Consequences of pandering to Pakistan extremists
Pakistan
is paying a devastating price for pandering to extremists and allowing them to
dictate the political agenda, argues writer Ahmed Rashid.
In
Pakistan, as elsewhere across the Muslim world, there is a sense of
powerlessness against Western governments and media companies who want to
uphold the right of free speech but publish explosive material that enrages
Muslims.
A
growing sense of economic and political powerlessness is leading to support for
extremist views.
And
the refusal of the West to meet half-way on containing hate material is being
further fuelled by extremists who find it convenient to stake their claim in
such troubled moments. This is particularly true in Pakistan, which has been
pandering to extremists for three decades even as the state appears to be
losing control of the streets.
On
Friday 21 September, some 21 people were killed, including three policemen, and
more than 200 injured as mobs protesting against a US-made film mocking the
Prophet Muhammad went on rampages against private property and fought running
battles with the police.
Islamabad's
diplomatic quarter was under siege as police fired live ammunition.
The
Pakistan Peoples Party government appeared to abdicate all responsibility for
maintaining law and order with its questionable decision to order a holiday on
Friday and yet give no political direction - a move which allowed mobs to take
control of the streets.
Three
'watersheds'
The
riots represented the third watershed moment for Pakistan where the state has
repeatedly yielded, for a time, to the demands of a handful of extremists,
thereby not just weakening the state but strengthening those extremists who
want to overthrow the system.
In
January 2007 then military ruler President Pervez Musharraf and his pliant
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz allowed the Red Mosque in Islamabad to be taken
over by extremists in a cynical effort to try to influence US fears about a
fundamentalist takeover and so relax US pressure on the army to end safe havens
for the Afghan Taliban.
It
took seven months of deliberate procrastination before Gen Musharraf decided to
send in the army and oust the thousands of militants in a pitched battle that
left 102 people dead, whereas in January a handful of police could have
achieved the task.
It
was a watershed event because thousands of militants escaped into the hills
leading to a rapid expansion and strengthening of the anti-state Pakistani
Taliban.
After
extremists murdered two prominent politicians in 2011, including Salman Taseer,
the governor of Punjab province and later a Christian federal minister, no
politician or journalist has since dared oppose the law or demand changes to it
or discuss the issue of changes to the blasphemy laws.
Pakistan's
blasphemy laws invariably persecute those belonging to other religions and
Muslim minority sects on the flimsiest of evidence or none at all.
After
the two officials were killed, the government withdrew amendments to the
blasphemy law it had sponsored in parliament, capitulating to the
fundamentalist viewpoint. This too was a kind of watershed because, since then,
genuine debate has been silenced out of fear.
Last
week's riots in response to the film were not just spontaneous events around
the country. Leading the riots were the religious parties that accept the
parliamentary form of government, but also extremist and terrorist groups
banned by the government and the United Nations.
Riots
in Lahore and many parts of Punjab were led by the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba whose
militants are presently fighting in Afghanistan, Indian-administered Kashmir
and Central Asia.
Sipah-e-Sahaba,
a militant Sunni group that wants to "cleanse" Pakistan of all Shia
Muslims and has claimed responsibility for the murder of more than 300 Hazara
Shias in Quetta alone this year, openly led the demonstrators in other parts of
Punjab (nobody has been caught for the murder of so many Shias).
The
Pakistani Taliban and their supporters were in the forefront in Karachi and
Peshawar where they have considerable assets.
But
vast areas such as rural Sindh, Balochistan and even parts of the north-west
saw no riots or demonstrations because the militants' network of mosques and
madrassas were weak or non-existent.
Nowhere
did the government even bother to organise a peaceful demonstration of its own
supporters to express outrage but at the same time maintain the dignity of the
government.
Cutting
a deal?
At
other times the government and the military have deliberately fuelled the
appearance of extremism in order to pressure, influence or blackmail US or Nato
decision-making for Pakistan and Afghanistan.
According
to religious figures, in January 2012 the military and intelligence services
mobilised dozens of Islamic parties, militant groups and retired generals to
form a platform called the Defence of Pakistan Council. They held nationwide
street protests against the Americans and Nato after the government had closed
the Nato supply road to the Afghan border, after 24 Pakistani soldiers were
killed by US forces.
The
road that provides Nato forces with goods from the port city of Karachi stayed
closed for seven months, creating widespread mistrust of Pakistan among its
allies and enormous economic hardship.
Yet,
mysteriously, when the military decided to cut a deal with the US and reopen
the road, the Council just as suddenly disbanded and disappeared from the
streets. The establishment had demonstrated to the Americans its obvious
influence over extremist groups.
Likewise
Pakistan gives shelter to the Afghan Taliban leadership even as the state
battles other groups of the Pakistani Taliban. The question is then obvious -
why can't the state deal with the threats such extremists now pose?
Pandering
to the extremists or using them as a foreign policy tool in the long-running
war of wills between Pakistan and the West has only strengthened extremism in
civil society, the army, the bureaucracy and the police.
The
state machinery itself is penetrated and undermined, with not a single
politician or general urging change. Pakistan is on the cusp of a nightmarish
scenario where extremists call the political shots and the government obeys.
There
was rightfully genuine anger felt by Muslims everywhere regarding the
desecration of the Prophet, but the cost Pakistan is paying for its leaders
deliberately allowing extremists to take control of the streets and cities is
devastating for the majority of Pakistanis.
Ahmed Rashid's latest book Pakistan on the Brink, the future of
Pakistan, Afghanistan and the West was published this year.
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