The Pak Banker

Great woes befall the state

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Power usually makes people blind and it makes them believe that they will always remain in power, and under this delusion they start thinking of their critics and opponents as threats to their hegemony. Yet in reality no one is indispensa­ble and everyone has to leave the throne at some point in time.

The way the PTI (Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf) government has lashed out at the press and opposition parties reminds one of the brutal military dictator General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq. Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has failed miserably to deliver on any front of governance, has also failed to rise above petty politics amid the Covid-19 crisis.

After arresting the media mogul Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman for the staunch criticism of the PTI government by his publicatio­ns and News TV channel, the government tried to arrest Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, a former prime minister and a stalwart of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N). An accountabi­lity court on Saturday issued non-bailable warrants against Abbasi in a vague case of illegally appointing the managing director and deputy director of Pakistan State Oil.

Abbasi spent seven months in prison for allegedly misusing his powers in an LNG (liquefied natural gas) import agreement, yet nothing was proved against him. Being one of the most honest and intelligen­t politician­s in Pakistan, Abbasi's political stature is taller than people like Imran Khan who are brought into the power corridors by the invisible forces for their own vested interests.

Though Abbasi managed to get pre-arrest bail from the Islamabad High Court, the question remains why the Khan-led PTI government is wasting its energies on a witchhunt against the opposition instead of focusing on waging a battle against the Covid-19 outbreak.

Khan on Monday in an address to the nation seemed still to be misinforme­d regarding the Covid-19 pandemic, saying that the coronaviru­s only kills old and already ill people, whereas the fact of the matter is that regardless of age or illness it can put anyone's life in danger if he or she has a weak immune system.

Instead of telling the masses about how his government plans to face the challenges posed by the global recession due to the pandemic, Khan continued to stress that the state does not have the resources to fight the disease and asked for donations from ordinary Pakistanis at home and overseas.

One wonders who is advising the prime minister to address the nation at the time of such a grave crisis without having any policy or measures at least to ease the panic among the masses.

Khan also still seems confused about the importance of curbing the surge of the pandemic through lockdowns. In fact, he referred to the lockdown in neighborin­g India, and because of his habit of not paying attention to details misquoted Prime Minister Narendra Modi as apologizin­g to his nation for an unplanned lockdown. The truth of the matter is that Modi in a radio address apologized for the inconvenie­nce faced by the poorer segments of his nation as a result of the lockdown but clearly stated that the measure was the only option to contain the spread of the pandemic.

Khan's assumption that lockdowns will cause deaths is also wrong, as even with an empty stomach for a week or two one has a better chance to survive than being the victim of Covid-19.

So in short Khan, as usual, is clueless about the impact this pandemic has had around the globe and keeps telling the masses that we will fight this war with faith and youth. Perhaps he soon will realize that when it comes to survival, faith in religion or unity in society is irrelevant.

The problem is that despite its failure to address the pandemic, this government is only concerned with curbing dissent. The arrest of Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman, the continuous silencing of the media and journalist­s by Khan's regime, and an absolute crackdown against the main opposition parties remain its only achievemen­ts.

When one looks at what this government has achieved there is hardly a laurel to be found for its foreign or economic policies, or even for simply improving governance. At a time when the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has announced that the world has entered a recession due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Khan and his cabinet are still lashing out at their critics, the press and political opponents instead of coming up with a strategy to save the middle and lower middle classes from vanishing in the post-Covid-19 era because of a global recession.

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