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Accountability does the trick

sparklingway

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Accountability does the trick
By Kamran Shafi
Tuesday, 09 Mar, 2010



At least two readers, obviously the Commando’s supporters, have sent me abusive emails after reading my last article ‘The happening place’ (March 2) in Dawn.

They have, among other compliments, called me a liar for suggesting that Bilal Musharraf, Gen Musharraf’s son and heir, visited Prince Alwalid bin Talal taking in tow the then Pakistani ambassador Adm Shahid Karimullah. ‘Where is the photograph?’ they have demanded of me.

Whilst they are being patently dishonest because the said photograph was printed in the press at the time, and was commented upon by me among others at the time, they need only google Bilal Musharraf’s name and spend a few minutes on the Internet to find and access it. They will see that not only is the admiral sitting, hands folded in his lap as if he were in the presence of a high and mighty personage, Musharraf Junior, even Asad Jamal, Musharraf Junior’s ‘boss’, is likewise sitting in a subservient way in the presence.

This is a most serious matter: the Pakistani ambassador sitting in on a private business meeting; specially an ambassador who was a retired and much bedecked navy chief. Might one call upon My Lords the justices of the Supreme Court of Pakistan who have oft spoken of the need to wipe out corruption in high places, to take suo motu action on this too and summon Adm Karimullah to explain himself? Unless, of course, the only corrupt people in Pakistan are political leaders against whom the Internet is full of postings ever since Gen Musharraf lost his nerve and left office under threat of impeachment.

Case in point: the friends of the establishment come out with facts and figures on the Internet on how much members of the National Assembly and the Senate of Pakistan are paid; what their perks are; how many government cars they use; and what their worth is according to themselves in their declarations of wealth and property. More often than not these declarations are made fun of and ridiculed by the media Taliban who ad nauseum ask for the ouster of whichever minister/public representative is the flavour of the week.

Not once has the media asked for transparency in what perks senior armed forces officers enjoy; how much they cost the state; which, and how many motor vehicles they are authorised; whether corps commanders drive around in BMWs or not; how many servants wait upon them and the zoos of exotic birds and antelope they maintain (in their official residences), and what they own in terms of movable and immovable property.

In my day there was a form, PAFY 1975, in which army officers were required to detail their worth. Is it existent today? And if it is, why are the assets of senior army, navy and air force officers not made public like those of elected representatives? Unless, of course, they are holy cows not to be questioned.

Holy cows reminds me, after the unilateral declaration of independence by the Pakistan Army in arrogating to itself the perfect right to give extensions in service to senior army officers, will other departments follow suit? The general manager Pakistan Railways handing out extensions in service to several divisional superintendents; the chairman federal board of revenue to customs and income tax officers, and the inspector general of police, Punjab, to DIGs?

Where will all of this stop if every department becomes a law unto itself? Why have governments at all then? For, of what use the prime minister or the chief ministers of the provinces? Of what use ministers and secretaries to government? Of what use, indeed, parliament itself?

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, more and more Al Qaeda and Taliban terrorists are being apprehended in joint operations of the Americans and our intelligence wallahs. Almost all of these arrests were made in Karachi adding to the charges that there always was a Quetta shura which hightailed it to Karachi when the Americans threatened to bomb their hideouts in the environs of Quetta itself.

The question to ask is why our security establishment for so many years denied the existence of the shura in the face of open and very public declarations by Balochistan’s elected leaders such as Mir Hasil Bizenjo and former chief minister Mir Akhtar Mengal that it did exist, in Quetta itself?

The answer is easy and we all know what it is. Anyway, it seems that President Obama’s strategy of using the carrot and the stick, mainly the stick (witness the tough letter hand-delivered by Gen James Jones, Obama’s security adviser), and of demanding accountability, is paying dividends not only in neutralising the terrorists who use Pakistan as a launching pad but also in Afghanistan. Would that accountability was applied across the board in this country too.

It would not be out of place here to mention, too, the clear-headed policy being followed by the US and Nato commander in Afghanistan Gen Stanley McChrystal. The thing that stands out most is that the general keeps a keen eye on what is going on and is sensitive to innocent deaths and collateral damage caused to non-combatants, apologising personally and publicly whenever such sad events occur. This is a sea-change from the arrogance of Dubya and Dick ‘The Sneer’ Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld and their field commanders.

In the end in what seems to be very bad news for the terrorist Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and his friends in the Pakistani security establishment, many of his commanders and fighters have reportedly defected to the Afghan government after attacking the Taliban in Baghlan province. This too seems to be the result of McChrystal’s policies, and is another setback to the establishment’s yearning for strategic depth in Afghanistan which seems to be a rather large pie-in-the-sky now. More on this quite inexplicable venture next week.
 
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Yet another one from our beloved KS.

If he goes to heaven or hell, am sure wahan per bhi is nae yahi kuch likhanaa hai.

:rofl::rofl:
 
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Yet another one from our beloved KS.

If he goes to heaven or hell, am sure wahan per bhi is nae yahi kuch likhanaa hai.

:rofl::rofl:

Kamran Shafi is impressed by hardly anything and moans all the time. He's a pleasure to read nonetheless, just like NFP.
 
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Kamran Shafi is impressed by hardly anything and moans all the time. He's a pleasure to read nonetheless, just like NFP.

Its good that he moans about issues, but his focus is just on the armed forces, he has made this into a holy war for himself.

There are much much more worse social issues and corruption filled things in Pakistan to write about.

But all he does is moaning about the Armed forces. And then he tries to himself an innocent filled human being, by coming up with stories that he was fired at in his house with no proof. Nowadays, if a single 1000 rupee camera is broken of a media man, the media and journalists cry foul and protest. He gets his house fired at, and nothing to be reported by any news agency to show the empty casing or the bullet marks, even by those for whom he writes.

He should better get a life and instead of just targeting the armed forces, should also write about other social, political issues which are more threatening to our country compared to the armed forces.
 
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Accountability does the trick
By Kamran Shafi
Tuesday, 09 Mar, 2010

Yaawwwn... another one by the old pompous has-been! I can just see him giggling like a giddy schoolgirl thinking he's all that when he writes these high falutin' pieces. Frankly, I find him neither balanced, nor humourous nor substantial.

It is, I must confess, quite funny to hear socialites from Lahore who have known him for a while, make fun of him in his absence. They're spot on with the impersonations and that's the only real value Kamran Shafi has in my life... a caricature I get to laugh at from time to time.
 
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Its good that he moans about issues, but his focus is just on the armed forces, he has made this into a holy war for himself.

There are much much more worse social issues and corruption filled things in Pakistan to write about.

But all he does is moaning about the Armed forces. And then he tries to himself an innocent filled human being, by coming up with stories that he was fired at in his house with no proof. Nowadays, if a single 1000 rupee camera is broken of a media man, the media and journalists cry foul and protest. He gets his house fired at, and nothing to be reported by any news agency to show the empty casing or the bullet marks, even by those for whom he writes.

He should better get a life and instead of just targeting the armed forces, should also write about other social, political issues which are more threatening to our country compared to the armed forces.

He has taken it as his duty to highlight the problems that have been created by the special status given to the military in our country based on our 63 years of brutal history. He highlights other issues time and again but as most writers do not touch the subject of the PA being given unchallenged autonomy or unheard-of benefits for the top brass, he has taken and has been writing about it forever now.

Many members here get offended easily because as KS said, they're the holy cows. Many times he goes over the top and does lame criticism but many times he has genuine points to make.

He gets his house fired at, and nothing to be reported by any news agency to show the empty casing or the bullet marks, even by those for whom he writes.

Now that is offensive. I know the media coverage of the attack on him was huge but how can you claim this as well. You went over the top too.
 
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Sparklingway, there is nothing offensive. I watch dawn news very regularly and never saw a single report or a new headline mentioning his name or the reported incident.

You may know well, whenever a journalist gets attacked how the media goes up in a uproar, but since no such uproar i doubt it. Plus, what he wrote and how he directly attacked the ISI on that issue, made perfect sense about his intentions. People have written much worse about Army, but they never got attacked, and are living happy lives.

I being myself from military background know much more and would have get offended by his articles but i don't as he is right in many things, but i don;t like him because as said he has made it a crusade for himself, and he should write about Army and the problems he sees in it, but leaving aside other things, well that is hypocrisy. He may have written about other things but not with the same zeal as he writes about the armed forces and his history shows it clearly, he is out for revenge, but not doing for the good cause.
 
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Sparklingway, there is nothing offensive. I watch dawn news very regularly and never saw a single report or a new headline mentioning his name or the reported incident.

You may know well, whenever a journalist gets attacked how the media goes up in a uproar, but since no such uproar i doubt it. Plus, what he wrote and how he directly attacked the ISI on that issue, made perfect sense about his intentions. People have written much worse about Army, but they never got attacked, and are living happy lives.

I being myself from military background know much more and would have get offended by his articles but i don't as he is right in many things, but i don;t like him because as said he has made it a crusade for himself, and he should write about Army and the problems he sees in it, but leaving aside other things, well that is hypocrisy. He may have written about other things but not with the same zeal as he writes about the armed forces and his history shows it clearly, he is out for revenge, but not doing for the good cause.

Agree to maybe 85% of what you said.
 
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Hi,

I just searched the name Bilal Musharraf and saw the picture that he is refering to making such a big deal out of it. The guy is sitting just like anyone else would sit---there is no submissiveness in his posture or otherwise---this man KS is making mountains out of mole hills---trying to catch fish in a urine puddle.
 
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in my entire life and i know this 'johnney' well, he has nothing good to say abt the army - this stems from the fact that he feels that he would have made a 'great' general in the army, so he is now 'grinding' his axe at every opportunity.
 
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Hi,

I just searched the name Bilal Musharraf and saw the picture that he is refering to making such a big deal out of it. The guy is sitting just like anyone else would sit---there is no submissiveness in his posture or otherwise---this man KS is making mountains out of mole hills---trying to catch fish in a urine puddle.

I guess you missed the HEC paying Boston Group advising fees during its early days. Theu publsihed a small report for which The Boston Group was reportedly paid a huge sum (report here). Bilal Musharraf was an "advisor" on that report. Many fingers were raised back then as well. Also, the favorite man in town Dr. Nasim Ashraf was "consulted" as well.

As for the picture, the offensive thing is that the ambassador is present with a private party meeting a business partner. Why is the ambassador there? He is not supposed to be there. If Bilal Musharraf was alone visiting, he should have definitely been there, but he had a business partner and the ambassador's presence was objectionable.
 
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