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India-Pakistan
A malicious campaign
2015-05-19
[DAWN] ONCE again, an ill wind is blowing. And once again, the state is demonstrating its pusillanimity.

It all began about two weeks ago when Information Minister Pervaiz Rasheed at a conference organised by the Pakistain Academy of Letters described madressahs as "universities of ignorance" promoting a "culture of hatred and conservativeness [in] society".

When religious organizations got wind of the minister's remarks, a storm of condemnation broke, particularly from the Deobandi elements. The Wafaqul Madaris Al Arabia, the board representing the country's Deobandi seminaries, in a demonstration outside the National Press Club in Islamabad demanded the minister's resignation and the registration of cases against him.

That, predictably, was only the opening salvo. Since then, the campaign against Mr Rasheed has taken a more sinister, yet very familiar course. Loaded language and potentially lethal labels that are peculiar to the arsenal of the right-wing have surfaced on cue. The minister had 'ridiculed the ideology' of Pakistain, read banners in the country's capital; he was an 'atheist' and 'heretic' they railed, and called for his execution.

First, let us dispense with the obvious: the religious organizations are well within their rights to register their protest. However,
alcohol has never solved anybody's problems. But then, neither has milk...
that right does not extend to levelling threats or using emotive language that in the existing environment can easily be construed as incitement to violence or even murder.

At the same time, it is telling that the banners have only now, after a week of being displayed at various central locations in Islamabad, reportedly been taken down and some individuals incarcerated
Don't shoot, coppers! I'm comin' out!
and charged with crimes pertaining to defamation and public mischief.

Even in a country where the 'VIP culture' is constantly lambasted for privileging the political elite, the government was unable, or unwilling, to mount a prompt and robust response to an unlawful campaign -- that too in the seat of government -- against one of its own federal ministers by religious lobbies.

Equally disheartening is the deafening silence from politicians in general to come to Mr Rasheed's defence. Whether cowardice or political expediency is to blame, it is in everyone's interest to work together to contain these malign forces that seem to mysteriously remain unaccountable to anyone.

A few years ago, a similar campaign led to the liquidation of the Punjab
1.) Little Orphan Annie's bodyguard
2.) A province of Pakistain ruled by one of the Sharif brothers
3.) A province of India. It is majority (60 percent) Sikh and Hindoo (37 percent), which means it has relatively few Moslem riots....

governor Salmaan Taseer. Much innocent blood has been spilt since then in the name of faith. The state cannot afford to continue taking the path of least resistance.
Posted by:Fred

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