it is the weakest of the three pillars of state. It has suffered a steady diminution of power and prestige. Its image is tarnished and has been turned into a fig-leaf for unconstitutional and illegal practices.

To no nation has fate been more malignant than to Pakistan. With few exceptions, Pakistan has long been saddled with poor, even malevolent, leadership: predatory kleptocrats, military dictators, political illiterates and carpetbaggers. With all her shortcomings, Benazir Bhutto had undoubted leadership qualities charisma, courage, political acumen and articulation. After her tragic assassination, Mr Zardari's sudden ascension to the presidency caused panic among the people. God help us all! "In a President character is everything," Peggy Noonan wrote in her assessment of Ronald Reagan. "A President does not have to be brilliant. Harry Truman was not brilliant and he helped save Western Europe from Stalin. He does not have to be clever, you can hire clever but you cannot rent a strong moral sense. You can't acquire it in the presidency. You carry it with you." If a president has credibility, if he is believable, if he has integrity, nothing else matters. If he has no integrity, if he has no credibility, if there is a gap between what he says and what he does, nothing else matters, and he cannot govern.

Today we need a leader who has the vision, the skill and the courage to pull Pakistan together as one nation and inspire the people. We need a president whose hands are clean and who has the capability to steer the ship of state through the rockiest shoals our country has ever known. Our nation has the heart of a lion. But who is there to give it the roar? Pakistan is not a case of failed state. It is a case of failed leadership

Today failure is the most often heard expression in Pakistan. Some say we are at the last quarter of an hour. "These are times that try men's souls. The best lack all conviction while the worst are full of passionate intensity. The summer soldier and sunshine patriot will in this crisis shrink from the service of his country, but he who serves it now deserves the love and thanks of man and woman." It is not enough to sit back and let history slowly evolve. To settle back into your cold-hearted acceptance of the status quo is not an option. The present leadership is taking Pakistan to a perilous place. The course they are on leads downhill. This is a delicate time, full of hope and trepidation in equal measure. Today it is a political and moral imperative for all patriotic Pakistanis to fight for our core values, to resist foreign intervention in our internal affairs and to destroy the roots of evil that afflicts Pakistan. That is the best way to celebrate Aug 14.

Email: [email protected] & www.roedadkhan.com
 

shaheedchoudry

Minister (2k+ posts)
jimpack said:
It is not criticism, it is the truth.. you have no choice but to accept it.
WE DO HAVE CHOICE. WE CAN START SHAKING HEAD LAFT AND RIGHT LIKE YOU PEOPLE. BUT WE ARE ANSWERABLE TO OUR CONSCIENCE.
 

nabeel117

Councller (250+ posts)
Today we need a leader who has the vision, the skill and the courage to pull Pakistan together as one nation and inspire the people. We need a president whose hands are clean and who has the capability to steer the ship of state through the rockiest shoals our country has ever known. Our nation has the heart of a lion. But who is there to give it the roar? Pakistan is not a case of failed state. It is a case of failed leadership

Issues can only resolve once you accept them, now nation is accepting this so it will be resolved soon. InshAllah!

@jimpak
you are still in denial mode for issues like Kashmir and other sepratist movements in India ;) first take care of your own home :twisted:
 

heyguy

Citizen
shaheedchoudry said:
jimpack said:
It is not criticism, it is the truth.. you have no choice but to accept it.
WE DO HAVE CHOICE. WE CAN START SHAKING HEAD LAFT AND RIGHT LIKE YOU PEOPLE. BUT WE ARE ANSWERABLE TO OUR CONSCIENCE.
Then Go to your impotent leaders like zardari and Takla
 

taul

Siasat.pk - Blogger
jimpack said:
It is not criticism, it is the truth.. you have no choice but to accept it.



---Followers of Sri devi (Bharat verma) a Delirious Moron with **ND Bharat :shock: :shock: :shock: had to be Disoriented and Disgruntled Bunch of Imbeciles :mrgreen: 8-) :lol: :lol:


-The tone of this whole site is such i believe you keep experiencing out of body incidents :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:


--Let Peace retun in the region Stop Terrorizing Kashmiris,,Acknowledgment will Cease all :geek: :geek:



-Why you don't like tehelka,Kashmir????Reason these are Facts and Truth..No Matter how far you run from em,they'll Catch up with you :P :P :P 8-)
 

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