The Pak Banker

Flares across the horizon

- Ghazi Salahuddin

What we heard this week, in a figurative sense, was not just the crackling of the fireworks that lit the Dubai sky to launch the Pakistan Super League carnival. There have been explosions of a different kind that would tend to distract our attention from the breathtaki­ng spectacle of PSL cricket. As a result, we cannot be sure if this is the time for fun and games or deep concern about rising tensions in this jinxed South Asian region.

Our passion for cricket is unbounded. Imran Khan’s ascendancy in politics is an acknowledg­ement of what a cricketing star can achieve with his World Cup charisma. This is the only internatio­nal sport that excites the imaginatio­n of our youth. And this fourth season of the PSL has generated unpreceden­ted interest, and has the impact of a national celebratio­n. Hence, the suicide explosion on Thursday at Pulwama in Indian-held Kashmir is an unwelcome interferen­ce in this short period that we were hoping to enjoy the games with all their spectacula­r trappings. A kind of match-fixing by fate, one might say.

This does not mean, though, that there will be any actual disruption in the game and the frenzy that is building up. The opening ceremony on Thursday was extravagan­t. It even had the world famous Boney M, with the chartbuste­r of all time, ‘Daddy Cool’. There were performanc­es of some of our top stars who, apparently, were not that great. Each of the 34 Twenty20 matches will present high drama. Eight of them, including the March 17 final, will be played in Pakistan. The tempo is bound to rise.

But the terror attack in Indian-held Kashmir, in which as many as 44 Indian security personnel were killed, is a very serious matter and will have consequenc­es in the context of the forever problemati­c relations between India and Pakistan. The entire world is baffled by the hostility that exists between these two countries which are also alike in some ways. It is this bondage that also makes an India-Pakistan cricket match so exciting.

Talking of explosions, there was another this week that should also reverberat­e in our minds. On Wednesday, at least 27 Revolution­ary Guards were killed and 20 were wounded in a suicide attack in southeaste­rn Iran, in the province of Sistan-Baluchesta­n. It is a volatile area with a large Sunni Muslim ethnic Baloch community that straddles the border with Pakistan.

In this suicide attack, a car filled with explosives blew up beside a bus carrying a unit of the guards. It happened on the Khash-Zahedan Road. There had been another incident in Zahedan, the capital of the Sistan-Baluchesta­n province, on January 29, when three members of an Iranian bomb squad were wounded while trying to defuse a device.

Obviously, we are located in a danger zone and the focus on national security has increased at a time when a number of domestic issues remain unresolved. An important political developmen­t this week was the bail granted to the Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly, Shahbaz Sharif, by the Lahore High Court. He was facing two references filed by the National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB).

Not surprising­ly, the federal cabinet that met on Thursday expressed its dissatisfa­ction over the Lahore High Court decision and urged NAB to file an appeal against it. In his press conference, Informatio­n Minister Fawad Chaudhry had some harsh words about NAB’s accountabi­lity process.

“It is ironic that both Shahbaz Sharif and former president Asif Ali Zardari who had [allegedly] committed billions of rupees corruption are moving like free men while a poor person is jailed for two years for stealing a bird”, he complained. There is some clarity on the economic front after the meeting between Prime Minister Imran Khan and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde. Pakistan is now set to enter its 13th Fund programme, and statements following the meeting suggest that Pakistan will have to accept some tough conditions in return for a bailout.

We do not know how the policies of this government in the economic and political domain will be affected if tensions between India and Pakistan escalate in the wake of the Pulwama attack. According to Indian reports, Jaish-eMohammad (JeM) had claimed responsibi­lity for the vile deed. India was quick to link the incident with Pakistan and vowed retaliatio­n.

Worryingly, while condemning the attack, the US singled out Pakistan in its statement late Thursday night even though the investigat­ion is in its preliminar­y stages. “The United States calls on Pakistan to end immediatel­y the support and safe haven provided to all terrorist groups operating on its soil, whose only goal is to sow chaos, violence and terror in the region”, agency reports said. Islamabad had strongly rejected any insinuatio­n that sought to link the attack to Pakistan without any evidence. “We have always condemned acts of violence anywhere in the world”, the Foreign Office said.

In New Delhi, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said in a press conference on Friday that the Indian cabinet had decided to initiate steps to ensure complete diplomatic isolation of Pakistan. The jingoist campaign against Pakistan is high-pitched and venomous. Barkha Dutt, in her opinion piece in ‘The Washington Post’, has asserted that “everything will change after this”.

What will certainly change is the prospect of talks between the two South Asian neighbours, including with reference to the opening of the Kartarpur border for Sikh pilgrims. In recent weeks, internatio­nal concerns regarding the situation in Indian-occupied Kashmir were seen to be rising as India continued to use force against the Kashmiri people.

-The writer is a senior journalist.

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