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Mard-e-momin, Mard-e-Haq and the Zia ul Haq.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/361248/why-ziaul-haq-should-not-be-forgotten/

Reportedly, when the relationship between China and the USSR was at its most tense and just before the Sino-Soviet split, the top leaders of both countries, Zhou Enlai and Nikita Khrushchev, met to see if the situation was still salvageable. After reaching a stalemate, the Russian premier Khrushchev said to his Chinese counterpart that he now understood what the problem was: I am the son of coal miners, he said. You are the descendant of big feudal mandarins. We have nothing in common. Perhaps we do, replied the great Zhou Enlai, we are both traitors to our class. I cannot hear or read about this story without thinking about how that could so easily be the conversation between Ziaul Haq and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Zia were both traitors to their respective classes. The son of Sir Shahnawaz Bhutto and the scion of one of the largest landowners of the country is now revered mostly by the most downtrodden of the masses. Whereas Ziaul Haq, the common man who climbed to the top, remains so alien and so painful to remember that ironically only a very small particular segment of the urban middle class can reluctantly associate with him.

I feel compelled to shed any pretense of theoretical, objective analysis and at the outset put forth my belief that Bhutto was the greatest and ablest leader that this country has witnessed. My purpose here is not to write an obituary for Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, I feel myself thoroughly ill-equipped for that task. The death anniversary of Bhutto was commemorated a few days ago, and a considerable bit has been said about his life, works and death, although not enough attention has been given to the implications of his death on the trajectory of our state. It would be an understatement and probably a misstatement to say that we have not quite recovered from Bhuttos murder, since recovery would imply that the infliction of damage has ceased.

There is a lot of easy, room-temperature analysis at offer these days about the decline of our state. An example of juvenile analysis is that why do people keep on electing the same corrupt politicians over and over and, perhaps, we deserve these leaders etc., and this is laced with reminiscence of the better times gone by. This often pretends as if it was some process of natural erosion or atrophy which has gradually led us to this point. Pakistani society and politics did not fade away or go giggling into the sea. They were destroyed very deliberately by the use of repression by the theocratic, tyrannical and maniacal dictatorship of Ziaul Haq. One need not be an admirer of Bhutto to see how the ghastly murder of Bhutto destroyed our moral fabric and integrity.

Coming back to the class treason bit, the 1970 election allowed the highest number of common people to be elected to the assemblies, with more feudal lords and industrial barons swept aside, than in any other election in our history. Bhutto did lose the plot slightly in 1977. However, compare this with the shamefully poorly-conducted farce of the non-party election in 1985, which returned to the assemblies the worst bit of our politics and more. Student politics was destroyed, it became a sin to be woman and the list goes on. Ziaul Haq was indeed pathological with visions about him guiding him, it was a shame that medical research could not benefit from him. Yet he did not and could not have done it alone. While Bhutto was being killed and people publicly flogged and executed, there was no meaningful opposition from the common man and that was the real damage. Weakness of this sort is regressive, as we have seen many times after that.

Due emphasis is being placed on the corruption of our leaders these days. Amongst other politicians, the Zia era produced some very brilliant army children, including his sons, who were to become very wealthy in a matter of few years. It is a shame that Pakistan has not benefitted more from the business acumen of Ijazul Haq and Humayun Akhtar Khan etc. It is indeed surprising that nobody has asked them to render accounts of how they moved from army salary allowances to the tycoons that they are today.

I could go on about Ziaul Haq, but it would be unnecessary. His political progeny have disowned him; association with Zia is now a stigma. His death anniversary passes almost unnoticed every year. Even his son does not seem entirely keen or comfortable relying on the works and wisdom of his father. The opening batsmen of his team would not like to be caught praying at his tomb. Yet, it is very important that we never forget Ziaul Haq and what he did and stood for. Actually, merely opposing what he represented is a fairly decent model of good political conscience and responsibility. The reluctance to bring up Zia cannot be solely attributed to the tedium of recollection of pain inflicted on the Pakistani people in general but also because Zia remains the most horrifying and shameful skeleton in many important closets. To use a term, unironically, a thorough post-mortem of Ziaul Haq and his legacy is essential, if for nothing else, then for closure. It is also necessary, perhaps, because we are still not completely immune to the lure of that demagoguery.

Ziaul Haq should remind us of the evil, mediocre and I stake everything and say; common men are capable of. In the comparison between Bhutto and Zia to mention the verdicts of history etc., will be a clich. Admittedly, some Bhutto supporters go a tad too far in their devotion, yet he certainly was a man worth admiring. Even his political opponents feel compelled to praise him before attacking other members of his party; I suspect this is not merely genteel courtesy dictating that one not speak ill of the dead, but the feeling of guilt, of blood on their hands and their complicity in his murder.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 8th, 2012.
 
There's very little to be cheerful about in the alternatives, and very little certainty, but that is one thing I am certain about, every dictator was a mistake, and each regressed Pakistan back many decades and crippled any ability to progress.

Please be clear that it is the same entity that creates these dictators like General Zia that also ensures that any alternatives remain non-viable.
 
You couldn't be more wrong..... a few pigs who visited multiple of times:

muammar-on-pilgrimage-to-haaj-and-touching-umrah.jpg


hqdefault.jpg


And hundreds more from where those came from...... you people are so predictable, always using the "emotional" angle, whenever you get cornered.............. what can I say, nothing I say will work on you people........ you guys are the definition of dheetpann.

@Desert Fox, why don't you affix your photo to the collage above. I bet you've also done the pilgrimage! :D

@jamahir

Time for u to attack Hyperion with Jamahiriyan socialist writeups.

:D
 
@jamahir

Time for u to attack Hyperion with Jamahiriyan socialist writeups.

:D

i generally support @Hyperion but here he is quite wrong.

but i am presently a jogi baba, a sufi who has temporarily renounced politicking, so i cannot do lengthy write-ups. :D

but i can certainly guide our friend to my relatively recent thread "the comfortable muslims of yesteryears and the pious muslims of now"[1] in the "world affairs" section. :agree:

Zia had several enemies.. India,USSR,Israel,USA and even his own cabinet and allies.

at least not the indian establishment[2] : :)
"New Delhi regards Pakistan as a strategic buffer against the USSR and would oppose Moscow's effort to dominate Pakistan. New Delhi and Moscow would find themselves supporting rival factions within Pakistan," said the report, according to which Moscow had plans to change the regime in Pakistan and extend its influence beyond Afghanistan.
"If (Gen) Zia (Ul Haq) regime were to fall, the Indians might try to prevent Soviet attempt to dominate Pakistan by supporting rival Pakistani political factions, Soviet military moves against an already neutralised Pakistan could even result in military confrontation with India," it added.
Six months later when Gandhi was planning to meet General Zia on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting in New York, the CIA analyzed that the then Indian Prime Minister, despite his strong public views on Pakistan's nuclear weapons program, was unlikely to push him hard on it. "Gandhi is unlikely to push Zia hard about the Pakistani nuclear program, although he probably will at least mention his continuing concern," noted the top secret CIA document dated October 21, 1985.


---

[1] https://defence.pk/threads/the-comf...steryears-and-the-pious-muslims-of-now.417825

[2] https://defence.pk/threads/rajiv-gandhi-saw-pakistan-as-buffer-against-ussr.395315/
 
His rule was a tragedy, and believe me, we will suffer more of it, even in the coming decades. One of the big problems that people tend to ignore is the drug culture and crime Zia created/imported, even if we beat terrorism and extremism (another by-product of Zia), and even if the short term economic and structural issues are overcome, drug use will perhaps one day become one of the biggest problems for us, it will plague our society even as it seems to progress.
He has left a big problem behind. Till now we have been unable to get rid of his blasphemy law which makes victims out of every liberal, Christian or Hindu. This law is evil and is against the spirit of Islam where it is not man who can judge such crimes. It is up to Allah alone to judge blasphemy.

He also left the hudood laws where a girl had to have 4 witnesses to rape. Of course it was not neccessary that a girl was raped in the presence of 4 people who were not the attackers. Zia has given Pakistan the bullet of fanaticism, intolerance and hatred. We should all acknowledge the problems he created and work to roll back the changes he brought. Religion often becomes a tool in the hands of leaders and mullahs to exploit. Instead the focus is never on Ibn Rushd's secularism or Pir Roshan's womens education initiative. We have destroyed ourselves and it started very early. Before Zia though I must say. Objectives resolution itself should never have been passed. Ayub Khan declared Pakistan an Islamiuc republic, ZAB began purge of Ahmedis and Zia Ul Haq gave the final bullet in the heart of Pakistani secular ideology. Except Jinnah none of our leaders understood the benefits of the secular system
 
Can someone tell me why he turned against Ahmadis even though we were at the forefront of creating this country? We fought alongside Pak Army in Kashmir and even raised a battalion seperately? I am sure he served alongside Ahmadi soldiers. Yet he considered us some western agents trying to break Pakistan. Like seriously, you idiot?
 
And why was that ?

Why did the quaid have more than one funerals ?
Off topic,
he belongs to a minority sect which janaza prayers are bit different and masses want to attend, so the authorities decide a state funeral and a separate funeral according to her faith.
 
Off topic,
he belongs to a minority sect which janaza prayers are bit different and masses want to attend, so the authorities decide a state funeral and a separate funeral according to her faith.

Good,

so that implies sectarianism existed long before 1979 ? i.e, the state couldn't tolerate the thought that the Quaid was from the minority sect ?

You seem like an ardent student of history; tell us some thing about sectarianism in the sub continent; I remember the Nizams of Hyderababd had a strong following.
 

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