Why should I live in Pakistan?
Natasha Raheel
Its not okay when you switch on the TV to find out that someone you know has become a victim of target killing. Its not okay to see that because it leaves you with a hundred unanswered questions about why you are still living in this country.
Thats how I felt yesterday when I heard the news that Wali Khan Babar, a fellow reporter and my senior in university, was shot dead in an incident of target killing.
As the news kept flashes images of him over and over again, I was reminded of him clad in huge sunglasses and a red T-shirt around the corridors of my department. Its hard to know that someone I laughed with was killed in such a way.
Although I am not in a position to judge him professionally, I can say that he was definitely a funny and caring guy.
What he did wasnt something extraordinarily brave he had a normal job as a reasonable journalist. But what he received in return is what is extraordinary death.
In my opinion, this country is not worth living in anymore because Walis death speaks volumes of how Pakistan has become an out-dated noun.
In international relations we learn that the basic unit of the whole system is a country which comprises nation and state.
Nation denotes a people who are believed to or deemed to share common customs, origins, and history; and state refers to the set of governing and supportive institutions that have sovereignty over a definite territory and population.
However, in Pakistan one gets killed for belonging to a certain ethnicity, for speaking your mind about religion, for being poor, for being honest, for being rational and with all that happening there is no writ of the government.
How can you live in a county when its not even a country anymore?
I chose to stay in Pakistan while my friends moved abroad. I made it my home because at I have my people here.
But, I feel, that maybe I made the wrong choice. I ask myself, why I should stay here now, when the state cannot even guarantee the security of the people I know?
Why should I live in Pakistan? – The Express Tribune Blog
Natasha Raheel
Its not okay when you switch on the TV to find out that someone you know has become a victim of target killing. Its not okay to see that because it leaves you with a hundred unanswered questions about why you are still living in this country.
Thats how I felt yesterday when I heard the news that Wali Khan Babar, a fellow reporter and my senior in university, was shot dead in an incident of target killing.
As the news kept flashes images of him over and over again, I was reminded of him clad in huge sunglasses and a red T-shirt around the corridors of my department. Its hard to know that someone I laughed with was killed in such a way.
Although I am not in a position to judge him professionally, I can say that he was definitely a funny and caring guy.
What he did wasnt something extraordinarily brave he had a normal job as a reasonable journalist. But what he received in return is what is extraordinary death.
In my opinion, this country is not worth living in anymore because Walis death speaks volumes of how Pakistan has become an out-dated noun.
In international relations we learn that the basic unit of the whole system is a country which comprises nation and state.
Nation denotes a people who are believed to or deemed to share common customs, origins, and history; and state refers to the set of governing and supportive institutions that have sovereignty over a definite territory and population.
However, in Pakistan one gets killed for belonging to a certain ethnicity, for speaking your mind about religion, for being poor, for being honest, for being rational and with all that happening there is no writ of the government.
How can you live in a county when its not even a country anymore?
I chose to stay in Pakistan while my friends moved abroad. I made it my home because at I have my people here.
But, I feel, that maybe I made the wrong choice. I ask myself, why I should stay here now, when the state cannot even guarantee the security of the people I know?
Why should I live in Pakistan? – The Express Tribune Blog