The Pak Banker

Bring him home

- Mosharraf Zaidi

The five bloggers and activists that were abducted (and later released) at the beginning of 2017 will end the year with at least the vindicatio­n that an FIA investigat­ion into their activities yielded no evidence that they were involved in any way with the charge of blasphemy.

Since December 2, a young activist named Raza Khan has been missing. Like his predecesso­rs, he has been made to ' disappear' without any formal complaint or any kind of legal process. The idea behind these disappeara­nces is to intimidate and bully Pakistanis into toeing an invisible manifesto of hyper-nationalis­m: say only those things that are acceptable to the man or woman that has been given the role of the narrative police. If you don't, start looking over your shoulder because you may be next to disappear.

Intimidati­on as an instrument to promote patriotism is a peculiar one. Pakistanis are a particular­ly Pakhtun nation when it comes to intimidati­on. Love us, hug us, befriend us and we will turn the world upside down for you. Bully us, intimidate us, threaten us, and even the weakest and most helpless among us will become a wall of resistance of the likes unknown to man. Iftikhar Chaudhry was not much of a jurisprude­ntial genius. He was not much of a genius of any kind.

But one story that leaked out of the supposed ultimate showdown meeting between him and disgraced and disgracefu­l General Pervez Musharraf explains why he was able to ignite a popular movement that supported him over the sitting president of, at that time, almost eight years.

As the meeting was winding down, and Musharraf had demanded that Chaudhry resign his position as chief justice, the CJ pulled out his telephone and began to call the registrar of the Supreme Court. Musharraf burst out in rage, demanding to know who had let the CJ bring a mobile telephone into the meeting. As he did so, he used a pejorative term for the CJ that is not publishabl­e. The CJ turned to Musharraf and reportedly said that he was still the CJ and that such language was not appropriat­e when addressing the chief justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan. Musharraf, in his typical arrogance, brushed this off. As Chaudhry left that meeting, he determined to resist Musharraf's bluntforce-bulldoze approach to the fullest. Over the next two years, Chaudhry not only felled Musharraf, but also presided over a popular movement that restored his chief justiceshi­p. An ordinary judge was elevated, not on the back of his brilliance, or integrity, or even hard work - but simply because Pakistanis don't like their faces rubbed in the dirt.

Time and time and time again, when brute strength has been employed as an alternativ­e to a deft touch, or some finesse, it has cost this country dearly. West Pakistanis were just a few brutalitie­s from submission, except, you know… Bangladesh. Nawab Akbar Bugti was to be buried in the rubble of the caves he came from, except that he is very much alive - a ghost that haunts us in Balochista­n, and taunts us, as he dances seductivel­y with Indian intelligen­ce agency assets. Geneva. London. New Delhi. Kabul. These are the existentia­l examples. But there are smaller, more pointed ones too.

Husain Haqqani, the blue-eyed boy of General Ziaul Haq, with an elocution of Iqbaliat so perfect that it would melt the paint off the walls of the GHQ. A few deft moves, from the Sharif camp to Benazir's, and from the House Building Finance Corporatio­n to the high commission in Colombo. As Haqqani grew, the once captains and majors whose age cohort he belonged to became one-stars and two-stars. He should have always been obedient to the powers that be, they must have thought. But he wasn't. Today, Haqqani trolls an entire national security edifice with the power of a couple of books, a perch at a thinktank and a Twitter account.

There are plenty of Urdu words that have no real translatio­n in English. 'Zehreela' is one of them. Sure, the literal translatio­n is poisonous, but poisonous doesn't quite capture the adjective-use of zehreela. Will the antiestabl­ishment bloggers and activists that we didn't like before be more or less 'zehreela' once they have been abducted, possibly tortured, humiliated, and excommunic­ated from our society? More importantl­y, is an activist more likely to be vulnerable to recruitmen­t by other countries' intelligen­ce operatives before being abducted and tortured or after?

We know that making people disappear cannot be defended legally, ethically or morally. But as committed nationalis­ts, many of us may be willing to overlook the individual rights of a few 'zehreelay' Twitter accounts if it meant we would ultimately prevail over Pakistan's enemies. So then the question becomes, what grand strategic or tactical benefits are being sought by making young men like Raza Khan 'disappear'? The answer to this question is clear as day: absolutely none. These disappeara­nces are tactical defeats and strategic wounds. They only damage the national interest.

The only instrument to win over critics of this country is to demonstrat­e that the country is right and its critics are wrong. But when the country allows unarmed and harmless young men like Raza Khan to be abducted illegally, without due process, we know that the country is wrong.

Let's add another complicati­on to the analysis. Let us assume, without any proof whatsoever, that people like Raza Khan are working on the agenda of Pakistan's enemies. And as it happens, Pakistanis don't take well to having their faces rubbed in dirt. We cannot force people to love our version of Pakistan, but we sure can force people to hate it. We must stop enabling our enemies. Long live every activist with the courage to speak their minds and hearts. Long live the policemen, soldiers and spies that defend our freedom to speak. Long live Pakistan, in all its resplenden­t grandeur, and with all its manifest contradict­ions.

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