By Muhammad Ali Hashmi
While
Beirut has uneasily risen out of its war-torn past as a glitzy metropolis,
Karachi seems to be hurtling toward a bloodier crisis. Once romanticized as
“the city of lights,” Karachi is now marred by death, darkness and chaos. It is
a city on the brink of an almost civil war.
Shot
four times after being brutally tortured, gunned down by unidentified men
riding a motorcycle, kidnapped for ransom, blown by grenade thrown into crowded
restaurant — these are the stories playing out across the city’s wards each
day.
Between
2003 and 2011, an estimated 5,549 people died in Karachi from target killings,
terrorism and sectarianism, according to a recent report by the Center for
Research & Security Studies, a Pakistani think-tank founded by civil
society activists. The number is nearly half of the 11,990 civilians killed in
Pakistan due to terrorism in the 2003-2011 time period, the report said.
“Karachi’s
situation has really deteriorated in the past year,” said Noman Baig, a Ph.D.
student of anthropology at the University of Texas Austin, who is currently
doing his fieldwork in Karachi. The situation began to worsen
substantially after the 2008 elections when several political parties and crime
syndicates began challenging the decades-long hegemony of the Muttahida Qaumi
Movement— an ethno-nationalist party, which represents the nine million
Urdu-speaking Mohajirs, who migrated from India in the 1947 partition.
Since then, hundreds of political workers have been killed.
These
targeted killings thrive with almost perfect impunity. Extortion and
kidnappings, used by the political parties as instruments to obtain and
maintain power, flourish. No business in Karachi can operate without
paying to the extortionists.
“Right
now nobody knows who is killing who,” he said. “The city’s situation can be
gauged from the fact that Karachi is now being compared with war-ravaged Beirut
in the 1980s.”
Beirut
and Karachi, while vastly different, have many parallels: both are seaport
cities; both play a pivotal role in each country’s economy and politics; and
both have an inflammable ethnic mix. It is the ethnic factor which gains
particular salience in the anatomy of stability in the two cities. During
the Lebanese civil war, Beirut was primarily divided between the Muslim west
part and the Christian east. In Karachi, the Mohajirs and the Pashtuns
lie at the heart of conflict.
For
a quarter of a century, the M.Q.M., the Mohajir political party, has controlled
both state and non-state governing
apparatus of Karachi in a thoroughly one-sided affair. This has bred
animosity and resentment from a growing number of other ethnic populations.
The M.Q.M. has violently clashed with other political and ethnic groups
in Karachi — Sindhis, Punjabis, Balochis, the Pakistan People’s Party and
Jamaat-e-Islami. Since 1994, an estimated 9,696 people have been killed in
Karachi and majority of them are victims of ethno-political conflicts, the
C.R.S.S. report said.
The
main challenge to the M.Q.M.’s dominance in Karachi has come from the Pashtuns.
Despite the fact that nearly half of Karachi is Pashtun, few Pashtuns hold
political power in the city. The M.Q.M. holds 17 of 20 national assembly
seats in Karachi while Awami National Party, the party of the Pashtuns, holds
no seats. Of the 44 seats in Karachi’s provincial assembly, the A.N.P.
holds two. The M.Q.M. has 34.
“The
M.Q.M. maintains its dominance of Mohajir politics through a combination of
coercion and consent,” said Hafeez Jamali, an anthropologist based in Pakistan
and the U.S who specializes in ethnic nationalism. It emerged in 1985 as a
platform to channel popular Mohajir resentment due to what they perceived as
unfair treatment of Mohajirs in the education and civil services.
The
M.Q.M.’s ideology was accompanied by a brand of rogue politics reliant on
targeted killings, extortions and kidnappings. “Over the years, the party lost
its shine due to its excessive reliance on violent means and its fascist
tendencies, as well as the dubious alliances it made with the Pakistani
establishment, to remain in power at all costs,” Jamali said.
The
absence of any other legitimate power force— one that is seen as a legitimate
negotiator by all the factions of the society— in Karachi’s politics is a
serious problem for the city: there is no way to negotiate the violence on the
streets. Pashtuns and other ethnic communities, who do not have enough
political strength to keep the M.Q.M. at bay, have started to exert power
through violent means.
Karachi
continues to attract migrants from other parts of Pakistan. In the wake of the
Taliban insurgency and the ongoing War on Terror in Pakistan’s frontier region,
more Pashtuns have fled the tribal areas to seek refuge in the Pashtun
dominated areas of Karachi’s slums. The M.Q.M. sees this growing influx of
Pashtuns and other migrants as a demographic change that will ultimately
challenge the authority of the M.Q.M. in the city politics.
“Karachi
is now witnessing a new political consciousness in non-Mohajir ethnic groups,
especially in Pashtuns,” Baig said. On the other hand, the M.Q.M. is neither
willing to cede any political power nor willing to accept other ethnic groups
as equals. In its latest fact-finding report, the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan called the tussle between the M.Q.M. and the A.N.P. “Karachi’s main
fault-line.”
The
commission argues Pakistan’s current government has completely failed to
maintain law and order in Karachi. It said it believes “the arrest, trial and
conviction of a few ringleaders” could alter the course of the city’s future.
But Baig is
skeptical about such a solution. “Law and order can bring some sense of peace
to the city, but it’s not the answer to Karachi's problems.”
In
the wake of deteriorating law and order situation in Karachi, another humanitarian organization
has filed a petition for military intervention in Karachi. But most
agree that military operation in Karachi is not a good idea, and the option of
using military action can further exacerbate the situation, as it
did in 1992. In 1992, Pakistan’s Army, in consultation with the civilian
government, launched a military-led operation to clean up Karachi. The
operation was marked by extrajudicial killings and ultimately resulted in
further radicalization of the political groups in Karachi.
The
P.P.P., the party in power, needs the support of M.Q.M. for its minority
government and seems completely disinterested in resolving this crisis. After the
general elections of 2008—in which the M.Q.M. emerged as the fourth largest
party in the parliament— the M.Q.M.’s support was crucial for Pakistan P.P.P.’s
minority government.
“Perhaps
an international peace mediator, which can bring all the stakeholders on the
table, can resolve this situation,” Baig said. “A peaceful solution can
only be achieved if the M.Q.M. accepts these ground realities and starts seeing
other ethnic groups as communities that also have political aspirations.
Karachi’s
problems are both deeper and dangerous than has been recognized. Mohajirs, who
consider themselves intellectual elites of the country, regularly denigrate the
Pashtuns and other ethnicities as “sub-humans” and “imbeciles” who are suitable
only for menial jobs. This mythologized dehumanization of “the others” is
disturbing. As we have learnt from past tragedies of ethnic conflict, when one
group denies the humanity of the other groups and monopolizes the political
apparatus in a conflict situation, the stakes become high for inaction. For
Pakistan, this could mean Karachi turning into another Beirut.
No comments:
Post a Comment