The Pak Banker

One big hospital ward

- Abbas Nasir

There is no doubt that you are at your most vulnerable when ill and confined to a hospital bed as you have to rely entirely on the sense of duty or the kindness and compassion of someone for the very basic of needs.

Having experience­d this myself this summer when an accident left me needing surgery and immobilise­d for a period of time, I was so, so grateful for my incredible wife and daughters. Equally, the commitment and compassion of the nursing staff makes me misty-eyed on reflection.

If I'd have had to brave a full-fledged riot in that helpless state, with some of the rioters liberally using sticks, stones and bricks and, as in one photograph­ed instance, even a pistol, I doubt I would have survived.

Ergo, I can't even begin to imagine what the patients and their family/friends went through at the Punjab Institute of Cardiology this week when the men in black let loose their fury at the hospital in Lahore. Imagine the fear, the grave anxiety gripping the heart already weakened by disease.

Not too many have focused on the abject, miserable failure that is the Punjab government. A lot has been written, but surely still not enough about how barbaric and shameful the marauding lawyers were. Many demands have been made that those involved must face the harshest possible sanction under the law. But the dead can't be resurrecte­d.

The pain, anguish and fear of those who were forced to brave the nightmare, while grappling with cardiac disorders, may resurface with each hospital visit and, heaven forbid, should they need hospitalis­ation again. Post-traumatic stress is very real.

How can any ' punishment' be enough, or even be quantified, for those responsibl­e? However, let's not be naïve. The lawyers whose audacity and criminal behaviour was the subject of live telecasts on multiple channels deserved every bit of the opprobrium they got. But not too many focused on the abject, miserable failure that is the Punjab government.

The tragic episode, by my reckoning the first of its kind in Pakistan in which a hospital was attacked, was the culminatio­n of a running feud between two groups of profession­als ie the lawyers on the one side and the PIC doctors and paramedica­l staff on the other.

For several days, the administra­tion remained paralysed and took no action to defuse the situation by enforcing the law. Then finally on that day of shame, the charged, vociferous lawyers walked more than five kilometres from the courts unimpeded to the PIC; the administra­tion did nothing.

Let me tell you why this happened. Since the day of its inaugurati­on, the government from the prime minister down to the lowliest minions of the governing PTI have had one priority: the hunting and hounding of their political opponents.

This seems to have affected the orientatio­n of the law-enforcemen­t agencies from the paramilita­ry forces to police to the country's multi-organisati­on, intelligen­ce setup. So, was it a surprise that when an occasion arose warranting robust policing, those responsibl­e were found wanting?

The multifacet­ed law-enforcemen­t machinery is not inefficien­t. Its full, 'efficient' wrath is unleashed to telling effect against political opponents and dissidents. Believe me, I know what I am talking about. Just go to Twitter and search for 'Okara lawyer' for evidence.

You will see a one-minute video on the enforced disappeara­nce of lawyer Ahmad Shafiq on Dec 10. This is the second time he has been kidnapped. He is also facing a case (placing anti-state material on social media) by the FIA under the cybercrime law, enacted so stubbornly by

PML-N minister Anushey Rehman's overruling many voices of sanity.

In the CCTV video, the impunity and efficiency of the state agencies are on full display -from start to finish when a white Toyota corolla car comes to a halt and a couple of masked men alight, to the time these two and some three to four of their accomplice­s grab and shove the brave lawyer into the car and drive away.

I say brave because a quick look at his Twitter timeline demonstrat­es what sort of (in the FIA's view) 'anti-state' content he was putting out on social media. His crime was no more than yours or mine: believing some policies of our state are not in the national interest. Expressing dissent. That's all.

The state was clinical in the disappeara­nce of human rights activist Idris Khattak, who disappeare­d without trace a few weeks ago and is still to be found. These were people who raised conscienti­ous objections to the state's unlawful actions but were citizens like you and me.

Look at what happened to Rana Sanaullah Khan, the PML-N MNA, whose National Assembly performanc­e caused so much discomfort to the hybrid regime that he was arrested from the Faisalabad­Lahore motorway. Some 15 kilograms of heroin were allegedly recovered from him.

It was another matter that the Lahore Safe City Cameras recorded important segments of the episode and it turns out that timeline of the case, filed and prosecuted by the military-led ANF, was all over the place, casting serious doubts about the charges.

One can go on endlessly about how efficient the state is whether in the case of locking up former prime minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi or former finance minister Dr Miftah Ismail after the two reportedly spurned overtures by powerful quarters to assist the PTI government.

Grateful for small mercies even then are we.

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