Our Man in Islamabad
By
Mahboob A Khawaja
Contemporary
Pakistani is divided. Its leaderless population is being exploited by
neo-colonial feudal lords looting the people of their socio-economic, moral and
political values.
This
year's elections didn't change a status-quo symbolized by foreign-dictated
governance. Nawaz Sharif is the replacement to Asif Ali Zardari, but Sharif was
an integral part of Zardari's regime.
The
nation will pay with torment and suffer the insane rages of egomaniac rulers -
the political gangsters that show the "right man" syndrome in its
most naked form.
In my
book Pakistan: Enigma of Change, in the late 1990s, I envisaged a
new beginning led by educated and intelligent leaders from a new generation.
Change can only come through men of new ideas, a new visionary leadership of
integrity and a public movement for change.
For
almost two decades, Pakistan's capacity for change has been badly fractured as
its moral, intellectual and political consciousness were derailed and
undermined by the few.
For
several decades, military coups and interventions have eroded the moral and
intellectual thread of society. Pakistan and its people are the victim of this
prolonged, cruel and unending tragedy.
The
generals and their accomplices, the so-called feudal politicians live in
different worlds - not able to see the urgency for change.
The
global community views them with mistrust and discord, not viable entities of
the international system. The irrational system of governance propelled by the
few does not offer any rational context to political change and reformation unless
there is another bloody outburst challenging the insanity with more vigorous
form of tragic insanity.
Nobody
thinks of Pakistan, its national interests or the interests of the people. More
than 40 years have been stolen from the precious lifeline of the nation of
Muslim Pakistan; yet, nobody was ever charged with a crime nor punished for
their treachery and monstrous actions against the freedom and integrity of the
country.
East
Pakistan now Bangladesh, was lost and surrendered to India because of the plan
by the then military-political rulers of the nation in 1971. But since the
military took over the reins, unthinking people will come to occupy the highest
offices.
Power
politics in Pakistan have become an outcome of institutionalized corruption,
conspiracies, killings, and treachery to the national interests. The generals,
politicians and assemblies are all the outcome of this flourishing industry.

















