What's new

Impact of the Media in Pakistan

Oh really?

The BBC is notoriously anti-Pakistan. This is nothing new.

Maybe because the Indian media does have a certain amount of credibility?

:rofl:
Even most educated Indians don't believe that nonsense.
Indian media is one of the most jingoistic pieces of crap on the planet.

Pro India? Or perhaps the truth.

Pro-India. Truth doesn't enter into the equation.

The BBC parrots Indian propaganda? Then why does it continue to call terrorists in Kashmir with the moniker gunmen or at worst militant? Why does it continue to use terms like Indian administered and Pakistani administered Kashmir? Why is it that the BBC always uses the prefix of "alleges", or "allegedly" with regards to Indian accusations on Pakistani sponsored militancy/terrorism/freedom fighting in kashmir?

Comical!

The BBC doesn't call them freedom fighters or rebels either. In any case, this doesn't even compare to the BBC parroting Indian media on Musharraf and Pakistan nukes, as well as tub thumping against Pakistanis falsely accused of terrorism.

The point here is to establish the objectivity of the BBC.

Irrelevant. The BBC is also even handed on climate change and gay marriage. What does that have to do with the India/Pakistan conflict?

About it being part of the neocon agenda, pray tell, who exactly are these neocons in Britian and what is their agenda? Was Blair a neocon for supporting the Iraq war? But wait...havent i already established the neutral position of the BBC during the war?

See below about Western agenda.

Perhaps you mean pro israeli coverage on the bbc? You would be mistaken. The BBC, is one of the few news organizations that are neutral on the issue.

Again irrelevant. The topic here is BBC's bias against Pakistan and the reasons for it.

Calling BBC a part of the neocon plot smacks of stupidity. The BBC, along with certain left to centre British newspapers (Guardian for example) - if they were part of the American media - would be shouted down by the neoconservatives, actually most of mainstream America, for "pushing the socialist agenda".

Faulty logic. Just because the neocon and leftist/liberal agendas conincide on certain matters doesn't mean one is part of the other.

There is no such thing as a Western agenda. The West is not a monolithic entity.

On the contrary, Western Europe and the US share a common culture and agenda to maintain their supremacy in the world. China is seen as an emerging threat and India is being groomed to keep China busy.

Thanks for the reality check, but its not needed. India is not the topic under discussion.

When Pakistan's relations with the West are involved, India is most certainly relevant.

Problems will continue to remain until the real enemies of Pakistani society - most of which are within Pakistan - are addressed.

Spare us the condescending advice. India should focus on improving its own lot.

Please stop. You are only embarrassing yourself.

Truth is never embarrasing. As a non-Muslim you can have the luxury of ignoring this fact, but we are fully aware who are real enemies are.

Is that why there are more articles praising China's economic miracle than India's? Most articles on India's economic boom also focus on the flip side of it. This is not true for articles on China. Before you construed this as "Indian whining", let me state that i have no problems with this kind of reporting.

The Western media puts India on a par with China, often mentioning them together as upcoming giants This annoys the Chinese to no end who point out that, on a per capita basis, India is a third world country and will remain so for well into this century.

You're right. The news reports we see on Pakistan are actually imaginary. There are no problems in Pakistan at the moment. The videos of terrorist attacks/army action/ etc/ is actually done by Hollywood special effect artists - after all Hollywood is controlled by Jews - in an effort to demonize the people and country of Pakistan.

Yawn. Here it is, the race card...
The usual pathetic attempt to turn everything into an anti-Semitic discussion so you can thump your chest as the champion of justice. You know full well that Judaism and Zionism are not the same thing.

Can't get that India obsession out of your head eh? Not everything should be seen with an India oriented prism.

To ignore an enemy actively campaigning against you is not logical. Furthermore, the Western agenda vis-a-vis India/China and the region is no secret.
 
Ok, enuff of the negative stuff. Let some Pakistani list those media outlets(within or outside) that are sympathistic to Pakistan and its interests....
 
A few months back a lady was flogged in public in Swat. While majority of Pakistan protested against it, some people ncluded rumour mill of the Jang Group Ansar Abbasi, tried to give the whole issue a different angle.


In this video Ansar Abbasi is saying that if all Islamic criteria for such jurisdction were met than this punishment was right and people against it should come to their senses.

I agree 100% that if Islamic jurisdiction was followed then there should have been no criticisim, HOWEVER, Islam also directs that the law of the land should be followed.

In Pakistan there are laws and procedures to deal with such issues and we should have followed those procedures. Islamic law never suggests a parallel govt. and also tells people to be compassionate towards each other.

This is one example of how media misguide people. Ansar Abbasi is not a 17 yr old kid and he knows better that Islamic Law can't be delivered via the Talibans but yet he will find a way to supprt them.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Geo TV is trying to confuse Pakistan so that when the time of action comes, noone will know what to do or where to go.
 
A few months back a lady was flogged in public in Swat. While majority of Pakistan protested against it, some people ncluded rumour mill of the Jang Group Ansar Abbasi, tried to give the whole issue a different angle.

[YouTube link to - Reaction of Ansar Abbasi about Swat girl flogging[/url]

In this video Ansar Abbasi is saying that if all Islamic criteria for such jurisdction were met than this punishment was right and people against it should come to their senses.

I agree 100% that if Islamic jurisdiction was followed then there should have been no criticisim, HOWEVER, Islam also directs that the law of the land should be followed.

In Pakistan there are laws and procedures to deal with such issues and we should have followed those procedures. Islamic law never suggests a parallel govt. and also tells people to be compassionate towards each other.

This is one example of how media misguide people. Ansar Abbasi is not a 17 yr old kid and he knows better that Islamic Law can't be delivered via the Talibans but yet he will find a way to supprt them.
Actually you have contracted a severe kind of Jang-group-diarrhea and as a side effect of this diarrhea; you are taking things totally out of context and present them as such. First of all when this incident took place, where was the writ of the GoP in Sawat? There was simply no writ of the GoP and the TTP was in full control of Sawat. Secondly, the debate was not on the legitimacy of a parallel TTP rule in Sawat, but on the legitimacy of the incident itself. All the liberal fascists and jaahils were on one side and taking the sky over their heads about that incident as if Islam was only about barbarism and that women are treated like slaves. Mr. Ansar Abbasi is only addressing to the issue whether in Islam such a punishment was allowed, and under which circumstance.

His actual words are :

“jis tarah sey aap log ya jo log commentary kar rahey hein is key upar, jo log yeh keh rahey hein key yeh barabaric hey, to yeh mujhey to bada afsos lag raha hey key app hum apni jahiliyat ko, hum ney Quran parha nahin hey, aur sirf apni jahiliyat ki wajah sey hum Allah Taala key qanoon ko barbaric keh rahey hein……”

He was telling that those who think this was barbaric or what not are wrong because in Surah Noor, there are clear instruction on how to deal the matters regarding zina, how the case be heard, what should be the punishment etc. No where he is defending that TTP be allowed to establish a parallel government or that people should not be compassionate towards each other.

You must be very careful and must avoid putting your words or interpretations in other’s mouth.
 
The myths, the madness, and the media​

Posted by Nadeem F. Paracha in Featured Articles, Politics on 12 10th, 2009

After talking of the dangerously concocted narratives peddled by the state, government, and religious parties of Pakistan that I mentioned in my last blog, let’s now turn our attention towards the political and social narratives emerging from the country’s highly animated electronic media.

Still basking (nay, indulgently bathing) in the sudden spat of freedom provided during the early years of General Pervez Musharraf, the private TV news channels, initially in their attempt to differ from the confining traditions of state-owned television, emerged sounding largely progressive and remaining as close to ‘objectivity’ as was possible – at least until they discovered the commercial wonders of what is called the political ‘talk show.’

It wasn’t until early 2006 that many of these talk shows started to devolve and mutate into the kind of rampant and anarchic ogres that they are today. Many of them actually did a wonderful job passionately reporting the tragic 2005 earthquake in Kashmir, in the process also facilitating the unprecedented interest that common Pakistanis exhibited in helping the quake victims.

But, alas, it seems this episode, which, I believe, finally brought the private electronic media into the forefront, had a rather disastrous impact on the nascent egos of various talk show hosts and TV reporters.

Suddenly, they took the noble idea of missionary journalism, and instead of continuing to tread on the ‘objective middle ground,’ began moving way towards the populist right. And what’s more, once their bosses decided that this new trajectory was actually generating better monetary results (à la FOX News), the channels never looked back, sloganeering all the way to the bank!


Personalities such as Shahid Masood, Hamid Mir, Talat Hussain, Kashif Abbasi, Ansar Abbasi, Zaid Hamid, Shireen Mazari have all emerged from the abovementioned scenario. As part of this largely reactionary and at the same time monetarily cynical phenomenon is the transformation of non-media personalities into regular TV feasts.
These include men and women who have become mainstays on talk shows as ‘guests’. Retired generals, small-time politicians, vernacular columnists and urban maulvis whose job it is to maintain the duration of their individual 15 minutes of fame by sounding off the talk show hosts’ populist and flammable innuendos.

Since the Taliban and the inhuman havoc they’ve been perpetrating is the single most critical issue impacting the country at this very moment, let’s evaluate the popular news channels’ handling of this ordeal.

Recently, many TV talk show hosts and their favourite sounding boards (‘guests’), have come under fire from certain ‘liberal’ sections belonging to the print media, academia, and in the blogsphere.

The more sensationalist and unsubstantiated accusations against some talk show hosts of being ‘ISI agents’ and ‘extremists’ can be put aside as subjective groaning. But then so can what usually comes out of the mouths of many hosts and their guests.

In the last three years at least, TV talk shows have openly thrived on building whole ‘debates’ and arguments on what almost entirely belongs in the floozy and demagogic conspiracy theory sphere.

The topics of the show may have a ring of intellectualism and serious policy matters, but it does not take much time for the so-called ‘debate’ to spiral down into sloganeering, wild theory casting (by the ‘guests’) and self-righteous preaching (by the hosts).

I use the word self-righteous because even though most talk show hosts are having a heck of a time being this new kind of TV celebrity with impressive material and social perks, their rhetoric seems to be surfacing from a besieged mindset. Without having any qualms or need for humility or modesty, they are quick to present themselves as heroes, besieged by the powers that be.

The truth is, the media has never been in the kind of free-floating situation it is today. Though the Musharraf regime blundered by putting an old-fashioned authoritarian cap on it in 2007 – not for entirely wrong reasons, mind you – the current coalition government led by the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), is actually the one finding its democratic credentials taken hostage by a hostile electronic media that is sumptuously feeding upon the many lingering misconceptions about popular democracy that still linger in the minds of Pakistanis.

So what is that narrative echoing in the corridors of the TV news channels that is making some of us suspect the ideological and political dispositions of so many talk show hosts? One way to find out is to track this narrative’s evolution, especially in regards to the matters of terrorism and extremism.

Till 2003, when, comparatively speaking, suicide bombings were a rare occurrence in Pakistan, they were reported by the newly inaugurated private TV channels as part of a simple narrative: the bombings were being undertaken by indigenous sectarian organisations in cahoots with Al Qaeda in reaction to the United States’ post-9/11 action in Afghanistan.

The narrative was simple, but there was a lot of truth in it as well. Even till this day, sectarian organisations such as the (supposedly banned) Sipah-Sehaba and Lashkar-e-Taiba are believed to be doing the ground work for the Taliban and shady Al Qaeda elements.

In the wake of Pakistan’s more aggressive involvement in the US-run ‘war on terror,’ the above narrative began being tempered by talk show ‘guests’ – mainly from the Jamat-i-Islami, and certain retired generals who still seemed nostalgically stuck in the 1980s’ ‘Afghan Jihad.’

The Pakistan Army’s half-hearted operations in the sensitive Taliban-infested territories too did not help in this respect, and neither did the right-wing provincial government of the NWFP (MMA) that attempted to ‘keep the peace’ by playing the sympathetic ostrich in the volatile province.

As one started seeing talk show hosts and their guests now condemn Pakistan’s involvement against what were clearly monsters, one was left baffled when the reason for their outrage had something to do with ‘tribal Pathans having great honour and appetite for revenge!’

Of course, it was conveniently forgotten that the ‘honourable’ tribals from whose ranks the Taliban were emerging found nothing so dishonourable about slaughtering not only fellow Pakistanis, but also their own Pushtun kinsmen?

But just when this contradiction and the utter feebleness of it started to become apparent, Musharraf blundered by delaying taking action against the violent Lal Masjid clerics and their army of self-righteous thugs.

The Musharraf dictatorship clearly manhandled the whole issue. But it is also true that electronic media coverage of the Army’s action against the terrorists at the mosque is yet to be paralleled in its utter show of irresponsibility, including in-studio and on-site reporting and ‘comment’ by reporters and hosts that sometimes bordered on actually eulogising and applauding the violent holy thugs.

I still wonder how much of the manic and rabid reactionary sparks that one saw flying around the TV studios at the time contributed to the construction of minds seeking violent revenge in the shape of suicide bombings against the common citizens of Pakistan?

The entirely lopsided and irresponsible coverage of the Lal Masjid is clearly the local electronic media’s darkest hour, one that was only partially rectified by the same media’s following fetish: The Lawyers’ Movement.

With the rise in terrorist attacks on Pakistani civilians, the narrative that put the action of Muslims seeking ‘justified revenge’ against fellow Muslims began weakening, until the sudden appearance of the likes of Zaid Hamid (on a struggling news channel and a music channel!) and Shireen Mazari.

Conspiracy theories about Mossad/RAW/CIA involvement in the matter that were once restricted to obscure crackpot websites suddenly exploded onto the Pakistani mainstream media scene. Some suggest this was done to justify the Pakistan Army’s operation in the north-west, making it look like a fight against infidels (as opposed to it being a civil war against monsters created and ignorantly tolerated by us alone).

So the following has become the new narrative, not only on TV talk shows, but consequently, and dangerously, within much of society: ‘Those conducting suicide attacks on common men, women, and children in Pakistan, cannot be Muslims. They have to be infidel foreigners, most probably funded and trained by RAW, Mossad, and even the CIA. These agencies want to take over Pakistan’s nuclear assets and control the imminent rise of Islam.’

Much psychosomatic gibberish emerges from this unsubstantiated and delusional narrative peddled every single day on talk shows. And if this is the only answer that these ‘experts’ have for the besieged people of Pakistan, then, I’m afraid, we truly have become a wretched nation which has decided to hold on to half-truths, myths, and fantastical stories as a means to safeguard our ‘honour,’ instead of depending more on reason and a positive exhibition of self-criticism. There is no bigger honour than saying and respecting the truth, no matter how disturbing it might be.

The myths, the madness, and the media — The Dawn Blog Blog Archive


************************

Nadeem did a great job in highlighting some of the issues with our media.
 
So the BBC is also biased about Pakistan? :rolleyes:

Another zionist conspiracy by the western world to defame Pakistan, is it?




The standard rhetoric for the delusional - Everyone else is too blame for Pakistani problems except Pakistan.

On the count of BBC, your countrymen accuse BBC of the same biases that we in Pakistan do. BBC definitely has a certain slant.
 
Pakistan cannot tackle its real problems unless the country's leaders - military and civilian - first admit that much of the present crisis is a result of long-standing mistakes, the lack of democracy, the failure to strengthen civic institutions and the lack of investment in public services like education, even as there continues to be a massive investment in nuclear weapons and the military.

I really didn't understand this blog type 'report'. Its so entirely useless. How would 'acknowledging' his skewed opinions on matters of the past help tackle our present problems? Would our military operations become more effective or will the terrorist attacks go away... say if Pakistan's leaders were to 'confess' to 'making' the likes of the TTP, which is utter tripe anyway. Its so weird how this guy is using Pakistan's present issues, which are very specific and very serious, to push his agenda on everything from the military budget, nuclear weapons to the public sector. I know Pakistan's education system is really lacking, but that doesn't mean it churns out suicide bombers; doesn't mean people from universities don't become terrorists either. If these are the only 'experts' representing Pakistan in respected organizations like the BBC then no wonder there is so much disinformation around.
 
A specific group of media and a section of churnalist, is constantly fanning political instability in the country. Even one One notable channel which also owns newspapers has taken it upon itself to topple the elected government. It is being constantly reported that this top channel is funded by Jewish lobby and one of the neighboring country, so what could be the ambitions of this news channel? Most of them are the mouthpiece of foreign powers. It has been revealed that MI6 paid a huge amount to Media mark, the firm of renowned journalist Mr. Javed Chaudhry, to run campaign against Pakistan Govt. This is the real face of healers of this nation.

Every citizen is fed up from this pharoanic media that presents faslehood as truth. Truth is always the first casualty of such media groups that serve vested interests. They are operating like a mafia who wants every government in the country to dance on their tune. They want to dictate internal and external policies of the country irrespective of whatever tunnel vision they have of the world.

They can level all kinds of founded or unfounded allegations against anybody whom they don’t like owing to their personal and political prejudices as right now they doing with elected President of Pakistan. To extend their personal and ideological agendas, they want to spit unchecked firepower. But, they are so fragile that their glasshouse breaks into pieces if someone like this blog braves to throw a pebble of criticism onto them. There should be accountability of media and such groups and churanlist should be banned forever.
 
Here's the other side of the media story. I agree with some of what this author says, except the part about FATA and Waziristan. (I think the army did exactly the right thing in liberating these areas.) I also don't think the US-Zionist nexus is quite as powerful in Pakistan as the author claims, but his points about the sycophantic sellouts, or native Orientalists as he calls them, are spot on. In fact, I would put Nadeem Paracha as among the worst of the "blame Pakistan first" crowd. Given a choice between Nadeeem Paracha and Shireen Mazari, I would take the latter any day of the week, and twice on Sundays.

Groveling of Pakistani Elites; An Excellent article by Shahid Alam > Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf > Insaf Blog

Native Orientalists at the Daily Times

By M. SHAHID ALAM

M. Shahid Alam is professor of economics at Northeastern University. He is the author of, Israeli Exceptionalism: The Destabilizing Logic of Zionism (Macmillan, November 2009).

A few days back, I received a ‘Dear friends’ email from Mr. Najam Sethi, ex editor-in-chief of Daily Times, Pakistan, announcing that he, together with several of his colleagues, had resigned from their positions in the newspaper.

In his email, Mr. Sethi thanked his ‘friends’ for their “support and encouragement…in making Daily Times a ‘new voice for a new Pakistan.’” Wistfully, he added, “I hope it will be able to live up to your expectations and mine in time to come.”

I am not sure why Mr. Sethi had chosen me for this dubious honor. Certainly, I did not deserve it. I could not count myself among his ‘friends’ who had given “support and encouragement” to the mission that DT had chosen for itself in Pakistan’s media and politics.

Contrary to its slogan, it was never DT’s mission to be a ‘new voice for a new Pakistan.’ The DT had dredged its voice from the colonial past; it had only altered its pitch and delivery to serve the new US-Zionist overlords. Many of the writers for DT aspire to the office of the native informers of the colonial era. They are heirs to the brown Sahibs, home-grown Orientalists, who see their own world (if it is theirs in any meaningful sense) through the lens created for them by their spiritual mentors, the Western Orientalists.

Pakistanis had failed to seize sovereign control over their country at its birth. In August 1947, the departing British had few worries about losing their colonial assets in Pakistan. They were quite confident that the brown Sahibs, who were succeeding them, would not fail in their duty to protect these assets. Within a few years, these brown Sahibs had strapped the new country to the wheels of the neocolonial order. Without effective resistance from below – from intellectuals, workers, students and peasants – these neocolonial managers have been free to cannibalize their own people as long as they could also keep their masters happy.

This is not a cri de coeur - only a diagnosis of Pakistan’s misery. The best time to do this was in the first decades after their country’s birth, when the Western imperialist grip was still weak, and, with courage and organization, Pakistanis could have set their newly free country on the course of irreversible independence.

Grievously, Pakistanis had failed at this task. Pakistan’s elites produced few men and women of conscience, who could transcend their class origins to mobilize workers and peasants to fight for their rights. More regrettably, Pakistan’s emerging middle classes have been too busy aping the brown Sahibs, stepping over each other to join the ranks of the corrupt elites. As a result, Pakistan’s elites have grown more predatory, refusing to establish the rule of law in any sphere of society.

Ironically, the enormous success of Edward Said’s Orientalism, his devastating critiquing of the West’s hegemonic discourse on the ‘Orient,’ has deflected attention from the recrudescence of a native Orientalism in much of the Periphery in the last few decades. Its victory in Pakistan is nearly complete, where it has been led by the likes of Ahmad Rashid, Pervez Hoodbhoy, Najam Sethi, Khaled Ahmad, Irfan Hussain, Husain Haqqani, and P. J. Mir. Not a very illustrious lot, but they are the minions of Western embassies and Western-financed NGOs in Pakistan.

In the euphoria of Edward Said’s success, left intellectuals have nearly forgotten that the West’s servant classes in the Periphery produce an indigenous Orientalism. I refer here to the coarser but more pernicious Orientalism of the brown Sahibs, who are free, behind their rhetoric of progress, to denigrate their own history and culture. A few of these native Orientalists are deracinated souls, who put down their own people for failing, as they see it, to keep up with the forward march of history. Most, however, are opportunists, lackeys, or wannabee lackeys, eager to join the native racketeers who manage the Periphery for the benefit of outside powers.

In the closing years of the colonial era, the nationalists had kept a watchful eye on native informers. In recent decades, as their power has grown several fold, this treasonous class has received little attention from left circles. Post-colonial critics continue to produce learned books and essays on the language, structures, tools, intricacies and even the arcana of Orientalism, but they pay scant attention to native Orientalism. These critics prefer to concentrate their firepower on the ‘far enemy,’ the Western protagonists of Orientalism. Perhaps, they imagine that the native Orientalists, the ‘near enemy,’ will vanish once the ‘far enemy’ has been discredited. In truth, the ‘near enemy’ has grown enormously even as the ‘far enemy’ treads more cautiously.

Quite early, writing in the 1950s, Franz Fanon, in The Wretched of the Earth, had sounded the alarm about the treachery latent in the ‘national bourgeoisie’ poised to step into the shoes of the white colonials and settlers in Africa. About this underdeveloped bourgeoisie, he writes, “its mission has nothing to do with transforming the nation; it consists, prosaically, of being the transmission line between the nation and a capitalism, rampant though camouflaged, which today puts on the mask of neocolonialism.”

“Because it is bereft of ideas,” Fanon writes, “because it lives to itself and cuts itself off from the people, undermined by its hereditary incapacity to think in terms of all the problems of the nation as seen from point of view of the whole of that nation, the national middle class will have nothing better to do than to take on the role of manager for Western enterprise, and it will in practice set up its country as the brothel of Europe.” Although Fanon was not writing about Pakistan, no truer words – nothing more prescient – could have been written about the brown Sahibs who have managed US-Zionist interests in Pakistan.

To return to the DT, surely some Pakistani – moved by the instinct of self-preservation – could have produced at least one damning monograph documenting the methods that this new flagship of native Orientalism has employed to advance the strategic interests of the US-Zionist confederates in Pakistan and the Islamicate. Oddly, you are unlikely to find even a few articles that shine the spotlight on the DT’s unabashed advocacy of the US-Zionist agenda in Pakistan.

The DT was launched in April 2002, simultaneously from Lahore and Karachi, just a few months after the United States had invaded and occupied Afghanistan, with indispensable logistic support from Pakistan. Was this timing a mere coincidence? Or was the launching of an aggressively pro-American and pro-Zionist newspaper, led by a team of mostly US-trained editors and columnists, an imperative of the new geopolitics created by the Pakistan’s mercenary embrace of the US-Zionist global war against terrorism?

Coincidence or not, the DT has served its masters with verve. Its pages have carried countless editorials justifying Pakistan’s induction into the US led war against Afghanistan, under the cover of the attacks of September 11. The editors and columnists at DT have routinely excoriated the patriots who have opposed Pakistan’s surrender to US-Zionist demands, as naïve sentimentalists unaware of the tough demands of realpolitik. Endlessly, they have argued that Pakistan – with the world’s sixth largest population, a million-strong military, and an arsenal of nuclear weapons – can save itself only through eager prostration before the demands of foreign powers.

In advocating national surrender, these native Orientalists boldly and unashamedly declared that Pakistan’s elites draw their power from Washington, London and Tel Aviv, not from the will of the people of Pakistan. It is an insult that has since been sinking, slowly but surely, into the national psyche of Pakistanis.

Taking advantage of what appeared to be – after the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 – the irreversible US assault against the sovereignty of Islamicate nations, Pakistan’s ruling elites openly began broaching the need to recognize Israel. Once again, the native Orientalists at DT were leading the charge, arguing that Pakistan could advance its national interests by recognizing Israel. Their rationale was pathetic in its naïveté. Grateful to Pakistan, the brown Sahibs argued, the powerful Zionist lobby would neutralize the Indian lobby’s machinations against Pakistan in the United States. Only determined opposition from nationalists in Pakistan defeated this treacherous move.

When resistance against US occupation of Afghanistan gained momentum, once again the DT was reading its master’s lips. Shut down the madrasas, they demanded; and, without delay, attack the Pakistanis in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) who were supporting the Afghan resistance. Repeated US and Pakistani bombings of the resistance groups in Fata, which has killed thousands of civilians, called forth new Taliban factions that have been attacking military and civilian targets in Pakistan. With barely concealed glee, the DT cheers when the Pakistan military carries its war deeper into the country’s towns and villages.

In 2007, when the lawyers in Pakistan took to the streets to demand the restoration of the Chief Justice sacked by the military dictator, the DT did not support them. Instead, it defended the sacking, and repeatedly made the case for a ‘gradual transition’ to civilian rule in Pakistan. A civilian government, they were afraid, might not be as compliant to US pressures as Pakistan’s military rulers.

When elections became unavoidable, the United States and Pakistan’s generals worked on a plan to bring to power the pro-American Benazir Bhutto, the exiled corrupt leader of the Pakistan People’s Party. At US prodding, President Musharraf passed an ordinance withdrawing all criminal cases against the leadership of the PPP. With luck, the US plan succeeded. The openly pro-American PPP followed General Musharraf into power.

Space allows us to list only a few egregious examples of the Orientalist mindset on display in the pages of the DT. As the paper’s chief native Orientalist, Khaled Ahmad, for several years surveyed the foibles and follies of Pakistan’s Urdu media. He berated the benighted Urdu writers for their naïveté, emotionalism, and foolish advocacy of national interests that collided with realpolitik (read: US-Zionist interests). Ejaz Haider, the paper’s op-ed editor, distinguished himself by writing his endlessly clever political commentaries in the racy street lingo of the United States. Did this make him a darling of the American staff at the US embassy in Islamabad?

Consider one more ‘exhibit’ that captures DT’s servile mentality. In a regular column, oddly titled, ‘Purple Patch,’ the newspaper ladles out wisdom to its readers. This wisdom is dispensed in the form of article-length passages lifted from various ‘great’ writers, who are always of Western provenance. Presumably, the editors at DT still believe, with their long-dead spiritual mentor, Lord Macaulay, that “a single shelf of a good European library was worth the whole native literature of India and Arabia.”

Will the departure of Mr. Sethi and his distinguished colleagues make a difference? I doubt if the owners of DT will have difficulty finding their replacements, voices equally shrill in their advocacy of foreign powers. More than at any other time, growing numbers of Pakistanis have been grooming themselves for service to the Empire, as their predecessors once eagerly sought to serve the British Raj. This groveling by Pakistan’s elites will only change when the people act to change the incentives on offer to the servants of Empire. It will only change when the people of Pakistan can put these mercenaries in the dock, charge them for their crimes against the people and the state, and force them to disgorge their loot.

This will take hard work; and some Pakistanis insist that this hard work is underway. It daily gains momentum, and, at some point, the will of the people will catch up with the craven and corrupt elites who have bartered the vital interests of Pakistan and the Islamicate for personal profit. When the ‘near enemy’ has been decapitated - metaphorically speaking – the ‘far enemy’ too will recede into the mists of history.

M. Shahid Alam is professor of economics at Northeastern University. This is an excerpt from his forthcoming book, Israeli Exceptionalism: The Destabilizing Logic of Zionism (Macmillan, November 2009). Contact me atalqalam02760@yahoo.com.
 
Last edited:
It was quite informative and educative to go through such a multivariate pile of information.However, our media needs to adjust its orientation and may not pursue its frenzied goal of becoming spokesmen of westernized style of presenting the information.
 
I honestly believe that there should be a ban on this ba-khabar zaria key mutabiq crap.
 

Back
Top Bottom