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This file photo taken on January 26, 2022, shows the seal for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington, DC. — AFP
As the country faces mass discord and violence in the aftermath of Khan’s arrest, we need to understand that Imran Khan is not the victim here. Pakistani democracy is. This crisis is of the former Prime Minister’s own making. Those who butcher democracy with their own very hands cannot be regarded as revolutionaries wielding flags of change. The very profiteers of authoritarianism cannot be deemed the champions of democracy.
The fighting erupted in Sudan on April 15th following months of tension between forces led by Sudan’s military leader and de-facto ruler since a coup in 2019, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the Commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), Mohamad Hamdan Dagalo.
The picture, sourced from Getty Images, shows the newly-appointed Sunak giving a speech on the steps of No.10 Downing Street.
Amid massive protests that saw tens of thousands of people on the streets this month over the proposed judicial reforms that aim to curb the independent Israeli Supreme Court’s power, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was forced to delay his contested plans. Not fully giving up, he reckoned that ‘an extremist minority’ was carrying out the protests and paralyzing the country. Recent political showdown shows otherwise.
This is a rather chaotic week for South Asian politics. Only on Friday was India’s opposition leader Rahul Gandhi expelled from parliament over a defamation case. Gandhi’s supposed crime was that about two years earlier he had implied that the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was a ‘thief.’ Gandhi has received a two-year sentence, implying that he can no longer serve in the Lok Sabha. This rather fast ruling shows how adamant Modi has been to silence opposition and weaken democracy. Was it necessary?
As countries around the globe celebrated International Women’s Day on March 8th, Pakistani women and transgender people confronted baton charging police officers and protesting men from conservative groups amid attempts by them to stop the ‘contentious” and ‘immoral’ Aurat March—a grassroots movement led by women, for women, to celebrate womanhood and protest the systematic societal discrimination and patriarchal norms and prejudices that women encounter every day in the country.
Whenever I walk past the confines of Lincoln’s Inn, the most prestigious Inn to have housed many political geniuses and ardent barristers of the caliber of Muhammad Iqbal, Tony Blair and Z.A. Bhutto, no one comes to my mind more than the founding father of my country—Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who 75 years ago, was eons ahead of his time.
Yet, today’s Pakistan is so far beyond his vision; it is marred by fundamentalism, authoritarianism and political patronage, a state where rule of law is subservient to the will of the ruling elite, where intolerance reigns and today, a state that might or might not be defaulting on its sovereign debt.
When Winston Churchill said, ‘democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others’, he was appealing to the notion that despite its supposed failings, there is no system better equipped for governance than a liberal democracy. Nearly seven decades later, the wisdom of this statement is less and less clear to the masses around the world, as democratic backsliding continues to afflict polities around the world.
As Pakistan has approached the international Monetary Fund (IMF) for the 23rd time in the 75 years of its existence, by the very first week of January, Pakistan had only $4.3 billion USD, enough only to pay for a month of imports.
