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Dangerous majoritarianism

ghazi52

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Mar 21, 2007
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Dangerous majoritarianism

Muhammad Amir Rana

PAKISTAN is unable to follow the path of Saudi Arabia or Indonesia, which are progressing slowly and steadily with religious reforms. Both countries present contrasting visions of religious reform but are ultimately opening up their respective societies, enhancing governance, and improving their international image.

In both countries, the leadership promotes religious reforms. In Saudi Arabia, the reform process is slower than the one in Indonesia, primarily because Indonesian civil society supports the state’s efforts in this direction.

In contrast, the Pakistani leadership needs to be more aware of the importance of religious reforms in navigating a changing world. Instead, it aligns itself with extremist forces, gaining ideological and political power while empowering these groups to use violence against communal and sectarian minorities.

The nexus between the power or ruling elite and the establishment in Pakistan is not new. It has been studied extensively by local and international scholars. However, what remains constant is the elite’s appeasement of extremists and their inclination to use them for political purposes. While social factors have contributed to the extremist mindset in Pakistan, the power elite’s actions are often criminal, eroding the societal fabric.

Incidents like the one in Madyan, Swat, lynchings in Punjab, and vandalism against the Ahmadi community during Eid indicate that extremism in society is reaching dangerous levels. Taking the law into one’s own hands has become standard practice for charged mobs and activists of radical religious groups. The administration hardly attempts to restrain them, and simply registers cases against the suspects. People with clout then come forward and help the suspects and their families financially and with legal aid. Once they are released, they become heroes in their communities. This has become the norm after every blasphemy-related tragedy that involves lynchings and mob violence.

The system is paralysed when it encounters the challenge of religiously motivated mob violence.
A majoritarian mindset is at play, with the state a mere spectator. In Punjab and urban Sindh, the Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan is fanning the flames of extremism. Although other religiously motivated actors have acted in a similar fashion in the past, the TLP’s rhetoric is now so powerful that they cannot compete.

The TLP has transformed itself into an extensive phenomenon, reflecting a mindset shared by perhaps most of society. This majority is religiously and politically disillusioned, falling into the trap of political populism and growing increasingly resentful of the power elites. Paradoxically, state institutions endorse this majority mindset and side with the extremists when issues of religious sentiment arise.

The common man cannot fully comprehend the dichotomy of the state, and his anger against the latter is increasing. However, the TLP and other religious parties have their constituencies in the semi-urban areas, and among low-income groups, while a significant portion of the middle class, too, exhibits the same mindset. While the middle class tends to avoid direct involvement in violence, they fully support the actions of the fanatics. These radical religious groups draw their core strength from middle-class youth, who serve as keyboard warriors, developing political strategies and evolving organisational tactics.

The power elites do not feel much threat from the core leadership of extremist groups because they maintain open communication channels and often interact with them. They are more concerned about the keyboard warriors and seek to regulate virtual spaces. They have similar fears about social media activists from populist political parties and nationalist political parties in the peripheries.

The power elites believe that more control over social media, building firewalls, and tightening legal regulations will eliminate dissent in all forms. Social media is merely a medium, but despite reviewing its policies and practices vis-à-vis extremism and extremist parties, the establishment is more interested in controlling it. Apart from controlling social media spaces, the state has taken cosmetic policy measures to deal with extremism. Until the power elites do not end their appeasement approach and address the core issue and encourage religious reforms as Saudi Arabia and Indonesia are doing, extremism will continue to shape an ugly majoritarian mindset.

The whole system seems paralysed once it encounters the challenge of religiously motivated mob violence. The federal and provincial governments avoid even commenting on such incidents and leave it to the establishment and local administrations to deal with such cases on their own. The governments are scared that their involvement in such cases would divert the public’s anger towards them. This attitude encourages the extremists.

The police and lower judiciary deal with such cases carelessly and, in many cases, leave loopholes in their decisions that ultimately benefit the culprits. The higher judiciary has taken such issues more seriously, but its reviews and decisions have failed to trigger any major change in society.

The state institutions need to break the support system of the extremists. Apart from the power elites’ appeasement policy and the system’s flaws in dealing with the menace, two major sources of support are encouraging the people to take the law into their own hands.

First is the influential class. Mostly, they are local businessmen and lawyers who provide financial and legal aid to the criminals on behalf of the rest of the community. Second are the mosque imams, who are directly or indirectly affiliated with the extremist groups; once such incidents happen, they invite these groups for their help. The extremist groups take this as an opportunity to increase their influence and take command of matters ranging from negotiating with the administration to dealing with legal matters. The extremist groups have lawyers’ wings, influencing the courts during the proceedings.

In such a society, where the state and society nurture and protect an infrastructure of extremism, who can hope for change? Religious reforms in Pakistan will remain a dream for a long time.

The writer is a security analyst.

Published in Dawn, June 23rd, 2024
 

krash

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This is an empty article. It points out secondary issues and gives no solutions.

The foremost issue with regards to religious intolerance in the country is the general Pakistani population's willful corruption and then use of religion (much like everything else in the country) to exact gross injustices in pursuit of their own two-bit emotional, personal, and/or political agendas coupled with the violent silencing of any voices of dissent. Ask here if any support the abrogation of the draconian and absolutely un-Islamic blasphemy laws.
 
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Oscar

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This is an empty article. It points out secondary issues and gives no solutions.

The foremost issue with regards to religious intolerance in the country is the general Pakistani population's willful corruption and then use of religion (much like everything else in the country) to exact gross injustices in pursuit of their own two-bit emotional, personal, and/or political agendas coupled with the violent silencing of any voices of dissent. Ask here if any support the abrogation of the draconian and absolutely un-Islamic blasphemy laws.
Unfortunately - I have to come to realize that there is no solution.

Considering that even back without the days of Social media Pakistanis were willing to trash their own streets and businesses just because of random incidents in the middle east tells you that all the frustration with the systematic failures of their leadership (and themselves as a nation and peoples) are attached onto these sentiments.

Almost like if all those frustrations and negative sentiments were an organism then the religious piece is like a parasitic fungus controlling it all towards whatever direction the mullah wants it to go.
 

JaneBhiDoYaaron

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Only solution is enforce rule of law, unwind some of Zia’s crazy policies like blasphemy and make people more tolerant and focus on real math and science education. If things works out Pakistan can be back on track in decade or two. It takes generation to change behavior else I don’t see solution.
 

Solomon2

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Unfortunately - I have to come to realize that there is no solution.
Your values are what you are willing to fight for, Oscar.

The solution, then, is quite obvious.
 

Solomon2

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I also don’t pick battles not worth winning.
I have my country 🇺🇲 that took me in and nurtured me beyond my expectations to focus on.
So the issue isn't, "there is no solution" but that you don't want to be a part of it.

You know, I could just spend my time on my family and career. I'd make more money that way. But I spend a small amount of my time here. Because some part of me cares about Pakistan and seeking the betterment of Pakistanis. Even though some people would consider it a "battle not worth winning."

Pakistan isn't not my country, never was, so it's not for me to act, but a fellow like you - you could do more.
 

Oscar

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So the issue isn't, "there is no solution" but that you don't want to be a part of it.

You know, I could just spend my time on my family and career. I'd make more money that way. But I spend a small amount of my time here. Because some part of me cares about Pakistan and seeking the betterment of Pakistanis. Even though some people would consider it a "battle not worth winning."

Pakistan isn't not my country, never was, so it's not for me to act, but a fellow like you - you could do more.
Depends on the cup and luxury - and without knowing my exact history I don’t believe you have any context to provide definitive statements on the bold
 

Guru Dutt

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why are Pakistani's worried for what is hapenning in name of TAUHIN E RISALAT/BHLAPHEMI as Pakistan was made after massecre of thousands of hindus in east and west pakistan

which were started by M A Jinnah and Shheed Shourwardy directed /organised muslim mobs on 14-08-1946 to massacrre of hindus in calcutta to trigger wide spread masacrres in british indian bengal a bihar while there messengers /students of Alighar Muslim University and many communists took this messege across to whats now pakistan to trigger such massecrre so to force congress to accept Partition


so whats hapenning in Pakistan today is just instalments of the fixed deposit British and Muslim Fedual elite made with help of Muslim Leuge headed by M A Jinnah starting way back in early 1940s when british got petrified after fall of berlin to the red army and saw how close red army is to Iran which was then sole Crude Oil producer and after that was afghanistan and then India the crown jewel of British raj hence they made Pakistan plan whose initial map was also made in London

as they what you sow is what you reap
 

VCheng

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This is an empty article. It points out secondary issues and gives no solutions.

The foremost issue with regards to religious intolerance in the country is the general Pakistani population's willful corruption and then use of religion (much like everything else in the country) to exact gross injustices in pursuit of their own two-bit emotional, personal, and/or political agendas coupled with the violent silencing of any voices of dissent. Ask here if any support the abrogation of the draconian and absolutely un-Islamic blasphemy laws.

The solution begins with repealing the Objectives Resolution. Is that realistically possible?
 

JaneBhiDoYaaron

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I also don’t pick battles not worth winning.
I have my country 🇺🇲 that took me in and nurtured me beyond my expectations to focus on.
Agreed but we as expats also feel for our birth place so all we can do is educate are still there, invest and promote.
 

krash

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Unfortunately - I have to come to realize that there is no solution.

Or we have to hit rock bottom. The point where the complicit majority will not be able to fleece the scraps that it is still happy with right now. We have done it once and do seem to have a knack for it. No guarantees of course, we have also failed before.

The solution begins with repealing the Objectives Resolution. Is that realistically possible?

Not when the majority in the country is still afraid of, opposed to, and/or indifferent to questioning the cruelty subjected on its own people or the fabricated religious arguments, which ironically constitute bidah and hence are haram. The rabid and emotionally charged horde of illiterate animals, supported and allowed by the powers that be for their own political gains elsewhere, is plenty to dissuade any voices of dissent.

Otherwise, the law and the "religious" argument can be picked apart in minutes by anyone still in control of their faculties.

I don't get it. The whole point of democracy is the majority decides, no? Do you want minoritarianism? We have that already

You have to couple that with freedom of speech and expression to allow reason to regulate the majoritarian discourse. Without it you have authoritarian majoritarianism masquerading as a democracy until the society's inevitable demise. Plenty of examples from human history and current affairs for both.
 
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PakFactor

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The solution begins with repealing the Objectives Resolution. Is that realistically possible?

Fazul Rehman, be what he is, tried to tone down the blasphemy law; in the end, he backtracked as he couldn't control his devil spawns coming out of his madrassas.

Can it be changed? Yes, but it will require significant efforts. Is the state ready to take the lead and make the necessary sacrifices to establish its writ in a way it doesn't have to rely on religious fanatics as attack dogs?
 

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