The conviction of a Brigadier General for conspiring to set up an Islamic caliphate in Pakistan, and more recently the attack on an airbase by militants has led once again to speculation about the country’s stability and the threat it faces from extremist religious groups. Is the speculation justified? Do religious extremist groups really pose a threat to Pakistan’s stability?
Surprisingly, the real threat to Pakistan lurks not in the madrassas and the mosques but rather in chambers not usually thought of as treacherous.
I know this because over the last two years I have campaigned across Pakistan. In remote impoverished rural areas I’ve talked to villagers and farmers. I’ve held corner meetings in sprawling urban slums and sipped tea with truck drivers at roadside cafes. I’ve addressed large rallies in the rumoured terrorist recruiting grounds of Southern Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FATA. And nowhere have I come across anyone who has expressed support for any of these groups or their actions.
The question that needs to be asked is: Can any group or groups that have virtually no support amongst the general population pose a threat to Pakistan? Yes, they can wreak havoc and spill blood, but in the end, without popular support, they cannot succeed.
Take the case of the Brigadier General. His conviction was for links - which he denied - with ‘extremist groups’. The ‘group’ in this case is widely thought to be the UK based Hizb ut Tahrir. The Hizb approaches influential people in society such as army officers, lawyers, bureaucrats with an intellectual argument that calls for the formation of a global caliphate. Their argument, however is riddled with inconsistency and most of these people are not impressed. I recently met a retired senior army officer in the Southern Punjab city of Bahawalpur who had been approached by the Hizb. He was dismissive in saying that they were not even able to answer some of his most basic questions.
It is this sad reality that is at the root of all, really, all of Pakistan's problems. Terrorism, economic collapse, sectarian violence, insurgencies, crime, and a host of other problems exist today because of the quality of those who run Pakistan.
Many people around the world are concerned about Pakistan. Societies and think tanks publish detailed reports prepared by smart, thoughtful and sincere people with a genuine interest in seeing change. There is a certain grim irony then in realizing that those who are the target audience for these reports - Pakistan’s politicians - do not have the ability or the desire to understand or implement them.
I am an optimist. And I know that Pakistan has a future. But those who care about it must now unite and bring a laser like focus to the central problem that it confronts: How to bring the best, the most competent and the most sincere of its people into politics?
Nadeem M Qureshi is Chairman of Mustaqbil Pakistan
This article has been published previously in Khaleej Times
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