[<<Recent events have once again raised the spectre of force and violence
in our fragile polity. The arrests of opposition leaders and political
activists have ignited memories of the decades from the 80s to the 2000s,
when the opposition was found either in jail or in exile. The problems
being faced by the media only heighten the anxiety associated with speech
in the public sphere. Yet, the quest for domination is not over.

In one of the most brazen statements promoting violence, Federal Minister
Faisal Vawda proposed the hanging of five thousand people as a remedy to
the disparate crises facing Pakistan, a move apparently hindered by
‘irritants’ such as the country’s constitution. It seems there is no dearth
among us of those looking forward to a situation where spectacles involving
cruelty will compensate for the undeniable failures at the level of public
policy and governance, pushing society deeper into the vortex of conflict
and uncertainty.

Perhaps the more scary fact is that such fetish for violence is not
restricted to those in power but has a mass appeal in contemporary
Pakistan. We all have grown up in households where the words “latka do
sabko” was as recurrent as discussions on career choices or family gossip.
This latent sentiment that prioritizes the visible suffering of others over
policy orientations has been galvanized by the ruling party; the more the
government chooses to punish its opponents, the more it solidifies a base
that seeks public displays of retribution, tying together the knot of
cruelty and enjoyment.
...
Pakistan is in desperate search for a vision that can initiate a common
political project shared by citizens with varying social, psychological and
economic experiences. Political parties and social movements would have to
propose and initiate a process in which our divided people can recognize
each other not as threats, but as agents propelled by similar reasons and
passions. Only then will we manage to replace suspicion with solidarity,
cruelty with empathy, and coercion with reason. Undoubtedly these are
distant ideals, but we have no option but to hold onto them since the costs
of submitting to reality as it exists appears as a terrifying compromise in
contemporary Pakistan.>>]

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/487609-republic-of-fear?fbclid=IwAR1xAvqoqivWSinuJ6yhzpMSZaGlBGURqknMO31eEhM3bfE34GXHzP7jBS0

Republic of fear

Ammar Ali Jan
The writer is an historian and a member of the Haqooq-e-Khalq Movement.

June 21, 2019

Recent events have once again raised the spectre of force and violence in
our fragile polity. The arrests of opposition leaders and political
activists have ignited memories of the decades from the 80s to the 2000s,
when the opposition was found either in jail or in exile. The problems
being faced by the media only heighten the anxiety associated with speech
in the public sphere. Yet, the quest for domination is not over.

In one of the most brazen statements promoting violence, Federal Minister
Faisal Vawda proposed the hanging of five thousand people as a remedy to
the disparate crises facing Pakistan, a move apparently hindered by
‘irritants’ such as the country’s constitution. It seems there is no dearth
among us of those looking forward to a situation where spectacles involving
cruelty will compensate for the undeniable failures at the level of public
policy and governance, pushing society deeper into the vortex of conflict
and uncertainty.

Perhaps the more scary fact is that such fetish for violence is not
restricted to those in power but has a mass appeal in contemporary
Pakistan. We all have grown up in households where the words “latka do
sabko” was as recurrent as discussions on career choices or family gossip.
This latent sentiment that prioritizes the visible suffering of others over
policy orientations has been galvanized by the ruling party; the more the
government chooses to punish its opponents, the more it solidifies a base
that seeks public displays of retribution, tying together the knot of
cruelty and enjoyment.

The task of theorists and intellectuals cannot be reduced to merely
condemning what is evidently a terrifying tendency in our society. Beyond
the moral outrage we need to explain the structural conditions that produce
a psyche that is indifferent to the suffering of others. This violence has
to be deciphered if we are to present a substantial, rather than merely a
formal, challenge to the existing apparatus of coercion.

One key reason can be located in the experience of modernity that is
specific to colonial and postcolonial societies. Since our societies
entered capitalism under coercion, we never experienced the revolutionary
changes from below, which are essential for a modern, bourgeois society.
Instead, capitalist modernity was imposed on a society that never fully
shed its feudal social relations, even as it became increasing integrated
into global markets. Moreover, the policy of divide and rule strengthened –
and at times even produced – divisions in society, making the possibility
of equal citizenship even more tenuous. The result was the juxtaposition of
multiple tendencies within the same social formation as differences
emanating from class, caste, religion and region were exacerbated rather
than eroding due to the march of modernity.

This context produces a fragmented experience of time and space that
divides disparate individuals living within a specific space. It can
explain why national bonds in postcolonial states are so fragile and
perpetually haunted by a radical emptiness, since the multiple segregations
in society allow others to appear as hostile strangers than as citizens
sharing a similar project.

Yet, this void can be partially stitched through politics by developing a
minimal 'national', 'regional' or 'global' agenda in which different
segments of society can participate collectively. Such a process not only
gives the state its legitimacy, but also propels the transformation of
separated, fragmented individuals into citizens. In other words, people not
only develop relations with anonymous individuals sharing the same project,
but also rediscover themselves as agents that are participating in a
historical project that exceeds the limits of their social origin.

This is why constitutions, political parties and social movements are so
central in developing a common bond that can propel the process of our
collective becoming. Pakistan’s greatest tragedy is that this process was
thwarted by repeated interruptions coups and the opportunism of certain
political elites, resulting in the increasing insularity of our personal
and public life. Our tendency to demonize nearly all social movements as
'foreign conspiracies' reflects how we inhabit a space of hyper
uncertainty, suspicion and anxiety, producing alienated and fragmented
groups rather than providing a sense of community.

Liberals often castigate the Pakistani state for its theocratic tendencies,
particularly due to the poor treatment meted to women and religious
minorities. But at times one feels that the rule of suspicion and
uncertainty is deeper than fidelity to any religious orthodoxy. Remember
that the constitution, which claims to belong to God, has been
suspended/abrogated at will by mere mortals, signaling that perhaps
Pakistan’s political tragedy is that we do not hold anything as sacred, a
condition that is simply masked by the overt religiosity of our public
sphere.

What then is the minimal common substance that stems out of this emptiness?
It is inevitably the primordial sentiment of the fear of others. It takes
the form of the fear of different ethnic or religious communities, of
assertive women, of social movements or anything that threatens the
infinite repetition of an insular existence. This is why movements are
increasingly viewed as conspiracies, since they happen to be foreign to the
survivalist ethos that has gripped our society, producing a mediocre
existence that can hardly be dignified with the word ‘life’.

The only 'national' sentiment bringing us together then is the fear
stemming from the fragmentation and uncertainty that shapes our social
existence. We live in a republic of fear. This fear craves security and
lends energy to the increasing policing and securitization that is
overwhelming our society. Institutions and practices that most fully
correspond to this sentiment assume centrality in the equation outlined.
There is no long-term policy of development, education or even a
well-articulated vision of regional security. Instead, there is a perpetual
readiness to subdue 'threats' that haunt us. But since this fear stems from
a deep absence of a common purpose, it cannot be satisfied by a specific
amount of suppression. Years of authoritarianism, repression, action
against political dissidents and censoring of the media – and yet you have
the Vawdas of this world asking for another five thousand heads. Give them
those and they won’t stop there either, since they are caught in a logic
that demands more in order to cover the emptiness at the heart of our
national life, unleashing a cycle of violence that perpetually exceeds its
own limits.

This is why, in the context of fear, the debate on civilian/the political
versus non-civilians/the non-political is inadequate in describing our
current predicament. It is not just some people in specific institutions
that are impositional (even if we tend to look that way for the most
concentrated expression of this). Instead, what we face is a tendency that
grips our entire society and forces all of us to become participants, since
we lack a language to relate to others other than through the prism of
suspicion. We cannot face this tendency with mere lectures on tolerance or
democracy.

Pakistan is in desperate search for a vision that can initiate a common
political project shared by citizens with varying social, psychological and
economic experiences. Political parties and social movements would have to
propose and initiate a process in which our divided people can recognize
each other not as threats, but as agents propelled by similar reasons and
passions. Only then will we manage to replace suspicion with solidarity,
cruelty with empathy, and coercion with reason. Undoubtedly these are
distant ideals, but we have no option but to hold onto them since the costs
of submitting to reality as it exists appears as a terrifying compromise in
contemporary Pakistan.

Email: [email protected]
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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