Crystal gazing – A powershift from ProWest to ProMullahs in Pakistan?

The Legatum Institute, a London-based think tank, has taken a look at our possible futures and presents us with a picture of a state which is Islamist but not Talibanised, and increasingly anti-American. The timeframe that is being considered is relatively short – one to three years – and the report talks of a subtle power shift from a secular pro-western society to one that is Islamist and anti-American. The predicate that this was ever a truly a secular society in anything other than an educated minority is almost certainly flawed — and has more to do with western wishful … Continue reading Crystal gazing – A powershift from ProWest to ProMullahs in Pakistan?

An unfortunate exclusion

Srinivasan Ramani Pakistan’s interior minister made a statement that “India was not serious about the peace process” by the manner in which the cricketers were excluded. Such a conclusion is unwarranted as it does not understand the way the league functions The decision by franchise owning businessmen to not to pick any of the Pakistani players available in the Indian Premier League (IPL) auction for its third season was unfortunate. The IPL franchisee owners clearly did not think much of the feelings of the cricketers who entered the auction process through a circuitous route, after having invited them to the … Continue reading An unfortunate exclusion

The minor majority – Loud Fanatics

Smokers’ Corner: The minor majority By Nadeem F. Paracha Why do many Pakistanis spend more time celebrating Islamic history of regions outside India (especially Arabian), the ummah, and seem to show more concern in what is happening to their brethren in Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan and Kashmir. The Mughals and the Muslim population of the subcontinent weren’t all that bothered by the whole concept of the caliphate. As rulers they did not, or only superficially, recognised the Ottoman caliph. The Mughals, though Central Asian by decent, were deeply entrenched in the political and social traditions of the subcontinent and so was … Continue reading The minor majority – Loud Fanatics

The curious case of Pakistans sex-siren Meera

By Aamna Haider Isani Meera has an answer for everything and one by one she dispels all the stories that have been doing the rounds. — File photo Meera talks in a language better known as scandal. Almost everything she says turns into controversy and it’s one of those controversies that she’s been embroiled in recently that has her emphasising the word Miss. In plain words, she insists she was never married to the man called Ateequr Rahman and the allegations that he slapped upon her were false and baseless. It’s still Miss as far as Meera is concerned though … Continue reading The curious case of Pakistans sex-siren Meera

A role for China

By Huma Yusuf China’s Premier Wen Jiabao (R) shakes hands with President Asif Ali Zardari. Having China on board would give Pakistan the confidence that a long-time ally with a transparent regional agenda is looking out for Islamabad’s interests. – Photo by Reuters. Although think tanks in the United States are working overtime to solve the Pakistan ‘problem’, their final reports are drawing rather obvious conclusions: choking terror funding and promoting economic development. However, a new think tank report suggesting that the US and China put the stabilisation of Pakistan on top of their bilateral agenda raises an interesting prospect … Continue reading A role for China

Unseemly claims

By Anwar Syed Ajmal sits next to the body of his brother, who was killed in a bomb blast in Rawalpindi, at the morgue in a hospital in the outskirts of Islamabad, November 2, 2009. — Reuters A man amongst the many who had assembled to mourn Benazir Bhutto’s death yelled out that Pakistan would not last. And then Asif Ali Zardari shouted “Pakistan khappay”, meaning it would. Since that day in December 2007 — Zardari has projected himself as the protector of Pakistan, democracy, the PPP, and the many legacies of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Benazir Bhutto. More recently he … Continue reading Unseemly claims

Goof-up as India govt ad features ex-PAF chief

Former Pakistan Air Force Chief Marshal Tanvir Ahmed (l) speaks to the media, November 2008 Pakistan Early warning aircraft inducted into PAF Early warning aircraft inducted into PAF In a major goof-up, the Indian government’s Directorate of Advertising and Visual Publicity (DAVP) issued a full-page ad on the occasion of the National Girl Child Day featuring the photograph of former Pakistan Air Chief Marshal Tanvir Ahmed (2006-2009), along with its national heroes such as cricketers Kapil Dev, Virender Sehwag and classical musician Amjad Ali Khan. The ad, splashed in all major newspapers and thereafter on all television channels and the electronic … Continue reading Goof-up as India govt ad features ex-PAF chief

Banning the burqa is simply not British – shame on you Lord Pearson you horrid little man

Dominic Lawson ‘As I was once strolling through the inner city, I suddenly happened upon an apparition in a long caftan with black hair locks. Is this a Jew? was my first thought … but the longer I stared … the more my first question was transformed into a new conception: is this a German?” That is the passage from Mein Kampf in which Adolf Hitler describes how, walking as a student through the less salubrious streets of Vienna, he had suddenly understood the true threat that the Jews presented to the Germanic way of life. I hadn’t read those … Continue reading Banning the burqa is simply not British – shame on you Lord Pearson you horrid little man

From ‘gay girls’ to ‘shagging flies’, the changing meaning of English words causes no end of confusion

What a queer language Khaled Diab guardian.co.uk, As many schoolboys and students know, unintended innuendo can be found in the most unexpected of places and can lend a certain mischievous serendipity to otherwise dull lessons and lectures. One major source of linguistic amusement is transatlantic confusion. This was recently driven home to me by the following passage from an Irwin Shaw story: “Across the street, on the public athletics field, four boys were shagging flies.” My confused yet amused eyes tripped and staggered over the sentence, but made no sense of it, retraced their steps several times, then sat on … Continue reading From ‘gay girls’ to ‘shagging flies’, the changing meaning of English words causes no end of confusion

The truth about Guantánamo

From a cover-up over prisoners’ deaths to the torture of Shaker Aamer, the real story of Guantánamo is beginning to emerge Moazzam Begg guardian.co.uk, I have always believed that the secret detention sites – where prisoners were waterboarded – and military prisons, such as Bagram, were far worse than Guantánamo. Now I’m not so sure. They once called it “asymmetrical warfare” and a “good PR move” but the US administration may soon have to call the alleged suicides of prisoners in Guantánamo something they were trying to hide all along: murder. The latest revelations in the US magazine Harper’s suggests … Continue reading The truth about Guantánamo