Shahbaz Sharif’s faux pas

Shahbaz Sharif’s comments asking the Taliban not to attack Punjab have caused a furore in many parts of the country. In imploring the Taliban to not attack the PML-N-ruled Punjab since both had a common enemy in Pervez Musharraf, the Punjab chief minister is being accused of pleading for peace for only his own province. He is being attacked from all directions despite his later claim of having being wronged by journalists who quoted him out of context.

Burnt dreams

Many years ago, during the mid-1980s, I remember a conversation with the great Urdu writer Ashfaq Ahmed. He was then the director-general of the Urdu Science Board in Lahore and had begun his journey towards religion and Sufism. I was keen to know what young people could do when public intellectual icons had sold their souls to dictatorial regimes. Perhaps I sought to understand how, intellectually, a society was prepared for greater and deeper feudalism/tribalism. What I am referring to here is a normative issue rather than a structural problem.

The Steel Mills case

SO the media has now become a tool for better governance.At least this is the impression one gets from the prime minister’s recent sacking of the Pakistan Steel Mills’ (PSM) chairman for his alleged corruption and making the concern lose Rs21bn.Interestingly Moeen Aftab Sheikh was removed even before an inquiry was instituted or a report submitted about his supposed wrongdoings.

The peace puzzle

Modern day media is a strange animal. It is easily excited raises expectations quickly and then just as rapidly dashes them.The excitement focused on the meeting of the Pakistani and Indian prime ministers is a typical example. On the morning of the foreign secretaries’ meeting in Sharm el Sheikh there began a rush of phone calls that increased during the course of the day in which anchorpersons were eager to know what could be obtained from the meeting and why we couldn’t stop talking to India. The tone and tenor of the conversation was similar on the other side as well.

Defence: a grey area

DECISION making in the defence sector is generally a grey area because of the secrecy that surrounds the process. However in decision making environments where political and accountability systems are not strong there is greater vagueness.

Defence: a grey area

DECISION making in the defence sector is generally a grey area because of the secrecy that surrounds the process. However in decision making environments where political and accountability systems are not strong there is greater vagueness.

The lesser evil?

FACEBOOK is a great invention. It allows you to interact with people without having to meet them and have discussions. I accidentally got into a discussion with some on my friends’ list regarding my comment on Gen Musharraf’s current status.

Sarkozy or Putin?

Why couldn’t we see our president like Nicolas Sarkozy as someone who was well meaning despite his scandalous behaviour he asked. More recently a Russian friend asked me why Mr Zardari could not be like Vladimir Putin — using an authoritative style of governance to control the ‘mafia’. So who is our president like — Sarkozy or Putin?

Absence of alternatives

The country is in a state of political economic and social chaos leading us to contemplate the question of finding another political alternative perhaps in the form of a new political party.