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Conflicted Karachi

SANDERS: Karachi cannot be ignored - Washington Times

Karachi cannot be ignored
The Washington Times
Sol Sanders
ANALYSIS/OPINION:

It isn't as though Karachi hasn't seen it all before.

In the convulsive migrations immediately after World War II, the Pakistani city played a largely unreported role. The few Western visitors to what had been only months before a sleepy little fishing port and railhead saw an awesome spectacle after 1947: a vast human migration and largely improvised shelters stretching as far as the eye could see. Writer Arthur Koestler noted at the time that exiting a plane from an international flight there was like getting hit in the face with a warm diaper.

Hundreds of thousands of Muslims sought refuge when the last British viceroy, Louis Lord Mountbatten, precipitously cleaved Imperial India into two independent states. The grim vista in Karachi spread out from the temporary grave of Mohammed Ali Jinnah, Pakistan's first leader, a secularist who attempted to build a state on the basis of Muslim identity.

It wasn't as if Pakistan's Siamese twin, the new Republic of India, was not facing equally vast problems at the same time. When perhaps as many as 2 million died on both sides in the bloody partition, survivors fled in all directions. But India — five times larger than its new neighbor — had retained more of the colonial heritage, including British architect Edwin Lutyens' grand New Delhi government buildings. Pakistan's capital in Karachi — politicians later moved it as far north as possible — was as improvised as everything else in the new country. And unlike the Arabs fighting Zionists in Palestine who became a permanent international charge at just about the same time, Karachi's "UPwallahs" (named after their former home in United Provinces, now India's Uttar Pradesh) were largely forgotten. The world was too busy elsewhere.

Somehow Karachi and Pakistan survived, a testament to fatalistic suffering on the subcontinent. But now a new human wave is descending on the world's largest — nearing 20 million — and most tempestuous megalopolis. The Indus Valley's worst floods ever have displaced some 20 million people. Most are subsistence farmers with little to go back to after the water subsides and likely to swell Karachi's already overwhelming burden. Local authorities have said they could absorb a million refugees. But that's likely wild-eyed optimism — minimizing the numbers and overestimating the infrastructure.

This time, too, the rest of the world is caught up in a dozen other major and numberless minor crises — not least a worldwide economic recession. But the international community ignores what happens in Karachi at its peril.

It is the major commercial and manufacturing center and the only port of a poor, nuclear-armed country of more than 170 million, a country already beset by domestic terrorism linked to the war next door in Afghanistan from which it cannot disentangle itself. It's from Karachi that supplies for American and NATO troops fighting terrorists in Afghanistan begin their hazardous thousand-mile overland trek.

Those terrorists have demonstrated agility in employing technology and adapting to counter Washington's efforts, suggesting they could establish roots in urban environments just as they have successfully employed more and more native Western agents. Karachi's Pashtun industrial work force — augmented by recent refugees from the Northwest Frontier where their kin shelter al Qaeda — is already an important base for the terrorists. Abdul Ghani Baradar, co-founder of the Afghanistan Taliban and the movement's operations chief, was reportedly captured there in February.

The terrorists seek to exploit Karachi's seething ethnic frictions, as well as resentments over poverty and rising crime. The Aug. 19 assassination of Ubaidullah Yusufzai, a leader of the secularist Awami National Party, led to communal rioting. That followed a wave of political killings after the Aug. 2 murder of Syed Raza Haider. Haider was a leader of the Mutahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), recruited from those Urdu-speaking post-independence refugees and their progeny now called muhajirs. The MQM has dominated Karachi politics. But it's telling that the movement's charismatic leader, Altaq Hussein, stays in London, apparently for his personal safety, leading the party via electronic media. Adding to this explosive potential is that the new wave of refugees is mostly Sindhi, Karachi's third ethnic component, the indigenous regional people who are still the majority in the flooded hinterland.

The terrorists have already threatened foreign aid providers, while maximizing their own ability to woo villagers caught now by the flood as well as the military clashes. The recent murder of eight American and British volunteers in Afghanistan only makes the threat that much more credible.

British Muslims of South Asian ancestry and others have contributed generously to relief funds. The U.S. government has donated $200 million, some of it switched from $7.5 billion aid promised over the next five years, and contributed personnel and aircraft to rescue efforts. But the enormity of the tragedy and Pakistan's ineffective bureaucracy limit effective relief. President Asif Ali Zardari, adding to his reputation for notorious corruption, continued a foreign trip as the floods struck. The military, Pakistan's only effective national institution, has promised to shift resources from its campaign against insurgents and its permanent deployment against India. MQM leader Hussein has called for martial law in a country in which the military has ruled Pakistan for more than half of its history.

However horrendous the immediate impact, the longer-term effects on Karachi will be critical — not only for Pakistan, but also for American and world security.

• Sol Sanders, veteran foreign correspondent and analyst, writes weekly on the convergence of international politics, business and economics. He can be reached at solsanders@cox.net.

© Copyright 2010 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.
 
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Bengalis and burmese migrate for the same reason as pakistanis go to western countries ,
There is a difference.The pakistanis have migrated to western countries by taking the legal route, the same cannot be said about bengalis and burmese.
 
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There is a difference.The pakistanis have migrated to western countries by taking the legal route, the same cannot be said about bengalis and burmese.

lol.. yeh most did flew in but never returned back to their home and instead claimed assylum or stayed illegal etc. A large no are still on housing etc etc benefits. If compared those bengalis and burmese are better as they cant claim benefits nor they are given nationality.
 
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lol.. yeh most did flew in but never returned back to their home and instead claimed assylum or stayed illegal etc.
They went to work on work permits issued by western countries.
How did bengalis and burmese made it to karachi?
 
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There is a difference.The pakistanis have migrated to western countries by taking the legal route, the same cannot be said about bengalis and burmese.

SORRY TO BLOW YOUR BUBBLE AWAY. PLEASE READ AND LEARN FROM THE LINK BELOW

UK cracks down on Pak illegal immigrants | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online

LONDON - The UK Border and Immigration Agency (UKBA) in different raids has arrested a number of illegal immigrants of Pakistani origin and fined millions of rupees to the British Pakistani owners of the businesses.
Seven men were arrested in an illegal immigration swoop on the TV company, being run by a close relative of Interior Advisor Rehman Malik. They were picked up at the studios of an Islamic station in Manchester city centre headed by Liaqat Malik. The offices of DM Digital TV, DM Islam TV and DM Digital World TV were also raided by immigration officers in a series of dawn swoops. Five of those found at the studio in a five-storey mill building in Turner Street were asleep in two bedrooms at the time of the search operation. All are suspected to be illegal immigrants from Pakistan. Two houses in Cheetham Hill were also searched as part of the operation by the North-West Border and Immigration Agency.
Malik, 47-year-old father-of-two, was struck off by a Solicitors’ Disciplinary Tribunal in July 2004 after an MEN undercover investigation revealed he had a criminal record for dishonesty and had previously been officially disciplined and banned from practising as a solicitor.
The UKBA officials said when Malik - who was also found to have forged qualifications to get on a university course - was not arrested because he was not present at the TV station offices when the operation code-named Europteria was carried out on Tuesday, but is expected to be quizzed about the immigration status of his staff during the course of the investigation.
On the television company building sign is a picture of the “Nayamat Mosque” with the caption: “Connecting Manchester to the World”. A notice on one of the doors also advertises a “property shop, Ayurvedic clinic, Rehani Clinic, Homoeopathic Clinic and a TV Shop.”
In another raid, a businesswomen, who is the driving force behind a hugely successful Manchester-based restaurant chain, has been arrested by police investigating the smuggling of illegal immigrants into the UK.
British Government race adviser Nighat Awan 52, one of the country’s richest entrepreneurs who had close links with Cherie Blair, was interviewed by officers from Merseyside Police on suspicion of conspiracy to facilitate illegal immigration, and has been bailed to be questioned again in November.
But a spokesman for the charity fundraiser who lives in Hale Barnes, near Altrincham, said on Wednesday she strenuously denied doing anything wrong, and had voluntarily helped police with their enquiries.
In February this year, her husband Rafique Awan 54, who started the Shere Khan restaurant chain in Rusholme, was arrested by officers involved in the same operation. He dismissed as ‘rubbish’, claims that he had been involved in an alleged illegal immigrants employment racket. The spokesman for Mrs Awan, who is understood to be en route home to the UK after a trip to Makkah, said, “She is totally in the dark about why she has been questioned, and totally bewildered by it all. Far from being involved in anything illegal, she has worked for a long time in the past as a human rights charity worker.
In another swoop by the immigration officials, half the workers at one of Manchester’s most popular curry houses were arrested. One of Manchester’s most popular curry houses was raided by immigration officials as kitchen staff prepared ingredients for the evening meals. A total of 21 arrests - more than half the workforce - were made when officers swooped at Akbar’s, on Liverpool Road. They found a number of Afghan, Pakistani, Iranian and Iraqi nationals thought to be working there illegally. Those arrested were taken into custody at holding cells across Greater Manchester. A notice of potential liability has been served on the restaurant, which could be hit with a 210,000 pounds fine - 10,000 pounds for each worker - if found guilty of breaching immigration laws. The vast majority of those held were kitchen staff. Shortly before 4.30pm a team of 26 officers, dressed in navy and wearing body armour, raided the restaurant.
 
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They went to work on work permits issued by western countries.
How did bengalis and burmese made it to karachi?

Asif you dont seem to know much about pakistani immigrants in uk really , i have worked in the housing sector there so i know a thing or two.

i guess Bengalis came or were here after 71 tragedy and Not sure about burmese , people dont differenciate as burmese cal themselves bengalis and mostly live with them
 
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