Is it for the Supreme Court to see what's happening to the citizens in Balochistan and Karachi?
Or there is none to heed? It seems so!
I think Nero was a far better person than the present federal and provincial rulers. At least, he had a knack for playing fiddle; whereas the present ruling party and its allies and the state machinery under them are interested only in making sure they remain in the government and continue robbing the citizens' tax money.
They do not care a dime for the security of citizens' life and property; let these cockroaches be robbed and die. Especially, in Karachi man-slaughtering has the semblance of a political game.
But the solution to this problem is not a political one; it is administrative! Until and unless it is treated as an administrative issue, there is going to be no improvement in the law and order situation in Karachi.
Karachi – not a political problem!
Or there is none to heed? It seems so!
I think Nero was a far better person than the present federal and provincial rulers. At least, he had a knack for playing fiddle; whereas the present ruling party and its allies and the state machinery under them are interested only in making sure they remain in the government and continue robbing the citizens' tax money.
They do not care a dime for the security of citizens' life and property; let these cockroaches be robbed and die. Especially, in Karachi man-slaughtering has the semblance of a political game.
But the solution to this problem is not a political one; it is administrative! Until and unless it is treated as an administrative issue, there is going to be no improvement in the law and order situation in Karachi.
The latest cliché is: Karachi is a political problem!
Explanations vary. Some say it cannot be solved only by resorting to force;
some assert that even if you call Army, in the
end it will require political resolution. Or any such views in various wordings
abound.
From army, rangers, police, to TV talk
show hosts, their guests; from politicians, representatives of civil society,
personalities from the elite classes, to op-ed writers, columnists,
news-analysts, - all are parroting the same refrain: Karachi is a political
problem and all the stakeholders should sit together and resolve it.
The writer thinks otherwise: Karachi is not a
political problem, though no doubt it's a problem which has both been created
and complicated by the politicians and political parties. In his view, Karachi is an
administrative problem. In fact, Karachi
is a problem of law and order; a problem emerged due to the lack of the rule of
law and supremacy of the law. It's a problem of absence of an efficient system
of dispensation of justice. In the last analysis, it's a problem of securing
the fundamental rights to the citizens of Karachi .
Instead, the political parties put all
these vital issues on the back burner. They
relegated them, but to promote their own heinous political gains and played
havoc with the lives and properties of the citizens of Karachi . It was they who gave rise to and
strengthened the criminal politics in Karachi .
That's why they are not the stakeholders (how could criminals be the
stakeholders?), the citizens of Karachi
are the real stakeholders.
Also, both the federal and provincial
governments are accomplice in this game. They did not meet their administrative
and constitutional responsibilities in Karachi .
They miserably failed in protecting the citizens' lives and properties there.
It was back in 1954 that Justice Muhammad
Munir and Justice M. R. Kayani, while concluding their Report of Inquiry into
the 1953 Punjab Disturbances, wrote (it's the last para and last words of the
Report):
“And it is our deep conviction that if
the Ahrar had been treated as a pure question of law and order, without any
political considerations, one District Magistrate and one Superintendent of
Police could have dealt with them. Consequently, we are prompted by something
that they call a human conscience to enquire whether, in our present state of
political development, the administrative problem of law and order cannot be
divorced from a democratic bed fellow called a Ministerial Government, which is
so remorselessly haunted by political nightmares. But if democracy means the
subordination of law and order to political ends – then Allah knoweth best and
we end the report.” (Justice Munir Inquiry Report 1954, P. 387)
So, the disease afflicting Pakistan is not
new. It's age-old; sort of a disease Pakistan was born with. It is this
same disease that divided Pakistan
into two, and has begotten "Karachi "
of today.
The treatment of the disease was/is very
simple, but till now it has not been taken recourse to. It lies in having
independent institutions, not working under the will of the politicians and
political parties, but taking their 'elan vital' from the laws and the
constitution of the country. First and foremost, courts and police must be
independent, so that political parties are not able to induct their cronies,
agents, and touts in them – the ones who draw their salaries from the tax money
of the citizens, but work to protect the dirty games of their masters.
The problem of Karachi is an administrative one, and needs
to be dealt with according to the demands of maintaining law and order, and
there must not be any political interference, and shadow of political
considerations either while these institutions play their role. The law must
take its course in Karachi ,
no matter which political party is in power. That's the way to resolve the Karachi 's administrative
problem.
[This article was completed on September 10,
2011. ]
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