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Thus karachi stands

pak-marine

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Thus stands Karachi Nadeem F. Paracha
Sunday, 18 Jul, 2010

An overriding consensus against the Taliban in Karachi was reached long before such a consensus was struck by Pakistan as a whole. —For long Karachi has been known as one of the country’s most liberal cities. But its liberalism is of a Nietzschean sort: what doesn’t kill Karachi makes it stronger.

It would be obvious to proclaim that no place is safe from the brutality of terrorism in Pakistan. There are no safe havens here where the barbarians can’t and won’t strike. However, over the last couple of years, what was once the most troubled city has remained nervously quiet (if not entirely peaceful).

As suicide bombers go off with audacious frequency right across Khyber Pakhtun-khwa, Punjab and Islamabad, comparatively speaking Karachi has remained largely peaceful, save politically motivated targeted killings. Karachi has always been known as the only truly cosmopolitan city in the country with strong liberal and pluralistic overtones. But ironically, till 1984, it was also the only major city where fundamentalist political/ religious groups such as the JI and the JUP enjoyed their finest electoral hours.

The JI’s and JUP’s influence in Karachi was solely political — a case of reactive politics on the part of Karachi’s majority community which, unlike Sindhis, Baloch, Pakhtuns and Punjabis, was not inherently linked to the hinterland, and thus, they identified with Pakistan by supporting the country’s non-ethnic ‘Islamic’ credentials
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The politicised Islam displayed in the rhetoric of the JI and the JUP appealed to the mohajirs’ landless refugee status, whereas as a social, cultural and economic entity, they were largely liberal in outlook. That’s why, though the JI and the JUP continued to enjoy widespread political support in Karachi, this did not affect Karachi’s status of being Pakistan’s most modern, diverse and liberal centre of activity.

Till the late 1970s, Karachi was the entertainment capital of the country, having nightclubs, bars, cinemas, amusement parks, social clubs and the beaches. The city has also remained the country’s economic hub and bastion of higher education. On the other hand, Karachi also has the biggest slums. The widespread slums also meant that Karachi had the most pronounced crime rate in the country.

It is interesting to note that political/ religious parties had been more popular among the city’s middle and lower-middle-class areas (before the emergence of the MQM in 1985); whereas the voting that takes place in the city’s (Pakhtun and Baloch/ Sindhi dominated) working-class areas favours left-leaning parties, mainly the PPP and the ANP.

The emergence of the MQM as a distinct, mohajir party happened at a time when Karachi had started to teem with a number of administrative, economic and social problems, mainly due to overpopulation and the arrival of thousands of Afghan refugees who started pouring into Pakistan at the start of the ‘anti-Soviet jihad’ in Afghanistan in 1979. Many of the Afghan refugees also brought with them huge amounts of weapons and drugs.


Unchecked entry of Afghans, introduction of sophisticated weapons to settle scores and commit crime (kalashnikov culture), along with rising drug mafias and utter lack of road sense and concern by transport companies run by the richer Afghans in the city, all upset the social and political landscape of the city. It put a tremendous burden on the once thriving economy of the metropolis.

The consequential emergence and popularity of the MQM meant the fading away of the political support for conventional political/ religious parties like the JI and the JUP. This also meant the beginning of another process, in which relative social liberalism of mohajirs began to impact the community’s otherwise conservative politics. Throughout the 1980s Karachi struggled with intense ethnic and sectarian strife, an unprecedented crime rate, a serious heroin problem, and a collapsing economy — a trend that failed to reverse itself even across the ‘decade of democracy’ in the 1990s.

The city had become a cultural and economic graveyard, and paled in comparison to what it had been before 1980. But in contrast to this, the last 10 years have seen Karachi unexpectedly regenerate itself — during which the MQM also began to peel off its overwhelmingly ethnic and exclusive character. The pace of the social, economic, and cultural regeneration picked up after 2004, and the city started to regain confidence and maturity.

Though still one of the most complex and diverse cosmopolitan entities, Karachi’s relatively peaceful decorum in the face of the havoc being perpetrated by extremists elsewhere is due to some admiring compromises that the people and politicians of this city have struck in the last few years. A delicate but promising compromise was struck between the secular political expressions of Karachi’s mohajir, Punjabi, Pakhtun, Baloch and Sindhi populations, namely the MQM, the ANP, and the PPP.

The city’s diverse population understood the importance of social and political plurality and tolerance as a means to experiencing a strife-free and economically benefiting survival. The withering away of the political support that religious parties such as the JI and the JUP once enjoyed has also helped. For example, the JI’s recent politics that encourages a myopic and isolationist worldview can be detrimental to the people of a cosmopolitan city like Karachi.

An overriding consensus against the Taliban in Karachi was reached long before such a consensus was struck by Pakistan as a whole.

:pakistan::pakistan:
 
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A delicate but promising compromise was struck between the secular political expressions of Karachi’s mohajir, Punjabi, Pakhtun, Baloch and Sindhi populations, namely the MQM, the ANP, and the PPP.

None of the parties mention Punjabis, its just PPP which as a little support.

And there is no mention of the target killings that happen between MQM and PPP, which are usually ended within a week during recent years after leaders from both the parties meet in London or Dubai.

Also this time, unforunately heads of both parties din't meet in recent 2,3 months and we are having stability in continuity of target killings, of which reports claim to have taken down roughly 640 lifes in six months from Jan 2010, averaging 100 and a few life's per month.

My 2 cents on some flaws of this some kind of a report..
 
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Karachi should not be held hostage to MQM, PPP, PML or JUI politics.
It's time we get a good IG for Police who can root out these thugs.

This kinda reminds me of the Drama serial Dhuwan, *Sigh* i only wish we had such a motivated force.
 
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None of the parties mention Punjabis, its just PPP which as a little support.

And there is no mention of the target killings that happen between MQM and PPP, which are usually ended within a week during recent years after leaders from both the parties meet in London or Dubai.

Also this time, unforunately heads of both parties din't meet in recent 2,3 months and we are having stability in continuity of target killings, of which reports claim to have taken down roughly 640 lifes in six months from Jan 2010, averaging 100 and a few life's per month.

My 2 cents on some flaws of this some kind of a report..

here author is givin credit to karachi and esp MQM as the recent wave of terrorists (al Qaida and TTP) attacks al over in Pakistan hitting govt instalations , attacks on armed forces etc etc ... hasnt happened yet ! MQM was although the first one to blow this TTP whistle when most of the political parties were and some still are in complete denial
 
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Karachi should not be held hostage to MQM, PPP, PML or JUI politics.
It's time we get a good IG for Police who can root out these thugs.

This kinda reminds me of the Drama serial Dhuwan, *Sigh* i only wish we had such a motivated force.

law enforcement cant do junk , paramiltary forces are a waste .. Its MQM who is holding the fort in karachi and has openly challenged the TTP and Al Qaida dogs , some ones got to be in control or we let the terrorists take over this city as well..
 
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law enforcement cant do junk , paramiltary forces are a waste .. Its MQM who is holding the fort in karachi and has openly challenged the TTP and Al Qaida dogs , some ones got to be in control or we let the terrorists take over this city as well..



What utter nonsense.

How can MQM keep suicide bombers out of 16 million people?
Just impossible.

All they are concerned about is who is Muhajir and who is Pathan and who is Punjabi.

MQM is a political party and should act like one. No one is above the law.
 
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You have to admit that Karachi is the least fundamentalist city in Pakistan . Fundamentalists never took hold of Karachi and they are not tolerated there either.
 
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law enforcement cant do junk , paramiltary forces are a waste .. Its MQM who is holding the fort in karachi and has openly challenged the TTP and Al Qaida dogs , some ones got to be in control or we let the terrorists take over this city as well..

well actually, all my sympathies to only people of karachi, be it the pukhtuns, punjabis or urdu speakers, we want to live in harmony regardless of the be it MQM ANP or PPP, these thugs really make a beautiful city of diverse people look bad. if these thugs go away, karachi will be even more peaceful!!

these parties only inflame the city with its ethnic divide, they play their cards for their own purpose..

while out cry for taliban was only because for ANP and was directed at the pathan community, so ANP was labelled as taliban to hide their ethnic wars.

while benazir was dead, these MQM were controling the city, the whole city burned under fire but these MQM thugs who proclaim to have such a power could save city from the chaos..
 
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Anybody that read history of violence in Karachi may remember April 15, 1986 when Karachi changed forever. The accident of Bushra Zaidi was the tipping out that sowed the seed of MQM and started ethnic violence that still simmers to this day.

Karachi is mostly settled by Muhajirs. The Police was mostly Punjabi, the transportation sytems was dominated by Pashtuns, people voted for Muslim parties including Jamaat Islami and JUP. Starting in 1986 people felt powerless as none of their political representatives tried to address their concerns. The police in Karachi never tried to control gun and drug trade in Karachi. There were daily traffic accidents in Karachi where bus drivers did not have driving licenses and were controlled Pashtun transport mafia. The police was getting bribes from transport mafia and never arrested any drivers that caused death of pedestrians. People of Karachi lost faith and took matters into their own hands. Thus started the movement to have their own representatives federal, provincial and municipal governments. “It was a reaction from society who thought, enough is enough”.

On April 15, 1986 Bushra Zaidi a young girl from Sir Syed Girls College, Nazimabad walked off to take a public bus back to her house unknowing that she will never reach her home alive. Bushra was crushed by a Pashtun Bus driver to death. This happened during a period of time when many people complained about the dangerous driving habits of bus drivers all of them Pashtuns who had no driving licenses and according to records killed, 6-8 because of their criminal negligence everyday. The people of Karachi branded the buses as, “Yellow Devils”

The bus was set on fire publicly by the fellow students and Pashtun driver fled the scene. Bushra Zaidi’s death had a huge impact on Karachi in more ways than one. It showed, for instance that the people of this city were unwilling to accept loss of life caused by rash and negligent driving.

That society was willing to stand up for students causes. And people could be angry instantly. There is more that can be read into that solitary incident, but suffice it to say that street protest took violent form. The Karachi Police often seen as an alien Punjabi force with minimal representation of locals the Mohajirs did not help either and infact played the role of Devils Advocate. The attitude of police post-Bushra Zaidi Death was dodgy and instead of getting hold of the real culprits ; a police party stromed Sir Syed College and was accused of molesting young female students after it entered Sir Syed College fuelled the further angered of Mohajir and fellow students. Rioting started in different parts of Karachi against Bushra Zaidi’s murder and army was deployed in Karachi to stop the rioters but what happened the next day on 16th of April, 1986 sparked tensions and wide spread rioting.A bus carrying Mohajir students to Bushra Zaidi’s funeral was attacked by a band of armed Pathans in Banaras Chowk while some of them tried to sexually molest the girls; which triggered a Karachi –wide movement to stop the bandit Pashtuns criminal activities in Karachi.

The Pashtuns also attacked the poor Bihari refugees who had only settled in Orangi Town from former East Pakistan a decade ago and took there houses which was started Karachi’s first, ethinic riots which we came to know as, “Bihari-Pashtun Rioting”.The Biharis fought back thanks to there experiences in countering Mukti Bahani in former East Pakistan with deadly force which resulted in wide spread killing and got there homes freed from land mafia who thought Biharis will be of no match to them - so much for Martial Races.

Obviously it was all in self-defense and the people of Karachi Won, Again!!!!Late Munawar Ali Sahib was the investigation officer of Bushra Zaidi case and a man who knew a lot of stories. According to him, the Pashtuns drivers and conductors publicly harassed young women and considered Mohajirs who were dark skin as people who could not fight and that attitude led to the rioting. “It was a reaction from society who thought, enough is enough”.

All in All, it was an unfortunate incident which led to the death of hundreds of people.
 
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What utter nonsense.

How can MQM keep suicide bombers out of 16 million people?
Just impossible.

Dont you read papers !? so far they have managed to keep em at bay ..

All they are concerned about is who is Muhajir and who is Pathan and who is Punjabi.
MQM is a political party and should act like one. No one is above the law.

Please read the article once more it was a ethinic party not any more and also FYI please do some more research rather than watching those U tube videos check what most of the critics have to say
 
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