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search Tag: PakistanPermalink Updated: Female Pakistani Minister ShotBy Ali Eteraz :
May God rest her soul. They caught the man who did it and he had no regrets saying he was following Allah's commands. This happened in a place in Pakistan where I used to live. You know, what is so weird is that I was once looking through all the profiles of the Pakistani Assemblypersons and I actually stopped at her profile and scanned it and thought maybe I should contact her. Now she's not there. Update [2007-2-20 21:28:8 by Ali Eteraz]: She may have been killed because a men-and-women marathon. Also, the brutality of Pakistani politics cannot be discounted. She had been elected on a reserved seat for women. Now, after becoming popular, she was going to run on a general, open seat which I'm sure was threatening to rival politicians. h/t Aslam (9 comments) Comments >> Permalink This Is A Joke: Hilarious Pakistan Supreme Court RulingBy Ali Eteraz Update [2007-2-20 21:30:8 by Ali Eteraz]: It's a joke Is this a joke? My source didn't say it wasn't and well, this is Pakistan we're talking about:
(4 comments) Comments >> Permalink Presenting: Pakistan, As It Could Have BeenBy Haroon One of the most unfortunate realities of the study of the Islamic world, today, is the parochialism of this study: If it isn't the Middle East, it probably isn't Islamic -- or, at least, worth study. Middle Eastern Muslims often remain unaware of Islam outside the Middle East, or the means by which it got there, and Orientalists compound the problem by reducing Islam's big tent to three unequal poles: Arabs, Turks and Iranians. This is just another way of grumbling, 'What About Pakistan?' Where does Pakistan fit in? What does Pakistan represent in terms of the contemporary Muslim world? At , Jajabor discusses of the Pakistani state, as part of an (around Language Day, commemorating the 1952 riots sparked by Pakistan's refusal to recognize Bangla as an official language), for this reason
Since this blog (if you haven't heard of it, I imagine that's only because it's so new) is composed largely of Bengalis (and Bengalis in the West), this perspective, from what Pakistan, is a tense one:
(1 comment, 561 words in story) There's more... Permalink Another Law for Pakistani WomenBy Maleeha The Pakistani government seems to be capitalizing on the momentum created by the in its Zina Ordinance. The National Assembly has now on The Prevention of Anti-Women Practices Bill, which bans six practices, namely 1) depriving women of their property rights, 2) vani (marrying girls off to settle blood feuds), 3) forced marriage, 4) divorce by pronouncing it three times in one sitting, 5) marrying women to the Quran and 6) watta satta (exchange marriages). The most interesting provision for me is this - the bill says that husbands who bring charges of adultery against their wives, but cannot prove it, will face charges of slander. I'm curious about what kind of punishment those charges entail. I am even more interested in the part that says that in such cases, the wives would have the right to initiate divorce proceedings. Since women do not have the unilateral right to divorce in Islam, I wonder how such divorce proceedings would work. These bills are so necessary and no doubt a result of some hard fought political and ideological battles. But they will not have an effect on the ground until and unless the victims feel safe enough to vindicate the rights given under these laws. And that security will not come unless the everyday man's attitude towards women changes, when she is not looked upon as an chattel or object to be exchanged (in the case of vani or watta satta) or be disposed off (in the case of uttering "divorce" three times in one sitting). Grassroots efforts to reform these attitudes need to be undertaken not just by NGOs or social groups, but especially by the local Imams and religious leaders, who have more sway with the man on the street than all the NGOs in the world combined. After all, it was a local Imam that condemned rape and encouraged her to come forward with her story and file charges. A few more like him, and these laws will truly become powerful weapons against men who oppress the very women whose honor they claim to uphold. (8 comments, 368 words in story) There's more... Permalink Attack Iran, Defeat PakistanBy Haroon Even as discussions continue on the likelihood of a war on Iran -- the very fact that I am talking about it, I am afraid, is a clue to how effective certain forms of propagandistic preparation can be -- I feel like we have to consider the bigger picture. (Here's .) No matter how much Iran has alienated Sunni regimes, is perceived to have contributed to instability in Lebanon and Iraq, and finally, Ahmedinejad has been, as a leader, a moral failure and a strategic myopic reactionary, we have to consider the ramifications of a widening of the war. The Middle East is hot right now; decades of political regimes unsuited to actual economic and social circumstances, coupled with the damaging effects of imperialisms old and new, have pushed the Middle East and the wider Muslim world into a general sectarian, theological and social crisis, of troubling proportions. What any sane reader must consider are the effects of destabilizing Iraq. Not the effects on Ahmedinejad, a set of ayatollahs, vulcan neo-cons in Washington, or uncertain Senators in a chamber, but rather for the hundreds of millions of people, primarily in the Middle East, whose lives will be entirely upended, if not extinguished, by further conflict. Case in point: Coming on yesterday's bombing of a Marriott Hotel in Pakistan, a has struck the country, this aimed at a Shi'i mosque, killing 11 and injuring dozens more. Pakistan -- and keep in mind its significance -- would be very adversely affected by any ill-conceived U.S. actions in Iran. The sectarian tensions thrown up by Iraq would be multiplied by any actions against Iran, especially if they are perceived to be with the permission or assistance of Sunni nations -- Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, etc. Permalink Extremist Recruitment In Pakistani UniversitiesBy Ali Eteraz Well, . Check out the dumbass slogans:
Plus the IJT killed Qasim Kidwai's mosquito! I remember seeing these idiots in Pakland, protesting to take out the words "vagina" from medical text books; rocking buses till they flipped. In the 1970's, the IJT was most successful in riot stabbing where numerous students died (this continued through the 80's). Sometimes they descended upon public schools and beat up a couple of teachers for the hell of it, and cancelled class for the day. At one point in Pakistan I used to attend (forced by dad) a private school four days a week and the public school two days a week (because he thought private school would make me too soft). I used to love when the frothing fundos showed up (they only came to the public scools, so only the poor kids lost their chance at education). They usually knocked over a wall of the school then ran in. We yelled "hartaal!" (strike!) and booked it, climbing over a wall, and back home. Most of the extremists at the university level are more of the armchair fanatic kind. The canon fodder comes from the way out madrassas. (1 comment) Comments >> Permalink Musharraf Uses "Fair and Lovely"By Haroon I didn't buy Musharraf's manifesto, In The Line of Fire. I had little desire to support the dictator by forking over twenty-something dollars, not to mention that much dough for a crap effort. Columbia Libraries did, though, and so I did too, insofar as I supported Musharraf by checking his book out of the library and reading a chunk of it while on vacation. A few superficial sort-of conclusions, since I'm not yet halfway through: Musharraf is a terribly bad writer, plagued by an arbitrary mind. If there could be a computer program written to translate text into Musharrafism, perhaps a sample passage could read like this:
Musharraf is also an astonishingly insecure person, who needs to tell us, far too often, how tough, brave, resilient, action-hero-ish, hard-working, indomitable and popular he is. After all, it's not enough to win at rigged referenda and speaking the language the richest minority of your subject population does. And he is, worst of all, ashamed of being Pakistani, which is the worst characteristic of a dictator. Like so many others among Pakistan's corrupt, or simply authoritarian, elite, Musharraf readily imbibes and unquestioningly constipates himself on half-truths and convenient fictions, designed to convey an acceptable Pakistaniness. To help ease his military mind's clearly successful brainwashing (see also 'ghusl of the neuron'), he remains deliberately ignorant of India, and that Pakistan is a Muslim state with strong Indic roots and realities. How could he accept that? To him, Pakistan has to be the "Other," that to justify his military's obsession with defeating and one-upping India. But not an Islamist other, an acceptably soft, smooth Muslim nationalism, the laxative of Islamism. Better to call it "In the Bubble," for Musharraf's worldview is at times as incorrect, stereotypical, pathetic and rotund as the middling mullah's. Take this precious fiction, from page 19, the chapter teasingly titled: "Turkey: The Formative Years":
Actually, Ataturk was a dictator. Like you! Score two for the in-common column. Turkey's transition from dictatorship to democracy has always been helped by that segment of its population which was not embarrassed of being Anatolian, in the fullest sense of the word, and only after Ismet died and one-party rule went the way of the Taliban did Turkey become the "enlightened" state Musharraf claimed Ataturk made it. Even now, it is the Islamists and the Kurds who represent Turkey's possibility of becoming a true democratic, moderate, confident state: It is the Turkish military that is obscurantist and dogmatic. But, of course, it takes a dictator to not see a dictator.
No, it didn't. Much of Pakistan's cuisine is South Asian, and is frankly speaking the same as Indian cuisine: We have peculiarities, and the influences of Baloch (Iranian) and Pashtun (Afghan) cultures, too, but chicken tikka masala, the samosa, gulab jamun, lassi, ruh afza, daal roti, channe, these are not Ankaran imports. I'm hungry.
No, Urdu did not originate in Turkey. Musharraf's proof? That "Ordu" is a Turkish word. Good God, are you serious? Get this: The Sanskrit term for the Indus was Sindh(u), or "River," leading to the Persian Hindi and the Greek India, from which we derive terms such as Hindi, Hindu, Indus, India, etc. Does that therefore mean India is a Greek country, because it is officially known as "India" and not "Sindhia" or "Aryavarta"? Urdu is a beautiful, rich language, with a strong influence of Persian and Arabic, and little if any Turkish influence -- especially the Turkish spoken in Turkey (see also, 'ghusl of the language'). Urdu is grammatically Indic, and has far more in common with Bangla, with Bihari, with Hindi, with Punjabi and Sindhi, than it does with Turkish in any of its Central Asian registers. (Or even Persian.) Its high literature does ooze a certain Persian joie de shairi, but that cultural influence is from one Aryan language to another. This is like reading a history book by a mullah: "Pakistan was founded in 711 by the Arabs." No. No. No. You were not elected into power, and you cannot write, and you have to stop doing sajdah to other dictators. At least don't be so obvious about your obsessions, Musharraf Sahib. The country is listening. (2 comments) Comments >> Permalink Nazenin Fatehi: Court Rules Killing UnintentionalBy Ali Eteraz I wrote about Nazenin Fatehi, the woman in Iran who stabbed one of her three would be rapists to death, but found herself on death row. Good :
We now wait for the sentence. Also check out Amnesty's call for action about Panah, a refuge for victim of severe domestic violence in Pakistan. See bold part on how to help. (5 comments) Comments >>
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