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Imran, Jinnah and Pakistan’s problem.

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Imran, Jinnah and Pakistan’s problem
By Aakar Patel
Published: January 14, 2012
321518-AakarPatelNew-1326557467-165-640x480.jpg

The writer is a director with Hill Road Media and a former editor of the Mumbai-based English newspaper Mid Day and the Gujarati paper Divya Bhaskar aakar.patel@tribune.com.pk
In his short but magnificent speech of August 11, 1947, the Quaid-i-Azam begins by instructing his government to settle the chaos of Partition. He ends by revealing his beautiful, humane side, telling us he sees people without noticing their religion.

In the middle, he lists Pakistan’s problems. According to him, these are three: corruption, black marketing and nepotism (Jinnah uses the quaint term ‘jobbery’). Was he correct in assuming these were Pakistan’s problems? This question is important because Imran Khan also believes that Pakistan’s problems are the same. Corruption is his primary theme and he ended his Karachi jalsa by promising his supporters never to succumb to chamchagiri. If he were asked to name a third problem, he would likely say loss of Pakistan’s sovereignty. As a Pathan, he feels loss of honour in fighting America’s war and in asking for aid.

To return to Jinnah’s list, were these Pakistan’s real problems? No. Pakistan’s breaking up, 25 years after being formed, was not because of corruption. The decades of military rule and the rise of the jihadis are not because of nepotism. Pakistan’s economic condition is not the doing of black marketeers.

What are the problems then? To the outsider, it appears there is only one. The orientation of the Pakistani state is wrong. And it isn’t aligned correctly because of its ideology, whose prenatal trait is more pronounced each passing decade. This flaw produced the state’s resolve to defy India at all costs and the subsequent dominance of the army, which has led to the emasculation of its political parties and made politics irrelevant. The successful penetration of this ideology has resulted in the population’s rejection of its own ancient culture. Indians are as corrupt as Pakistanis, as nepotistic and as poor. Most Indians don’t like their politicians. However, they don’t have a crisis of the state and no need for a saviour like Imran. Why? Simple. India’s secular constitution is accepted by all its parties, right, centre and left. Even the BJP insists on secularism.

India has one of the world’s most bigoted societies, true. But it has outstanding laws and a constitution as good as if not better than any in Europe. The state is aligned correctly, the orientation is right. In such conditions, progress is possible and despair is held at bay.

The equality of human beings is not something we should waste time debating in 2012. It can be argued that some articles in Pakistan’s constitution are in violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Specifically, the second amendment (which apostatises Ahmadis), Article 41-2 (which excludes non-Muslims from being a president) and Article 91-3 (excludes non-Muslims from being eligible to be elected prime minister). Article 227 permanently keeps Pakistan unstable because its power to strike down anything interpreted as un-Islamic is open-ended.

As an example, we have before us the Supreme Court’s opinion this week that Prime Minister Gilani may not be a good enough Muslim to hold office. Absolute purity of their faith is something that seems to be the exclusive concern of Pakistanis.

Imran defines a welfare state as one that gives free medical treatment, free education, free justice and unemployment benefits, as in Europe. He doesn’t seem to understand that Europe’s progress is the result of its secularism. The individual’s religion is irrelevant. This equality is the basis of their welfare state. Change cannot come to Pakistan without reorienting its state, its army and its culture.

This is Pakistan’s only real problem. It’s settling down can come only from a change in ideology, not a change of governments. Building an ‘Islami falahi riyasat’, even by well-meaning saviours, is likely to cause more confusion.

In that sense, Zardari is a better leader than Imran because he understands the problem. He wants to normalise the state, soften its ideology.

Unfortunately, Pakistan’s army and media vetoed his no-first use and open trade policies with India. Now its courts are working on getting him out.

It’s possible that Imran Khan will take power in Pakistan. At the Mazar-i-Quaid, he promised to finish Jinnah’s work.

So long as he tilts at the old windmills of corruption and nepotism, not understanding that the problem really lies elsewhere, his messianic fervour will come to nothing.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 15th, 2012.
 
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Imran, Jinnah and Pakistan’s problem

In that sense, Zardari is a better leader than Imran because he understands the problem. He wants to normalise the state, soften its ideology.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 15th, 2012.

stupid article i doubt zardari understands the problems faced by Pakistan or even he is willing to solve them , how did that writer claim that zardar is better leader than imran , zardari is not considered even a 'leader' his party won elections because of sympathy votes , zardari don't even know how to talk in public . (n)
 
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how many times guys need to tell

The Express Tribune is the first internationally affiliated newspaper in Pakistan. Partnered with The International Herald Tribune – the global edition of The New York Times
 
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indians and their farts, Yeah right even "Top Gear" guys know it now :lol:
Yeah, so did Richard Clark and also the entire BBC team about Pakistan. While Clarkson showed India's *****, Clark showed the Pakistani psyche of duplicity.
 
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Yeah, so did Richard Clark and also the entire BBC team about Pakistan. While Clarkson showed India's *****, Clark showed the Pakistani psyche of duplicity.

India's ***** is reality, which can be seen from the common eye; Pakistan's duplicity is their perception based on baseless speculation. Big difference.
 
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Better than his last article, but still a weak & poorly argued piece. Amateurish. The author does a good job showing all the dots, but he doesn't know how to connect them properly. His article is all over the place, & is like a lot of opinion pieces on Express Tribune.
 
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Imran Jinnah and Zardari all have one thing in common. THEY DO NOT SERVE ISLAM! Their agenda is only secular where Islam is degraded to the same level as other religion which means Islam has no value which makes two nation theory very hypocritical.
 
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Imran Jinnah and Zardari all have one thing in common. THEY DO NOT SERVE ISLAM! Their agenda is only secular where Islam is degraded to the same level as other religion which means Islam has no value which makes two nation theory very hypocritical.

then kindly tell us who serves Islam , Mullah Umar or Osama Bin Ladin or Baitullah Mehsood ?

If you don't consider Jinnah a true Pakistani leader remove pakistani flag from your profile you have no right to be called Pakistani if you have objections on the father of the nation.
 
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more mental masturbation by our Indian friends.

I will just say that with all the flaws of Pakistan, I would still take it over India any day of the week simply because I won't go to jail for 7 years for eating beef. :pakistan:
 
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India's ***** is reality, which can be seen from the common eye; Pakistan's duplicity is their perception based on baseless speculation. Big difference.
The difference is of character and appearance. Character forms the guts of your persona, much harder to change. Appearance form the skin of your persona, much easier to change. Thus Pakistani character will take a longer time to change, while India will get there in relatively lesser time. THAT is the difference.
 
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I always find it hilarious that the 'secular' Indians are obsessed with seeing religion everywhere. Pakistan's problems are due to the feudal domination; everything else is a consequence of the feudal need to keep the population under control.
 
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But it was his candid and implicit acknowledgement of Pakistan's mistakes on the Kashmir front that pricked the ears of regional specialists, although it was marked by some caveats. Pakistan, he conceded, had encouraged militants, which (he said) it called ''assets,'' following the ''rigged'' state elections in 1989, in hopes of fomenting an uprising. The policy failed and Pakistan had to suffer the blowback. ''Whatever the reason, we should move on,'' he said. ''The time has come to develop a completely new relationship with India. Pakistan should resolve all issues with India through political dialogue.''

Imran Khan calls for new ties with India, says he's not anti-west either - The Times of India

Imran for President !
 
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then kindly tell us who serves Islam , Mullah Umar or Osama Bin Ladin or Baitullah Mehsood ?
You have turly proved my point. Not Much difference between people like you and Indians, both will wont miss an apportunity to bash at Islam and associate every this and that topic on Islam with terrorism.
If you don't consider Jinnah a true Pakistani leader remove pakistani flag from your profile you have no right to be called Pakistani if you have objections on the father of the nation.
If you dont consider the book of allah above everything else then you should not call yourself Muslim and change your religion to that of Jinnah. The book of allah teaches us to hold every leader accountable of their actions and not to blindly follow and worship them. So what ever jinnah is for is, is not for me.
 
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The difference is of character and appearance. Character forms the guts of your persona, much harder to change. Appearance form the skin of your persona, much easier to change. Thus Pakistani character will take a longer time to change, while India will get there in relatively lesser time. THAT is the difference.

Yes, because "India's character is truly exemplary", correct?
 
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