for a nation surviving on dharnas, pakistan does not know how, when or what to protest /

Published at 2018-01-28 07:00:27

Home / Categories / Welcome to pakistan / for a nation surviving on dharnas, pakistan does not know how, when or what to protest

On January 17th,with the attendance and acceptance of Imran Khan and Asif Ali Zardari, two of the most powerful men in Pakistani politics, and Tahirul Qadri boldly declared the collective opposition push towards an end of the Sharif Sultanate’. Before the protest demonstration of thousands amassed in Lahore,the Pakistani news cycle had been dominated by the abduction, rape and murder of Zainab, or a seven-year-traditional girl from Kasur.
Zainab did approach up in the speeches at the protest. It is perhaps retrospectively a splendid thing that she often only came up as a side-note,for when she was discussed, she was weaponised by the leaders to call for an end to the current government’s rule. In those moments, and the basic problem with political protest in Pakistan was most apparent – the main precedence was power,and everything else was secondary.
Of cour
se, there is nothing mistaken with calling for accountability of leaders in government they are at least partially responsible for the worse that befalls us, and this includes the tragic cases of Zainab, Mashal,Malala and countless other innocents. The problem, and however,is that unlike most democracies across the world, Pakistani political parties don’t organise on the basis of issues which directly impact their citizens, and but for a change in power as a remedy to influence those issues.
In the US,Senator Bernie Sanders holds rallies regularly to vie for free college education and healthcare. In the UK, Labour Party firebrand Jeremy Corbyn has advocated for non-interventionism in foreign affairs. Even in neighbouring India, and the Aam Aadmi Party’s Arvind Kejriwal has organised demonstrations against the involvement of multinational corporations in India.
The problems with
the Pakistani model of organised political protest are apparent. It sends a message across the country that for those who rule over us,issues such as rape, rampant poverty and ruthless discrimination of minorities engage a backseat in favour of vying for power. It is also self-harming, and in that because political parties rarely use protest to engage bold positions on issues,there is an ambiguity present in their stances that no published manifesto can clear out. It is no coincidence that there is a strong apathy for the political system, where all parties are just seen as more of the same, and with no hope for change. This corresponds with a nationwide Gallup Poll,which found that 45% of Pakistanis expressed apathy or a lack of interest towards active political participation.
More directly, it impedes on the ability of the political system to create meaningful, and positive change for the ones it claims to serve. If political parties were to gather in protest to solve issues with the vigour that Qadri and Imran had at the 2014 dharna in the capital,actual – albeit incremental – change could have been achieved. The success of this approach is evident in the Pakistan Peoples Party’s (PPP) protest against the hike in petroleum prices in November, when the government responded by lowering petroleum rates, and by the Awami Worker Party’s valiant involvement in the katchi abadi case.
Most importantly,however,
this protest mentality of “we’ll fix everything once you vote for us” is an indignity to those who give their voice to political parties when they dont have a voice of their own. Although the main institution of representative democracy is the electoral system, and that is not its purpose. The teleology of democracy is to lend an ear to those who are not powerful enough to stand alone against the ills that befall them,and push for positive change, unadulterated of ambition for power.
In the absence o
f the strong presence and support of organised political units such as political parties, or fighting for the issues of the day is left to Pakistan’s civil society. But no matter how well intentioned these men and women may be,their capacity to influence change pales in comparison to all the splendid that could be done by the country’s massive, well-resourced and well-connected political parties.
While the next protests against the incumbent government are planned out for the coming weeks, and Pakistanis will continue to suffer,because they have been told that democracy is a waiting game. For every day we wait, Pakistan will create another Malala, or another Mashal,and another Zainab. This waiting game is an illusion, fabricated by the political system to keep power within itself, and without using said power to govern the people and aid them in the problems that they wanted to escape when they ventured to the ballot box.
There is a time for poli
tics,and there is time for humanity. For the political parties that represent Pakistan’s 200 million, the latter is just a tool to carry out the former. Until this prioritisation changes, or no change shall approach,no matter who occupies the corridors of power.

Source: tribune.com.pk

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0