Posts Tagged ‘Muharram’

SHC revokes Sen Rehman Malik’s ban on motorcycle riding

November 16, 2012

The Sindh High Court chief justice late on Thursday revoked a ban on riding motorcycles in Karachi just hours after Interior Minister Rehman Malik announced that the government was banning motorcycles in Karachi and Quetta for one day (today) in view of “serious security threats” on the first day of the Shia holy month of Muharram.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik told a press conference on Thursday evening that motorbikes would not be allowed on roads from 6am to 7pm in Karachi and Quetta today, adding that no one would be exempted.

Malik said his ministry had received information that motorcycles would be used in terrorist attacks.

“The decision to keep bikers off the road has come on the heels of intelligence reports that terrorists are hatching plans to carry out attacks using motorcycles,” Malik said.

Malik also said the government was considering shutting down mobile phone services in Karachi and Quetta. “A decision to this effect will be made on Friday morning,” he added.

Moreover, markets in both cities had also been directed to conduct business only between from 10am to 5pm on Friday (today). “No market in both cities will be allowed to open before 10am and after 5pm,” he said.

However, a few hours later the Sindh High Court Bar Association moved an application before the SHC CJ, asking the top judge of the province to annul the order as it is in violation of the basic rights of citizens.

The CJ admitted the application and ordered the interior secretary, advocate general and the provincial police chief to appear in court at 11am today.

Rehman Malik has come under severe criticism for ordering suspension of mobile phone services across the country “for security reasons” on more than one occasion. Cellular services were first suspended on Eidul Fitr and then on Eidul Azha, prompting protests from citizens and cellular companies.

Critics say that the interior minister is coming up with such unprecedented measures to conceal his inefficiency and incompetence, as instead of cracking down on terrorist networks, the Interior Ministry and its subordinate agencies are resorting to infringing the rights of citizens.

Police yet to install digital surveillance system worth Rs1.2 billion

November 30, 2010

By: Irfan Aligi

KARACHI: Provincial and city governments have failed to install a digital surveillance system in time to monitor sensitive areas during Muharram.


Traffic police’s security system failed to record three major acts of terrorism

After the Ashura bomb blast and arson attacks last year, DIG Ghulam Nabi Memon had claimed that the police was acquiring the latest digital surveillance and monitoring system worth Rs1.2 billion so that it can start working before Muharram starts this year. The project has, however, not succeeded beyond tender invitations.

Tenders have been received as many as three times but cancelled later. The last tender was invited three months ago and is still in the evaluation process.

The City District Government Karachi (CDGK) had installed the digital surveillance and monitoring system at Civic Centre and it is being monitored by the law enforcement authorities.

The first phase of this project, worth Rs130 million, was completed in May 2008 with 130 close-circuit television (CCTV) cameras. These cameras were installed along with the required technical support, such as monitoring screens, navigation of CCTVs and recording equipment.

The second phase, worth Rs260 million, was expected to start before Eidul Azha this year so that the entire city could be converted into a digitally protected area especially during Muharram. However, the CDGK lacks the funds to install an additional 165 CCTV cameras.

The digital loop for the second phase will start from Jinnah International Airport and will cover the entire Sharae Faisal up till Hotel Metropole, II Chundrigar Road and the Merewether Tower. Another loop will start from Safoora Goth towards NIPA Chowrangi, Jail Chowrangi and Preedy Street.

The Capital City Traffic Police has also acquired a similar system, worth Rs150 million, but it is mainly for traffic management. This system was managed by the Sindh Information Technology ministry but the machines were of poor quality and were unable to record the video of three main acts of terrorism in the city, mainly Chehlum blast in Nursery, twin blasts at the shrine of Abdullah Shah Ghazi and the blast on the CID Building.

A CDGK official told The Express Tribune that the city government lacks enough funds to pay for routine repair and maintenance works. There is no chance that the second phase of the command and control system will be completed, he added.

Meanwhile, Capital City Police Officer Fayyaz Leghari said that he was unaware of the details of such a system. It concerns the Sindh Home department and the Sindh IG office, he said.

According to a well-placed officer in Sindh Home Department, who spoke to The Express Tribune on the condition of anonymity, the system was due to be completed this year but it kept getting delayed due to different problems. It might take another year to get the system installed, the official said.

It may be mentioned that former Sindh IG Niaz Siddiqui had initiated the system for its e-policing project. With Muharram around the corner, Shia organisations have also expressed their reservations with the security arrangements. A request has been made to provide enhanced security in Shia dominated neighbourhoods of the city, such as Jaffer-e-Tayyar Cooperative Housing Society, Abbas Town and Rizvia Colony.

One day we all will be terrorists!

January 15, 2010

By Dr Haider Mehdi

“Dissent is no longer the duty of the engaged citizen but is becoming an act of terrorism.”

- Chris Hedges (in an article of the same title)

My generation grew up in a different Pakistan. A different Lahore, a different Karachi, a different Peshawar, a different Quetta, a different Islamabad and an entirely different country.

In Lahore, people sat in Pak Tea House and Coffee House and talked about politics, poetry, religion, culture and friendships gave birth, on a daily basis, to youthful romanticism of our times: the mutual seduction of kindred spirits within the confines of our cultural values and the gentleness of Urdu poetry, songs, geets (lyrics) and the Lahori humour. We celebrated basant (the kite-flying festival), maila-charagha (the festival of lights) and Urs Data Gung-Baksh (the festival of a saint). We observed Muharram with great reverence.

Karachi used to be alive 24 hours a day all year round. It was a city of “lights”, “fashion”, hustle-bustle of a truly cosmopolitan metropolis. Ethnic diversity and tolerance was the hallmark of this city.

Peshawar was a beacon of hospitality, a tribute to human gentleness and an affirmation of a rich community life.

Quetta’s apple-laden trees decorated its roads everywhere and the Balochis colourful existence found its spirit in its music, songs and even in its cuisine. Moreover, Pakistan’s rural society existed in purity, simplicity and the zealousness of hard working people.

Pakistan was a different country then: we lived in relative peace, tolerance and mutual harmony. A delicious puri nashta cost one rupee, petrol was Rs 2.50 a gallon, schooling was cheap, sugar and food were plenty, and a round-trip by PIA from Lahore to Karachi was Rs 250.

The majority of Pakistanis were poor even then, but there was no mass starvation, deprivation suicides, forced prostitution, massive collective depressive communities, agonising socio-psychological conditions, economic collapse, and no one knew of crippling demoralising inner fears. We did not know of institutional violence and extensive state terror – though police brutality and legal system atrocities were common, bureaucracy was horribly cruel, corrupt, inefficient and unbelievably powerful vis-à-vis the citizenry, commerce thrived on black marketing and the political class wholly and completely indulged in vested interests, inappropriate use of political power and mismanagement of state affairs.

Even though we lived with a million vices as a nation, but strangely enough, life was not as painful as it is in today’s democratic Pakistan. Neither was the entire nation, every one of its citizens, gripped with such forceful, depleting and paralysing fear – a fear that the management of the survival of this country has gone out of control. A fear that we all may be blown away from existence the next moment, if not literally then at least in a metaphorical sense!

Do you realise the seriousness of our contemporary political crisis?

The present state of our deplorable existence is the work of our decade long political leadership inclusive of Pervez Musharraf’s dictatorship and the incumbent political dispensation in the country.

The fundamental failure of our national policy is this country’s ruling elite’s destructive all time political-economic-military alliance with the US and its allies (now India included).

Even at the time that I have described as the “golden days” of Pakistan’s past, our ruling elite was fully and comprehensively politically engaged with the US and its allies. However the US was in a different political mode then: it was fighting its own self-invented “demons” – the communist ideology and the communist nations (though communism was not a threat – it was a political experiment to solve mass poverty). The objective of American foreign policy was global political-economic and military domination.

In the present day world, the policy objectives of the US and its allies remain same: worldwide imperialist hegemony and exploitation by the west’s multi-national corporations.

However, in the contemporary equation, the west’s enemies have been redefined: Now we are the “demons”. They have declared a war against Muslim nations, their people, their faith, their culture, their traditions, their values and customs, their history and even against their existence as we know it today. Huntington in The Clash of Civilisations warns that if we do not transform our civilisation to a western model, then we must be prepared for an ultimate obliteration through successive wars at the hands of the west: we are given no choices.

Seven hundred Pakistani citizens died in American drone attacks in 2009 alone. It is not accidental!

What the US and its western allies do not understand is that their present war is not against an economic-political ideology (communism). This war is against a people, a faith, a history, an existential reality, an entirety of a civilisation, an actual formidable historical presence and an enduring spiritual entity. They, the US and its allies (which include collaborating political elites in Muslim countries), cannot win this war. Indeed, they can unleash havoc, a wave of destruction (as they are doing now), but they cannot and will not win!

Coming back to the context of Pak-US relations, consider the following most plausible scenario in the immediate future:

Through covertly managed organised violence, collaborations, propaganda, bombings and political manipulations, the US succeeds in destabilising Pakistan to an extent of complete political chaos, limited anarchy and a near civil war situation. Under the pretext of threat to international security, American and NATO forces are moved from Afghanistan to Pakistan. Pakistan’s nuclear assets are seized, a puppet regime is installed: Pakistan is de-nuclearised, India (the newest US ally) becomes a dominant regional power, Iran is contained, China-Russia growing political clout is checked, the US/west’s historical global dominance is achieved – the world is saved!

Is that what the Pakistani nation wants and deserves?

Imran Khan’s perspective on Pakistan’s foreign policy and domestic priorities is correct: we need to politically-militarily disengage Pakistan from the US/west’s global objectives. We need to immediately end this so-called War on Terror against our own citizens. We need to negotiate peace with political dissidents in NWFP, Balochistan and in every corner of Pakistan. We must appreciate the fact that political dissent is not terror!

We ought to, by engaging our own citizens and political dissidents, quietly and secretly do a complete “cleansing” of the foreign elements and local collaborators involved in organised violence in our country. This can only be accomplished by a determined, independent, nationalist and highly efficient political leadership that can make the national policy without American influence and interference. And this is the ultimate requirement of our times.

At last, Mian Nawaz Sharif said something right the other day: the public in Pakistan needs to think in revolutionary ways now.

Allow me to go one step further: what we need is a revolutionary political leadership in this country. We deserve a change in the political mindset and political conduct of this nation’s leaders. We need fresh leadership in Pakistan.

We all do not need to be politically loyal to our contemporary political dispensation or to our present political allies. We must completely reject a global political system of US/west’s dominance.

We all ought to be political dissidents! After all, dissent is a vital element of the democratic political process. It is a duty of an engaged citizenry!

One day we all might be considered terrorists by our western “friends”.

Never mind. So be it!

The writer is an academic, political analyst and conflict-resolution expert.
Email: hl_mehdi@hotmail.com


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.