[Reader-list] Fwd: [People'sResistance] Karachi rally brief report & pix; Muneer A. Malik update

yasir ~ yasir.media at gmail.com
Sat Dec 15 01:36:09 IST 2007


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Beena Sarwar
Date: Dec 14, 2007 10:58 AM



Having entrenched himself securely in the presidential chair,
Musharraf appears to feel less threatened and has decided to allow
rallies to take place without the police beating up participants. Time
to show the world that there is freedom of association and political
activity before the elections! Nice try. According to an AFP report,
Hina Jillani today told a Congressional hearing that "...the election
that is going to take place on January 8 has very little credibility.
Under Pakistan's constitution and the law, the judiciary oversees the
elections. "A judiciary that lacks the confidence of the people and
has no credibility, how do you think the elections are going to be
credible?" she asked.

The most popular slogan at today's rally in Karachi was the catchy
"Muk gaya tera show Musharraf, Go Musharraf, go Musharraf!" (Your show
is over, Musharraf). He should definitely go – he has no business
being in power, given that his position has no legitimacy – he was
elected while still in uniform by an outgoing assembly with no mandate
to elect him as president for the next five years. But even if he were
to be miraculous out of the equation, the system he represents will
continue – and that is what political parties and 'civil society' have
to address. As long as the military continues to disenfranchise the
people and run the show (bankrolled and supported by Washington for
its own short term interests on 'the war on terror') and as long as
our politicians continue to collude with the system without addressing
the real issues of poverty, unemployment and education that the
majority of Pakistanis face, Musharraf or no Musharraf, we will
continue to lurch from crisis to crisis.

MUNEER MALIK UPDATE: "Muneer Sahib is improving everyday. He even went
to the passport office last Monday to get his passport extended. He
might be discharged from the hospital very soon."

KARACHI RALLY – pix up at http://www.teeth.com.pk/blog/ (thanks Awab)
- Well done, all those who worked so hard on getting together a show
of strength in Karachi. It went smoothly & peacefully. The only
downside was that the hired pickup with speakers leading it often went
too fast (maybe pushed by the police who wanted the rally to end
quickly) and that the event coincided with the Irtiqa seminar on the
judiciary held at the Press Club (because of the rally date change),
presided over by Minhaj Barna (who launched his book of poetry right
before the Live with Talat event).

Protesters started to assemble at Regal Chowk at around 4:00 pm.
Within minutes the crowd swelled up to a few hundred under the
watchful eyes of a dozen or so policemen. Participants shouted slogans
against Musharraf and the Emergency and called for the restoration of
the judiciary and media freedom. One constable watching the spectacle
of diverse flags (including several Pakistan flags) and placards
amidst the din of traffic and full-throated slogans told a journalist,
"In our hearts we say the same thing as you. But what we are on duty
and we can't join you."

The diversity of the participants cut across the divisions of right-
and left-wing politics, ethnicity, class, education and gender. People
from various walks of life present ranged from lawyers, doctors,
engineers, journalists, writers, to labourers, students, and
housewives, as well as the families of the victims of enforced
disappearances in Balochistan, brought to the rally by Baloch Students
Organization (BSO) Azad and their dynamic chaddar-clad central
executive committee member, Karima Baloch.

Several political parties participated, including Pakistan
Tehreek-e-Insaf, Awami Tehreek, PML-N (Shazia Faizi), National
Worker's Party (Yusuf Mastikhan and Usman Baloch), Labour Party of
Pakistan (LPP, Nasir Mansoor), International Socialists, Communist
Mazdoor Kissan Party(CMKP), Pukhtoonkhawa Milli Awami Party (PMAP),
Jamat-e-Islami, and Shabab-e-Milli. Other groups included Islamic
Lawyer Forum, Railway Workers Federation, the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan (HRCP), Aurat Foundation, Women's Action Forum (WAF),
Democratic Labour Action Committee, and the PC Workers Union.

Police officers initially refused to allow the rally participants to
make their way in a procession through the crowded Saddar area to the
Karachi Press Club barely a kilometer down the road, but had obviously
been briefed not to use force. After some negotiations, they allowed
the rally to proceed.

An interesting mix of slogans was heard as leftist and right-wing
parties marched sided by side, ranging from "Asia Surkh Hai!" (Asia is
Red) to religious-oriented slogans. Participants held up placards
featuring images of Che Guevara, the 'non-PCO judges', and the
'disappeared'. "This is the essence of democracy," remarked a
participant.

Akbar Shah, an elderly tourist guide in a shabby shalwar kurta and
tennis shoes standing on the sidewalk raised his hands in appreciation
as the rally turned towards the Press Club and talked aloud to
himself, "Go Musharraf go, so nice, good slogans."

Enthused by the crowd, he accompanied them to the Press Club where
leaders from various parties addressed the gathering from the back of
a hired pick-up vehicle. They condemned the illegitimate usurpation of
power by Musharraf and urged for the restoration of Judiciary which
can be the corner stone for the return of democracy in Pakistan.


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