Friday, May 17, 2024

National Students Movement (NSM) Seminar at Research and Publication Centre (RPC)

National Students Movement (NSM) invites you to two seminars on May 18, 2024, 3:00 pm at the Research and Publication Centre (RPC), 2nd floor, 65 Main Boulevard Gulberg, Lahore (next to Standard Chartered Bank, above Indesign showroom):

I. "True Federalism: Challenges and Way Forward".

Panelists:

1. Syed Muzammil, Journalist.

2. Afrasyab Khattak, former Senator.

3. Rashed Rahman, Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR), Director, Research and Publication Centre (RPC).

4. Bushra Gohar, National Democratic Movement (NDM).

5. Haider Butt, Lawyer.

6. Sabahat Rizvi, Lawyer.

Moderator:

Abubakar Mehsud.

II. "From Bullets to Ballots: The Struggle for Peaceful Political Expression in Pakistan".

Panelists:

1. Mohsin Dawar, National Democratic Movement (NDM) Chairman.

2. Nouman Wazir, National Students Movement (NSM) Central President.

3. Muzammil Kakar, HKP General Secretary.

4. Khushal Kakar, PNAP Chairman.

5. Jan Muhammad, Senator.

Moderator:

Abubakar Mehsud.

Venue:

Research and Publication Centre (RPC), 2nd floor, 65 Main Boulevard Gulberg, Lahore (next to Standard Chartered Bank, above Indesign showroom).

Date and Time:

Saturday, May 18, 2024, 3:00 pm.

Tea will be served after the seminar/s.

For further information contact Hamza Gull, cell no: 0335 5962288, or below:

Rashed Rahman

Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) (link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com)

Director, Research and Publication Centre (RPC) (on Facebook).

Cells: 0302 8482737, 0333 4216335.

Thursday, May 16, 2024

The May 2024 issue of Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) is out

The May 2024 issue of Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) is out. Link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com

Contents:

1. Vijay Prashad: How Africa's National Liberation Struggles brought democracy to Europe.

2. Robert P Hager: The Cold War and Third World Revolutions.

3. Berch Berberoglu: Nationalism, Ethnic Conflict and Class Struggle: A critical analysis of Mainstream and Marxist Theories of Nationalism and National Movements.

4. Saulat Nagi: Pakistan: The Politico-Economic Pandora's box.

5. Fawzia Afzal-Khan: Censoring the anti-Zionist Professor.

6. Fayyaz Baqir: My Life and Struggle – III: NSO launches itself.

7. Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur: The Rise of Baloch Nationalism and Resistance – IX: Disappeared persons and Baloch response.

Rashed Rahman

Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) (link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com)

Director, Research and Publication Centre (RPC) (on Facebook).

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Impasse

 

Rashed Rahman

 

Anniversaries can be of different kinds, some mere rituals, others more than a mere remembrance of things past. May 9 has already passed into the category of the latter. A year ago, the happenings on May 9, 2023 have been detailed in a report by the caretaker government. It makes, to put it mildly, startling reading. What it says seems to nullify Imran Khan and the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaaf’s (PTI’s) lately found narrative of them being victims of a ‘false flag’ operation. What it omits, or does not say, is even more mind boggling.

The report names dozens of PTI leaders who it says were responsible for instigating their party followers to attack military installations, etc., on that fateful day after the arrest of Imran Khan. It lists 300 places where such violent protests were mounted after PTI leaders took to social media following the arrest of Imran Khan to spread lies and calumnies about the conditions in which Imran Khan was being held (i.e. torture in custody) and that he was likely to be killed. Naturally this had the intended effect of angering the PTI followers who went berserk in their attacks on various military sites. Since the violent reaction took hardly minutes to ensue, the unanswered question remains, were the targets pre-chosen? If so, there was obviously a preconceived plan or strategy. Let us examine the details in the report of what transpired in the major cities of the country that day.

Protests in Lahore began on May 9, 2023 around 1500 hours when PTI supporters started gathering at Liberty Chowk. At around 1600 hours, Dr Yasmin Rashid reached Liberty Chowk and the protestors started moving towards the Corps Commander’s residence (Jinnah House) in Cantt. As an aside, let me add that when I went home that night in Cantt over the Sherpao Bridge, I was surprised to find that the military check post after the bridge showed signs as though a hurricane had hit it. The soldiers/guards’ cabin at the start lay shattered, all the lights were out, the lane markers (red and white) all lay flattened like a storm-hit wheat field. Not a single soldier was present. My surmise then was that the military had opted not to accost the protestors as this could have led to bloodshed (the soldiers deployed at such check posts are armed). This could be likened to a strategic retreat, but whether that qualifies as a ‘false flag’ operation begs the question: is it not a fact that the protestors were so charged up that they demolished this check post (as I witnessed)? The report says by 1800 hours the protestors entered Jinnah House, ransacked it and set it on fire. Urban legend has it that the Corps Commander and his family fled by breaking a back boundary wall into a neighbouring house and escaping in the neighbours’ car. No attempt seems to have been made by the military’s security detail to prevent all this, which normally does not allow even parking anywhere near the Corps Commander’s house, let alone entering and destroying it. Not content with this ‘victory’, the protestors ransacked the nearby Military Engineering Services (MES) office and CSD. By 2200 hours, the mob had reached Main Boulevard, Gulberg, where it set alight Askari Tower and Askari Bank. Another group of protestors attacked the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Secretariat at 180-H, Model Town. There were continual clashes between the protestors and the law enforcing agencies (LEAs) (basically the police) across the city. LEA estimates speak of a total of around 2,000 protestors.

In Rawalpindi, protestors gathered at Liaquat Bagh by 1700 hours. For the next hour, a number of audio clips of PTI leaders emerged on social media urging the protestors to move towards General Headquarters (GHQ). The crowd now reached GHQ, turned violent, breaking a statue outside GHQ and the glass door of the reception area. Unthinkable that the military high command’s GHQ could so easily be approached and attacked, except if the military itself ‘retreated’ and left it to the LEAs to thwart any further damage, which they eventually managed by repelling the attackers. Again, ‘false flag’ or restraint? Whatever the case, it did not deter the protestors from ransacking the military history museum and the Army Signals Mess. Several vehicles were also set ablaze. The Hamza Camp and the Army Welfare Trust Plaza were attacked and the latter’s entrance was set on fire, all this while clashes between the protestors and the LEAs continued for several hours.

Gujranwala Cantt was besieged by about 100 protestors around 1940 hours but were pushed back by the LEAs. However, they continued to attack and eventually succeeded in destroying the Rahwali Gate and the main reception area. In Mianwali around 1700 hours, a crowd of about 1,000 ‘insurgents’ attacked the M M Alam Airbase. They damaged the boundary wall, broke the main entrance gate and set ablaze a jet model. Repelled by the LEAs, the same mob then attacked and damaged the Police Khidmet Centre, judicial complex and the National Bank, Punjab Bank and the General Post Office. A number of shops were looted and vehicles set ablaze. The next day, a smaller contingent blocked the Mianwali-Bannu Road, attacked several vehicles and then damaged Police Station (PS) Kamar Mashani. In Islamabad around 1500 hours, a crowd of PTI workers from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa of around 1,000 attacked the SP Office Industrial Area and set it alight. They then attacked the Ramna PS. The mob damaged several vehicles. In Multan at around 1800 hours, PTI workers gathered at CMH Chowk, where their strength had grown to about a thousand in the next hour. The mob attacked and damaged the Army Recruiting Centre, Army check post and neighbouring buildings, including another National Bank branch.

Does this outline of the May 9, 2023 PTI attacks smack of a ‘false flag’ operation? More likely, it suggests that the PTI felt emboldened by getting away with its 2014 attacks on Parliament and PTV Islamabad, having suffered no adverse consequences. However, what PTI forgot was that at that point it was the ‘darling’ of the military establishment, which was preparing its entry into power four years later. In 2023, that support had reversed into rejection and animosity. Urban legend again has it that the ‘insurgency’ was pre-planned and hoped for a mutiny within the military in favour of PTI. The authors of this foolish, quixotic adventure are reportedly some pro-PTI retired military officers. They would have served their party better by keeping their ‘brilliant’ counsel to themselves.

Given the above facts as adumbrated in the report, no surprise at the DG ISPR’s rejection in a press conference the other day of any suggestion of talks with PTI unless Imran Khan and the party offer an unconditional apology for their unprecedented attacks on military installations and, if urban legend is to be believed, even contemplating a breakdown of the military’s internal unity and discipline, leading to a mutiny against COAS General Asim Munir. Since Imran Khan has responded by ruling out any apology, instead demanding an apology, we are in a classic impasse, with no way out in sight.

 

 

 

 

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Business Recorder Column May 7, 2024

Wheat, wheat everywhere…

 

Rashed Rahman

 

The wheat crisis has thrown up a host of troubling questions that revolve around the persistent wisdom that in our governance system, the left hand seldom knows what the right hand is doing. Or, alternatively, one hand is engaging in manipulation undetected by the other.

The wheat crisis stems from two irreducible facts. One, the caretaker government headed by Anwaarul Haq Kakar was responsible for importing 3.5 million tonnes of wheat through the private sector costing Rs 370 billion between August 2023 and March 2024 although all the prognoses pointed to a bumper wheat crop this spring. Of this 3.5 million tonnes imported wheat, 1.3 million tonnes was found to be fungus-infested and therefore not fit for human consumption. The rest was packed away in government godowns till they were literally bursting at the seams. What this meant was that when the bumper wheat crop of 28-29 million tonnes this season arrived, the government simply did not have any place to store it, nor, arguably, the finances to purchase it at the officially declared support price of Rs 3,900 per 40 kilograms. Hence the foot dragging by the provincial government of Punjab (the largest producer) in procuring the wheat from farmers. The result? Poor farmers are being forced to sell their harvested wheat at Rs 2,800-3,000 per 40 kilograms in the market.

The crisis in the wheat sector has drawn the wrath of peasant organisations. The Pakistan Kissan Ittehad (PKI) President Khalid Mahmood Khokhar has accused a mafia of having profited from the unnecessary wheat import. Farmers have suffered a Rs 400 billion loss as a result and with no viable option left, have geared up to take to the streets with their tractor trolleys and cattle on May 10, 2024 (shades of the farmers’ protests in India!). Mr Khokhar also perceptibly pointed out that unless the crisis was resolved, the farmers will not be able to cultivate cotton and rice and future wheat output could not escape being affected. Pakistan Kisan Rabita Committee (PKRC) general secretary Farooq Tariq has placed the blame squarely on the caretaker government and demanded the arrest of former caretaker Prime Minister (PM) Anwaarul Haq Kakar, the bureaucrats and importers involved in the wheat scandal, while pressing the present government to compensate the growers badly hit by the import policy.

Responding to what could prove to be a crisis that could blow up in its face, the government of PM Shahbaz Sharif has set up an inquiry committee headed by the Cabinet Division Secretary to probe the wheat import scandal. The committee’s report is still awaited at the time of writing these lines but such inquiry committees headed by bureaucrats enjoy little credibility given their track record of obfuscation and sheltering the guilty. The issue is touchy given that Anwaarul Haq Kakar is considered the blue-eyed boy of the establishment, which has rewarded him for services rendered by having a Senate seat allotted to him. According to some commentators, bigger things were meant to be in store for Mr Kakar but matters have not panned out in the desired way. One set of speculations argues that Ishaq Dar’s inexplicable appointment as Deputy PM was a pre-emptive gambit since the position was one desired for Mr Kakar by his establishment backers. When confronted with awkward questions about the wheat import debacle on his watch, Mr Kakar has dumped the whole blame in the basket of the provincial governments and their rendered information about the wheat stocks situation, which projected an alarming shortage, hence the ‘hurried’ import. Mr Kakar’s mea culpa beggars the imagination. Does the federal government have no information about the wheat stocks in the country? Is it incapable of checking and double checking the data of the provincial governments? Are no records of all this available for perusal by the apex office of the federal government?

Nawaz Sharif, embarked on reactivating his role in the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and thereby the government he bestowed on younger brother Shahbaz Sharif, wants the government to take action without anyone responsible being able to get away scot-free, whatever their strong political clout, and to refer the matter to the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) or Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) to probe the scam. However, the Shahbaz government seems reluctant to take strong action against those responsible, probably another indicator of his government’s reluctance to lock horns with the all-powerful establishment by putting their satrap Mr Kakar and others in the dock. Here again emerges the difference in approach of the two brothers, Nawaz bold, Shahbaz collaborationist. They may well reconcile these ‘differences’ once again as they have been doing since 2022, but it does speak volumes for the not-so-hidden tussle inside the PML-N vis-à-vis the approach towards the establishment.

Whatever the outcome of the inquiry committee report, and there are grave doubts it will amount to much, the totally ridiculous and unnecessary import of wheat by the caretaker government smacks of malafide corruption and vested interest that has robbed the farmers, particularly small landholders, of the fruits of their hard labour. Is there no justice to be had in this Mad Hatter’s Tea Party system in our benighted country?

 

 

 

 

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com

Friday, May 3, 2024

The May 2024 issue of Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) is out

The May 2024 issue of Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) is out. Link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com

Contents:

1. Vijay Prashad: How Africa's National Liberation Struggles brought democracy to Europe.

2. Robert P Hager: The Cold War and Third World Revolutions.

3. Berch Berberoglu: Nationalism, Ethnic Conflict and Class Struggle: A critical analysis of Mainstream and Marxist Theories of Nationalism and National Movements.

4. Saulat Nagi: Pakistan: The Politico-Economic Pandora's box.

5. Fawzia Afzal-Khan: Censoring the anti-Zionist Professor.

6. Fayyaz Baqir: My Life and Struggle – III: NSO launches itself.

7. Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur: The Rise of Baloch Nationalism and Resistance – IX: Disappeared persons and Baloch response.

Rashed Rahman

Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) (link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com)

Director, Research and Publication Centre (RPC) (on Facebook).