The Pak Banker

Lethal weapons

- Syed Talat Hussain

Let us admit it. It is not the fault of the Tehreek-e-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah (TLYR) that the millions of citizens of this country that commute between Islamabad and Rawalpindi or those who come from other areas have suffered excruciati­ng pain and suffering for two weeks.

Yes, the religious outfit, which has been duly registered with the Election Commission after its surprise arrival and performanc­e in the Lahore NA-120 byelection, has held a nuclear country's capital hostage this long. It caused business losses worth billions. It besmeared our national image in the world. But they are not to be blamed. Their shenanigan­s - beating up commuters, attacking school buses and vans, smashing private cars, taking over public property, causing deaths by blocking roads to hospitals, inciting violence, abusing and threatenin­g etc - are not really theirs either.

The group and its fantastic rise to the point where it could paralyse state and governance institutio­ns is essentiall­y an outcome of a system that has allowed (and in more than one instance engineered) weaponisat­ion of street sentiment (WSS) in order to achieve short-term goals. In the list of all the lethal weapons (robot killers, oxygen sucking bombs, resource-ravaging organisms, machine swarms knocking out thousands in one go) that the world has invented, or is in the process of inventing, our creation - Weaponised Street Sentiment with easy triggers - must be most the unique. Not the least because this weapon can create mass trouble without anyone being able to truly question its use. It is so also because unlike other weapons of mass impact, this one is created, tested, perfected at home and deployed against ourselves. There aren't many examples from across the world that anyone can quote where a home-made lethality is used with such brutality against the home itself. But then we have always strived to be different and this is another example of how well we have done.

To be sure, long years of sweat and research have gone into producing WSS. The more recent testing ground (rather, firing range) was the Imran Khan-led and Tahirul Qadri-fed dharnas 1 and 2, and later on dharna 3. In the vast labs of DChowk, just in front of the parliament, and the presence of hundreds of cameras the various designs of this state-of-thepolitic­al-art masterpiec­e was put to use. The results were astounding. A few thousand people could occupy one road and create a mass impression of the imminent collapse of an elected government.

The research also showed the weapon's capacity to totally block parliament and make the formidable judiciary shrivel to a non-entity forced to plead with the protesters to at least allow the honourable judges to reach their chambers without additional inconvenie­nce. The three tests also revealed that the government was inherently incapable of dealing with mass protests and was so weak in its knees that the mere thought of being accused of using excessive force made it cringe and crumble in fear of being taken apart by the media.

The dharna tests in Islamabad's heartland - the smaller version was on display earlier when Mr Qadri brought his tribe to the city during the PPP government - also establishe­d without any doubt that the citizens of Islamabad, soft and rich, had no stomach for raising their voice against the abrogation and infringeme­nt of their rights. The results had another interestin­g conclusion: that once people are brought onto the streets and given a cause of sorts (rigging, corruption etc) they can perpetuate themselves in changing climatic conditions and, depending on how much local support is available, can be driven to the point of attacking government buildings etc.

In other words, mob rule could real- ly rule. Inspired by the Model Town massacre, the dharna model testing also reinforced the lesson that, by sheer stupidity of law enforcers or through some dark mechanism, the possibilit­y of a catastroph­ic event taking place becomes real.

But perhaps the most important lesson from the dharnas related to the damage they could cause to the target: the government. Made to look like it would fall at a touch, the whole arrogance of being 'mandated' could also appear like a joke. The weapon could throw everything out of gear and turn part of public sentiment against elected members so incapable, so impotent that they could do little other than to moralise and speak hollow words of taking action without being to even lift a finger. The idea of elected representa­tives - and with them the elected representa­tion system - being bogus and farcical could be easily promoted when the weapon was in use.

With remarkable success having been proven through repeated cold tests in the lab of D-Chowk, the weapon is now ready to be used in various forms and categories. The TLYR model is different only in the nature of the payload it carries. It is loaded with religious sentiment rather than with a propagated desire to bring democratic revolution or make a 'Naya Pakistan'. Every other part of the weapon has been the same as used in the previous tests in Islamabad. Because of the nature of the payload (finality of Prophethoo­d) the TLYR model is particular­ly deadly. It can kill without mercy and claim great rewards for shooting the victim. It is technicall­y protected against being challenged in a national debate because debate is impossible when there are a dozen self-issued fatwas already out there justifying murder. More important, once deployed, the TLYR model then operates on the network available in the shape of nearby mosques and shrines - the main means by which the protesters sustained themselves for two weeks. The possibilit­ies are immense of the TLYR model getting activated in every district in the country (in heartland Punjab at least) in case extreme action is taken. The only problem with the deployment and use of WSS is the blowback, the sideeffect­s. Sometimes, more than the target (the government in this case), WSS ends up inflicting irreparabl­e collateral damage on the country and the people. While the government and its ministers have survived with minor bruises, the real wounds WSS's TLYR model deployment has inflicted is on the country's image and on the lives of the people.

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 ??  ?? There aren't many examples
There aren't many examples

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