http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/opinion/from-indonesia-to-pakistan-race-politics-is-rearing-its-ugly-head/576681

>From Indonesia to Pakistan, Race Politics Is Rearing Its Ugly Head
Pankaj Mishra | March 05, 2013

 JG Illustration 
 



The recent slaughter of Shiites in Pakistan is another grisly reminder of the 
perilous condition of its minorities. Indeed, in Pakistan and Indonesia, two 
countries with the largest Muslim population, both of which are in the midst of 
a fraught experiment with electoral democracy after decades of military rule, 
murderous assaults on Shiites, Christians and Ahmadis by majoritarian Sunni 
fanatics have become routine.

As a report last week by Human Rights Watch claimed, the Indonesian government 
has shown a “deadly indifference to the growing plight of Indonesia’s religious 
minorities.” Political leaders in Pakistan, too, are guilty of the same.

Successful mass mobilizations against autocratic rule in Indonesia and 
Pakistan, followed by free elections, raised hopes of a new civil society. So 
why have both countries witnessed the opposite phenomenon — the rise of uncivil 
society?

The exponential rise in violence and bigotry is often blamed on the deep — and 
very nasty — state within the two countries: army and intelligence officials 
who helped set up extremist groups and now use them to wield power.

Islam is also held culpable, even though its conservative varieties, denoted 
superficially by the proliferation of veils and long beards, have long been 
apparent in both countries, partly as the result of urbanization and the loss 
of traditionalist Sufi-inflected faiths favored by a majority in the 
multicultural pasts of both Indonesia and Pakistan.

However, the obsession with the deep state’s incurable malignity or Islam’s 
menacing sociopolitical manifestations, which actually range from Wahhabi 
blowhards to relatively sagacious televangelists, obscures how elected 
politicians, in the absence of substantive democracy, cynically deploy radical 
groups to practice power politics.

The government in Pakistan’s Punjab province, which is run by the Pakistan 
Muslim League (N), one of Pakistan’s two main parties, reportedly paid a 
monthly stipend to Malik Ishaq, who was just detained in connection with a 
bombing that killed almost 90 people. PML (N)’s arrangements with Ishaq’s 
banned Shiite-killing outfit, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, are in place for the elections 
due this year; and, as a likely harvester of votes, Ishaq enjoys near-perfect 
immunity.

Mainstream politics in Indonesia, as in Pakistan, were free of murderous 
Islamic extremists well after independence in the late 1940s. It was an 
insecure dictator, Suharto, who inaugurated the Islamization of Indonesia, a 
constitutionally secular state, in an attempt to give himself legitimacy and 
redirect the growing appeal of political Islam, part of a worldwide trend in 
the 1980s.

But the lifting of restrictions on political activity since Suharto’s fall in 
1998 brought other actors on stage, including: the now-suppressed terrorist 
outfit Jemaah Islamiyah, which was involved in the Bali bombings in 2002; the 
Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), a militia that tries to regulate the morals of 
Indonesians by attacking massage parlors and nightclubs; and the Prosperous 
Justice Party (PKS), which won 9 percent of the popular vote in national 
elections in 2009.

Most importantly, many mainstream parties with secular traditions have gone 
garishly Islamic in a desperate attempt to distract voters. Local governments 
have enacted harsh Shariah laws while the central government turns a blind eye 
to attacks by thugs on churches.
It doesn’t help that political parties are basically patronage-dispensing 
machines for old and new elites, with the capture of state power as their main 
aim. Ideologies and principles rarely matter in what is seen as a zero-sum game 
in which votes are aggressively bartered — when not literally bought.

In this dog-eat-dog world, standing up politically for the Shiites and Ahmadis 
can be more trouble than it’s worth; and it’s easier to bet on the possibility 
that the rabid anti- Shiites might just bring in a few votes in places 
traditionally dominated by Shiite landlords.
Illiberal politics pays — and not just in an Islamic country. A purely formal 
democracy, one not underpinned by institutions and notions of justice and 
fairness, can breed monsters anywhere.

Indeed, India’s prime minister-in-waiting Narendra Modi, whose alleged 
complicity in the deaths of almost 2,000 Muslims in his state in 2002 seems to 
help rather than hinder him, is South Asia’s true master of the brutal calculus 
of sectarian politics; his perfectly calibrated callousness toward religious 
minorities and the poor is now matched by brimming business-friendliness that 
endears him to big Indian conglomerates.

Democracy is undermined not so much by Islam, or for that matter Hindu 
extremism, as by ruthlessly self-interested elites who hijack the political 
process, using all available means to secure their dominance.

Their old axis of violence, cronyism and corruption is susceptible to challenge 
by a genuinely social-democratic party or movement. But essential ingredients 
for such a challenge seem to be in short supply in Indonesia and Pakistan.

For decades their ruling class systematically destroyed all progressive 
opposition and even the conception of political life, in which nongovernmental 
organizations, women’s groups, peasant associations, trade unions or empowered 
local governments patiently create democracy from below.

In their place, the two countries have populist parties and individuals vending 
miracles, like the PKS or Pakistan’s Movement for Justice, led by the famous 
ex- cricketer Imran Khan, which present themselves as anti-establishment and 
profess to offer instantly honest and truly Islamic government to both the 
harried middle class and the militantly disaffected poor.

They are soon compromised by their apparent proximity to the venal 
establishment. Nevertheless, there are always enough people who, recoiling from 
everyday experiences of predatory capitalism, graft-ridden political 
institutions, harsh poverty and joblessness, seek recourse in the practice of 
“true” Islam.

This would be unremarkable — Islam will never cease to signify an alternative 
moral and political order — if growing rage over a grossly iniquitous system 
wasn’t channelled so frequently into savage assaults on various infidels. 

As leaked cables from the US Embassy in Pakistan 2009 pointed out, “poor and 
underdeveloped regions” in rural Punjab and Sindh are “increasingly the 
recruiting and training ground for extremism and militancy.”

“Unlike in the recent past, the poor and jobless youth are no longer cut off 
from the outside world”; they can see “the wealth and corruption that exist 
outside their immediate circles.”

One day, this dyad of dupes and extremists may well be regarded as a byproduct 
of a particularly unstable and grim phase in the evolution of democracy. But 
that day will come only if democracy amounts to something more than adult 
franchise and ceases to be a way of further empowering the rich and the 
powerful. In the meantime, the working relationship between politicians and 
communities of sectarian hate can only grow stronger.

Bloomberg

Pankaj Mishra is a Bloomberg View columnist, based in London and Mashobra, 
India. The opinions expressed are his own.

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