http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/the-newspaper/editorial/the-new-left-revisited-930


The New Left revisited 
By Asha Amirali 
Tuesday, 09 Mar, 2010 


 
Today, the Left - particularly in Punjab - must make clear its commitment to a 
new social contract in which all nations within the state of Pakistan are 
considered equal and given rights and resources accordingly. - Photo by AP 

The much-maligned and weakened Pakistani Left often comes in for more than its 
fair share of prescriptive remedies. 


One such critical dose appeared on these pages on March 3 in which Mr Muhammad 
Ali Siddiqi expressed a cautious optimism about the recent merger of a handful 
of leftist groups, which has resulted in the formation of the Workers Party 
Pakistan (WPP). 

He also, however, advised the 'New Left' to 'not jump on the anti-American 
bandwagon', recognise that the real enemy facing Pakistan today is religious 
militancy, welcome foreign investment, and follow the lead of New Labour in the 
UK and repackage itself given the realities of the post-Cold War world. 

To start with the anti-Americanism aspect, I completely agree with Mr Siddiqi 
that a new leftist political formation in Pakistan must not limit itself to 
hollow slogans. There is an urgent need to objectively analyse the 
contradictions that exist within Pakistani society and put together a political 
programme that responds to them. 

Not all of Pakistan's problems can be blamed away, and Mr Siddiqi is right that 
there is an immediate need to debunk the anti-American hate-mongering of the 
right, with all its emphasis on waging war against kufr. But what most liberals 
and others who decry the Left's anti-Americanism fail to see is that the Left 
is not anti-American, it is anti-imperialist. Those are two completely 
different political positions - the Left's fight is not with a particular 
culture but with any state that seeks to destroy, coerce and manipulate others 
to its own advantage. 

Most Pakistani people, and indeed people the world over, resent American 
interventionism in their affairs. The Left can only be a force for genuine 
emancipation if it heeds this sentiment and builds and articulates an 
alternative vision which privileges the democratisation of the global order. 
And while it is obvious, there is no harm in repeating a truth: without genuine 
democratisation of the global order, democratisation within national boundaries 
is impossible. 

A second but related point is the policy regime that the international 
financial institutions have championed in Pakistan over the past three decades. 
The claim that the Pakistani people will benefit from uninhibited flows of 
foreign capital and technology has amassed little evidence in its favour. 

Throughout the tenure of Musharraf and Shaukat Aziz, Pakistan experienced an 
extraordinary influx of capital and new information technologies. The result 
was a temporary bubble of growth which burst, leaving in its wake sharpened 
inequality and an economy teetering on termite-ridden stilts. The global 
financial crisis followed soon after and made clear just how viable and 
pro-people the radical free market capitalist model is.There is no doubt that 
Pakistan needs to employ its unemployed millions and increase productivity 
across all sectors, but the trickle-down effects from foreign capital have yet 
to show themselves in most of the Third World. So instead, why should the Left 
in Pakistan not look at the experiments being attempted in Latin America which 
reject the neo-liberal paradigm and emphasise growth and integration strategies 
that put people and the environment first? It seems the logical thing to do. 

Finally, and very crucially, the greatest problem facing Pakistan at the 
present time is not religious militancy, but fragmentation along ethnic lines. 
Balochistan is (still) burning and a wide cross-section of the Baloch people 
are increasingly drawn towards separatism. Sindhi nationalist sentiment, while 
currently muted because the PPP is in office, is nevertheless simmering below 
the surface. A large number of Pakhtuns view the unfolding civil war-like 
situation in Pakhtunkhwa as a war in which a conspiring and duplicitous state 
treats Pakhtuns as nothing more than pawns on its chessboard. 

Historically the Left and ethnic-nationalists struggled together against the 
unitary state. Today, the Left - particularly in Punjab - must make clear its 
commitment to a new social contract in which all nations within the state of 
Pakistan are considered equal and given rights and resources accordingly. 

Religious militancy is growing, yes. It is instilling hatred and violence and 
negating all that progressive forces want to see realised in Pakistan. However, 
I believe it is essential for the Left to move beyond the liberal refrain about 
the Islamists constituting an existential threat to the Pakistani state. 
Islamism has established roots in parts of Pakistani society largely because of 
its historic patronage by the military establishment. Today it sustains these 
roots because of continued support by the state, the presence of western troops 
in the region, and the end of imagination that afflicts society. 

Military operations against people who have been alienated from the social and 
political mainstream will not reduce the appeal of radical Islamist ideology. 
We must focus on causes rather than react to symptoms: the 'real enemy', as Mr 
Siddiqi put it, is not religious militancy, rather, it is the militaristic 
state and its Islam-centric ideology, the nastiest but perfectly logical 
manifestation of which is the Taliban. The 'New Left' in Pakistan will do well 
to create consensus amongst progressive forces on these most basic of issues. 
However, the clear differences between Mr Siddiqi's point of view and the one 
propounded here indicate that such a consensus might be difficult. 

Those who, in Mr Siddiqi's words, are not sure how they "feel about the word 
'Left'", are unlikely to support a strongly anti-imperialist, anti-neoliberal 
programme. Unfortunately though, meaningful change is only possible if we 
travel this difficult path. There are no shortcuts.

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