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While India has turned cruel and exclusionary, it is time to show world how different Pakistan is.

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While India has turned cruel and exclusionary, it is time to show the world just how different Pakistan is
Winning with empathy
Rafia Zakaria

Updated April 24, 2019
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The writer is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political philosophy.

IT has been called the world’s largest election. Next door in India, a seven-phase vote to elect the Lok Sabha got under way on April 19. It will go on for many more weeks, not culminating until May 19, when the long process of counting the votes cast will begin.

As has been visible in the days leading up to the election, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have deployed every flavour of divisive rhetoric to whet the appetite of their Hindu nationalist base. Such has been the vile desperation that even a near war with Pakistan was brought into the mix, the attendant claims of the killing of militants and the downing of Pakistani F-16 planes all to be admitted as fabrications, as perceived.

While crossing over into Pakistani territory and attempting to ‘bomb’ an area was a tactic that was seen in the weeks preceding the election, the crackdown on Muslims living in India itself has been a fixture of the Modi administration. Leaders in Modi’s party have made it a point to demonise Muslims at every opportunity they get.

Entire movements in India have been constructed on the policy of Muslim exclusion.

Those who plan and execute attacks against non-Muslims have not simply been tolerated but, on the contrary, anointed. Sadhvi Pragya, a known Hindutva extremist, has been given a party ticket for these elections. Entire movements have, in fact, been constructed on the policy of Muslim exclusion. According to a recent article in Scroll India, studies have shown that even upper-middle-class Muslims are not safe. A high percentage of their children report being harassed in school, with questions like ‘Do you support Al Qaeda?’ and ‘Are your parents Taliban?’

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER AD
Read: Modi defends extremist woman candidate

The practice of denying rental housing to Muslims, which came to light years ago, used to be an embarrassment for most Indians. Not anymore. Such denials, along with exclusion from public spaces in schools and colleges and universities, have created an extremely restrictive environment in which the powerful appear to be proud of excluding Muslims and would likely welcome thoroughly strong-arm tactics that would restrict Muslims to certain living spaces in certain areas of Indian cities and towns. The narrowing of the Indian mind, the evisceration of Indian democracy, it seems, is here to stay, regardless of what the outcome of the ongoing elections may be.

The BJP is still worried about the outcome of the elections, however. One new proposal that again delivers hatred and exclusion in yet another way is a system that would expedite citizenship proceedings of persecuted minorities living in other countries but it pointedly and particularly leaves out Muslims.

Hindus, Buddhists, Jains and other minorities who have fled their homelands owing to persecution and violence, and have taken refuge in India, will all be eligible for this sort of fast-track citizenship; everyone, that is, except the Muslims.

In his article on the issue, scholar Sadanand Dhume honed in on the law as being particularly indicative of the unquenchable hatred of Muslims that festers in the country. The Muslim community in India, it seems, is looked upon by extremist minds with such hate that it can never be identified as persecuted — on the contrary, the hard-liners living in the Modi era, look upon the Muslims as persecutors. The image of India as a Hindu nation in the eyes of Modi and his supporters cannot include Muslims, and discrimination and persecution may well be geared to eventually driving out India’s Muslims.

Pakistan has not been able to do much to stop the march of hatred right across the border. The recent episode that left India and Pakistan teetering on the brink of war, averted by happenstance, fortunately, revealed just how far the Islamophobia has progressed. Even the Indian media, once insurance against fascist takeovers, has kowtowed to the Modi government, with recent reports showing dissenting journalists confronted with reprisals and revenge if they do not toe the BJP party line.

With this sort of toxic atmosphere hanging over the subcontinent, Pakistan has an opportunity to show leadership on the issue of persecuted Muslims. Not only should the government finally resolve the issue of stateless Muslims who still languish in camps in Bangladesh, it should consider policies that can offer Pakistani citizenship to persecuted Muslims in the region. This would likely include Rohingya Muslims and others who have been fleeing violence.

It could also possibly include Sri Lankan Muslims who are at risk of violence at the hands of Sinhalese Buddhists following Sunday’s Easter attacks (and the fact that they are being blamed on hard-line Islamist groups, despite the absence of concrete evidence).

Pakistan has taken in thousands of Afghan refugees before, but now it can show its respect and empathy for the suffering by taking in these other Muslims.

Arms races between India and Pakistan are common, both countries having always been eager to stockpile weapons and aircraft and all sorts of military technology. It may be time for a new competition. If India has turned cruel and exclusionary, made hatred a staple and coercion its practice, Pakistan can rise above the fray and show the world and especially the region its respect and commitment to providing assistance and refuge to the world’s persecuted.

Just as Pakistan followed the dictates of the Geneva Conventions and releasedcaptured Indian pilot Abhinandan, so too should it open its arms and its borders to those who have suffered injustice and now exclusion at the hands of states that are fuelled by hatred and who have elevated the exclusion of Muslims as a primary tenet of their governing platform. In a world pivoted on hatred, Pakistan can be different; Pakistan is different and it is time to show the world just how different.

The writer is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political philosophy.
rafia.zakaria@gmail.com

Published in Dawn, April 24th, 2019
 
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I don't think Pak Govt will open it's arms for Muslims from India...
 
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I really think if Pakistan can play its cards right in the next few years you could see a reversal of the post 1980 trend where India started to outperform Pakistan on economic and some social indicators.

Peace on the Afghan front will be beneficial.

Whilst no one should make Bangladesh style boast about becoming a trillion dollar economy all it needs is one or two new export sectors to gain a foothold along with remainder of CPEC and it can rapidly start to industrialise and invest in health, education etc
 
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We are full to the brim... Need to open up some more lands in India for the Muslims of India.

Indian Muslims need to make their own space... We know how they backstabbed us.

How did Indian Muslim backstab Pak?
 
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I really think if Pakistan can play its cards right in the next few years you could see a reversal of the post 1980 trend where India started to outperform Pakistan on economic and some social indicators.

Peace on the Afghan front will be beneficial.

Whilst no one should make Bangladesh style boast about becoming a trillion dollar economy all it needs is one or two new export sectors to gain a foothold along with remainder of CPEC and it can rapidly start to industrialise and invest in health, education etc


Actually In 1980s India Was Still Pretty Much Behind Pakistan It Started To Move Ahead After 1990s
 
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While India has turned cruel and exclusionary, it is time to show the world just how different Pakistan is
Winning with empathy
Rafia Zakaria

Updated April 24, 2019
Facebook Count
Twitter Share
0
5cbf92f6ab2ec.jpg




The writer is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political philosophy.

IT has been called the world’s largest election. Next door in India, a seven-phase vote to elect the Lok Sabha got under way on April 19. It will go on for many more weeks, not culminating until May 19, when the long process of counting the votes cast will begin.

As has been visible in the days leading up to the election, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have deployed every flavour of divisive rhetoric to whet the appetite of their Hindu nationalist base. Such has been the vile desperation that even a near war with Pakistan was brought into the mix, the attendant claims of the killing of militants and the downing of Pakistani F-16 planes all to be admitted as fabrications, as perceived.

While crossing over into Pakistani territory and attempting to ‘bomb’ an area was a tactic that was seen in the weeks preceding the election, the crackdown on Muslims living in India itself has been a fixture of the Modi administration. Leaders in Modi’s party have made it a point to demonise Muslims at every opportunity they get.

Entire movements in India have been constructed on the policy of Muslim exclusion.

Those who plan and execute attacks against non-Muslims have not simply been tolerated but, on the contrary, anointed. Sadhvi Pragya, a known Hindutva extremist, has been given a party ticket for these elections. Entire movements have, in fact, been constructed on the policy of Muslim exclusion. According to a recent article in Scroll India, studies have shown that even upper-middle-class Muslims are not safe. A high percentage of their children report being harassed in school, with questions like ‘Do you support Al Qaeda?’ and ‘Are your parents Taliban?’

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER AD
Read: Modi defends extremist woman candidate

The practice of denying rental housing to Muslims, which came to light years ago, used to be an embarrassment for most Indians. Not anymore. Such denials, along with exclusion from public spaces in schools and colleges and universities, have created an extremely restrictive environment in which the powerful appear to be proud of excluding Muslims and would likely welcome thoroughly strong-arm tactics that would restrict Muslims to certain living spaces in certain areas of Indian cities and towns. The narrowing of the Indian mind, the evisceration of Indian democracy, it seems, is here to stay, regardless of what the outcome of the ongoing elections may be.

The BJP is still worried about the outcome of the elections, however. One new proposal that again delivers hatred and exclusion in yet another way is a system that would expedite citizenship proceedings of persecuted minorities living in other countries but it pointedly and particularly leaves out Muslims.

Hindus, Buddhists, Jains and other minorities who have fled their homelands owing to persecution and violence, and have taken refuge in India, will all be eligible for this sort of fast-track citizenship; everyone, that is, except the Muslims.

In his article on the issue, scholar Sadanand Dhume honed in on the law as being particularly indicative of the unquenchable hatred of Muslims that festers in the country. The Muslim community in India, it seems, is looked upon by extremist minds with such hate that it can never be identified as persecuted — on the contrary, the hard-liners living in the Modi era, look upon the Muslims as persecutors. The image of India as a Hindu nation in the eyes of Modi and his supporters cannot include Muslims, and discrimination and persecution may well be geared to eventually driving out India’s Muslims.

Pakistan has not been able to do much to stop the march of hatred right across the border. The recent episode that left India and Pakistan teetering on the brink of war, averted by happenstance, fortunately, revealed just how far the Islamophobia has progressed. Even the Indian media, once insurance against fascist takeovers, has kowtowed to the Modi government, with recent reports showing dissenting journalists confronted with reprisals and revenge if they do not toe the BJP party line.

With this sort of toxic atmosphere hanging over the subcontinent, Pakistan has an opportunity to show leadership on the issue of persecuted Muslims. Not only should the government finally resolve the issue of stateless Muslims who still languish in camps in Bangladesh, it should consider policies that can offer Pakistani citizenship to persecuted Muslims in the region. This would likely include Rohingya Muslims and others who have been fleeing violence.

It could also possibly include Sri Lankan Muslims who are at risk of violence at the hands of Sinhalese Buddhists following Sunday’s Easter attacks (and the fact that they are being blamed on hard-line Islamist groups, despite the absence of concrete evidence).

Pakistan has taken in thousands of Afghan refugees before, but now it can show its respect and empathy for the suffering by taking in these other Muslims.

Arms races between India and Pakistan are common, both countries having always been eager to stockpile weapons and aircraft and all sorts of military technology. It may be time for a new competition. If India has turned cruel and exclusionary, made hatred a staple and coercion its practice, Pakistan can rise above the fray and show the world and especially the region its respect and commitment to providing assistance and refuge to the world’s persecuted.

Just as Pakistan followed the dictates of the Geneva Conventions and releasedcaptured Indian pilot Abhinandan, so too should it open its arms and its borders to those who have suffered injustice and now exclusion at the hands of states that are fuelled by hatred and who have elevated the exclusion of Muslims as a primary tenet of their governing platform. In a world pivoted on hatred, Pakistan can be different; Pakistan is different and it is time to show the world just how different.

The writer is an attorney teaching constitutional law and political philosophy.
rafia.zakaria@gmail.com

Published in Dawn, April 24th, 2019

I dig her...

Agree with her wholeheartedly but not sure abt Sri Lankan muslims because until last week they seemed ok.

Bringing in these ppl can open up new opportunities...educated ppl can contribute to our society and businessmen will bring an injection of cash. House them in temporary accommodation until they make their next step. A noble initiative indeed.

Rohingya muslims are a community of roughly around 600,000. Many of them are living as refugees in Bangladesh.

Pak govt can do a global fundraiser starting with a donation from OIC.

A few ideas on how to house them:

- Pakistan has a few islands off the coast of Sindh and Balochistan. If they are suitable then we can build facilities for them there and they can live there initially. The Rohingya are a fishing community and can fish for a living and Pak govt can facilitate tourism there. Even make hotels there and an airport. Schools should be built for them so they can learn our language and culture and adapt to our society and educate themselves.
 
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I don't think mass immigration is the answer as we don't have the economy for it. But selective immigration like in the west, where we take the best and brightest mindes will be a good idea.

Also, we should be doing more to help Muslims in their own countires rather the brining them here.
We can provide them with economic, military and diplomatic support.
 
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How did Indian Muslim backstab Pak?

No. They didn't. They never had. This is a heartless and inconsiderate comment, about the people, who are under compulsion of the circumstances. In 1945-46 elections, which formed the basis of Pakistan, majority of the Muslims, living in the present day India, voted for All India Muslim League, thus supporting the idea of Pakistan; though knowing well that they would not be able to live in that country. That is, in its own right, height of sacrifice.
 
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Meanwhile earning from Tourist visiting India rose by 4 folds in a decade touching 2 lakh crore.

Visitor's number increased to over 10 millions.
 
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The best way to help Muslims, living in those countries, where their conditions are strained, is to somehow develop good and amiable relations with those countries.
 
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And One small question.

Why do you want to showcase Pakistan to world now waiting for decades till India became
cruel and exclusionary? You could have done this much before India turns cruel.
 
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Wait what? Is she really advocating a mass migration again? Hell no. India can keep its Muslims or eradicate them. Pakistan absolutely doesn't care! The last time Pakistan fell in love with fellow Muslims across the border; we let afghans creep into and destroy our social fabric.
 
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