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Women Protection Bill !!! Traditional Conflict !!!

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Dr Moeed Pirzada critically discussed the reservations of the Chancellor of Jamia Binoria International, Mufti Naeem. He said this is not right in an Islamic country and many clauses in the Bill are contrary to Quran and Sunnah. While Dr Moeed Pirzada also mentioned mainstream religious parties meeting in Mansoora, Lahore, on March 15 to discuss the next course of action against the conspiracies being hatched by the government. These religious parties belonging to all schools of thought on Saturday rejected the women protection bill recently passed by the Punjab assembly. The announcement was made at the official residence of Maulana Fazlur Rehman in the Ministers Colony here. The meeting was attended by Jamaat-i-Islami emir Sirajul Haq, Awais Noorani, son of late Shah Ahmed Noorani and the leader of Jamiat Ulema Pakistan (JUP-N), Dr Sahibzada Abul Khair Mohammad Zubair (JUP-N), Allama Arif Wahidi of Islami Tehreek of Allama Sajid Naqvi and Allama Abdul Aziz Hanif of Markazi Jamiat Ahle Hadis led by Senator Prof Sajid Mir.

Tonight With Moeed Pirzada: Invention in Psychology

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Dr Moeed Pirzada in this program segment gave interesting analysis on Washington Post’s Front page Editorial in which it praised as how a Pakistani Doctor Hassan Asif is transforming Psychological issues with New Cutting Edge Technology. While talking to Dr. Hassan Asif he said that Scientists have long known that the most forward part of the brain is the seat of higher cognition. But only in recent years have they been able to link certain mental disorders with specific brain circuits, the connections between neurons that are responsible for every one of our thoughts, emotions and actions. Dr Hassan Asif’s tools enable him to more precisely diagnose his patients’ problems and, ultimately, to treat them. Neuroscience’s inroads have emboldened a small but growing number of clinicians and researchers to reject diagnostic protocols on which mental health practitioners have relied for years — the cataloguing of symptoms such as sadness, fatigue, loss of appetite — and instead focus on finding biological clues associated with these symptoms in a blood test, a brain image or a saliva sample.

Tonight With Moeed Pirzada: Syrian Truce Deal

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Dr Moeed Pirzada with Prominent Foreign Security Affairs Analyst Professor Dr. Hassan Askari Rizvi critically discussed the future prospects of  this truce agreement as The United States and Russia reached agreement on a partial Syria truce to go into effect after intensive Russian-American negotiations in Geneva culminated in a phone call Feb. 22 between US President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Those Syrian parties and armed groups (minus IS and Jabhat al-Nusra) that accept the “cessation of hostilities” will not be targeted by the Syrian-, Russian- or US-led anti-IS coalition militaries, the joint agreement states. The United States and Russia, which co-chair the International Syria Support Group (ISSG) cease-fire task force, will map out where Jabhat al-Nusra, IS and other groups are and set up a communications hotline in order to try to adjudicate if and when there are violations of the truce terms, the State Department said, as officials acknowledged there were still procedural details to be finalized and much mistrust and skepticism about a way out after five years of brutal conflict. “We are all aware of the significant challenges ahead,” Kerry said Feb. 22 in a statement welcoming the agreement. “This is a moment of promise, but the fulfillment of that promise depends on actions.”Putin, announcing the deal in a special broadcast on Russian television, expressed optimism that it could help end the Syrian crisis.“I’m convinced that the joint actions agreed with the American side are able to radically transform the crisis situation in Syria,” Putin said in remarks posted to the Kremlin website.

Tonight With Moeed Pirzada: Nuclear Security Summit 2016

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In this part Dr. Moeed Pirzada along with Nuclear Expert Dr Maria Sultan who is also Director General of SASSI discussed different aspects of the coming Nuclear Summit in Washington where Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and PM India Narendra Modi will likely take part along with other 40 Heads of State. This summit also holds importance as President Obama’s initiative behind these Nuclear Summits which he proposed in 2010 as an important source to build a Mechanism for Reporting and Maintaining Nuclear Technology. Guest of the show Dr Maria Sultan discussed the initiative of this Nuclear Security Summit and President Obama’s stance to put a mutual effort to take measures to maintain and report the enrichment of Uranium and Plutonium. Dr Maria Sultan thinks that President Obama somehow failed to achieve his targets in these series of Nuclear Security Summit .

Controlling the Media:We want to look Great; Only Good News Please!

Moeed Pirzada | FB Blog |

So the argument goes that we can use ‘the medium’ to send the message across to the world that we are bold enough, strong enough and determined enough to hang a killer; that we have a determinition to implement the law but we will block ‘the medium’ the same medium, we need for sending the message if it reports back to us that some sections of the society react to it, consider it unfair, are blocking roads, and unfortunately thousands have gathered to honor this killer. So now ‘News’ in Pakistan is something we like or we do but is not something that happens…?

On 4th January 2011, few minutes past 4pm, when this misguided zealot, Mumtaz Qadri, took 28 shots at the then governor of Punjab, Salman Taseer, I, Nasim Zehra and Fahd Hussain were all at Dunya News TV. If today’s logic has to be accepted then our channel should have suppressed the news, kept our mouths shut; should have denied that high and mighty Governor of Punjab has been shot dead by his own body guard; public should have sat in their living rooms or offices and suspected Taliban, Indians, NDS, CIA or his enemies in Punjab government as many in the PPP did.

But No, Fahd Hussain, the then Director News Dunya, went on air asking me and Nasim to join to analyze what happened. I was the first to suspect, to speculate that this must be the work of religious zealots; my reasoning was clear that only inconspicuous fanatic hidden in the governors’ security detail – someone not being seen as a threat – could have done it and given the personalized rhetoric against the governor over the last few weeks this must have happened. As news poured in, minute by minute, we were proved right. Given the legacy or the curse of the free media which we inherited from a so called ‘dictator’ by 4.30pm, whole Pakistan, the whole world knew that Governor of Punjab, of the largest province in Pakistan has been shot dead by his own guard, who was acting alone.

Over the next few years, while speaking to parliamentarians and officers in universities like NDU in Pakistan and while speaking to students of Georgetown and Harvard and other places I always gave the example of this tragic incident as the power of Pakistani media to report the truth, to describe what happened. I explained that in our childhood, growing under the Frankenstein unleashed by Gen. Zia and in the lives of our parents, as long as we can remember, we in this country listened to BBC, to Akashwani, to Radio Moscow, to Voice of Germany, Voice of America and all kinds of ‘voices from every where’ like schizophrenics – because we didn’t have our own voice – to know what might have happened in our own city, may be next bloc.

I remember whenever something ‘political’ was happening, in Karachi, in Lahore, in Sindh, my father, a doctor in Mirpur, least interested in politics, would switch to ‘Saer Been’ a BBC radio program, that was broadcasted from London, at 8.15 pm Pakistan time to know what is happening in his own country – and sometimes in a neighboring town. Given weak and fluctuating signals, we would move, with a radio glued to our ears, from room to room, sometimes from street to street to get a good earshot of what BBC was saying. But in the last few years, in seminar after seminar, I told students in Pakistan and across the world that we in Pakistan have broken this ‘trust deficit’ and now we can tell ourselves about ourselves and that we have kicked out BBC and CNN and VOA and off-course ‘Akashvani’; and we are proud that we are getting a bit more confident, a bit more mature and lot more sovereign — because what is ‘sovereignty’ without the ‘freedom to know thyself’.

Now over the last few months, we are increasingly returning back to our ‘primitive selves’; the hapless nation, informed by Ptv, that did not know in 1970 what Bengalis were thinking of Punjabis and rest of West Pakistanis, that did not know in 1971 that town after town has fallen to Indian forces that are advancing towards Dacca, that did not protest when in 1980’s front pages of newspapers had empty columns, or that did not know in May of 1999, that we have almost started a war with India in Kargill. The level of political discourse is crashing with such a speed – like a jet falling down after being shot – that in the last 48 hours most people failed to distinguish between ‘news’ and ‘current affair programs’. Upset, or hurt or distraught by the ‘agendas’ of some unscrupulous anchors, large sections of public are even prepared to accept ‘blackouts of news’. They have even forgotten that news is an altogether different commodity from ‘gossipy discussions’ and that ‘News’ is sacrosanct. Many activists masquerading as ‘columnists’ and ‘responsible journalists’ are part of this idiocy.

How can television channels be advised or forced not to tell the public that sizable crowds have protested in Rawalpindi, Lahore, Karachi and other parts of the country; or that roads remained blocked in different parts of different cities? How could lens be blocked from registering that these crowds are much smaller than what could have been expected if the country had not moved ahead in its thinking on these issues? How could simple physical facts happening in major towns of the country just disappear from our screens and from our consciousness?

God forbid, if we expect this logic then Pakistani tv channels should not have reported that a man existing by the name of ‘Ajmal Kasab’ belonged to Faridkot, that hundreds of people are missing in Baluchistan, in Swat and across the country; then courts will have no basis to admit petitions and take actions; then we would not known that terrorists and sectarians and insurgents of one or the other kind have struck hundreds of times in the last few years; perhaps thousands of Pakistanis just disappeared, vaporized. If this logic expands then soon all things considered bad, ugly and dangerous will disappear from ‘the news’. Since ‘news’ is about ‘happenings’ then those ‘bad things’ will not be happening. Since corruption, nepotism, kick backs, abuse of authority by government agencies are all ‘ugly things’ that bring bad name and discomfiture to the government then surely these should disappear. What about gang rapes, rapes by policemen and those connected politically, surely these unsavory things don’t sound good to our ears and may be banished as Plato once set out to banish poets and Ayub Khan ordered destruction of goat and sheep. Politicians in Sindh already complain that children have always been dying in Thar; why such fuss now?

When I was in nursery, my aunt told me that in Iran or Japan or somewhere during a tremor, earth shattered and people fell into the crevices; shocked devastated and sleepless, I asked my mother: could this happen? She replied: No! aunt is lying. Later a driver told me that babies are born from the bottom of the mothers; my mother found out and driver was sacked. Just like the Media in Pakistan – dismissed. Its embarrassing to admit that till how late in my life I kept on believing that babies are delivered by female angels in hospital, and I used to wonder: why Angels come only to hospitals?

So people of Pakistan are children. At least someone in Prime Minister’s Office, in the Ministry of Information and PEMRA is convinced that public be given as much information as it can absorb or digest. But this ‘discovery’ certainly predates the hanging of Mumtaz Qadri. The advisories being issued from PEMRA, over the last few weeks, are getting more and more ‘interesting’. I will request all colleagues in media to make copies and file them for posterity; for these ‘advisories’ built around ‘arbitrary authority’ instead of the logic of law and constitutionalism increasingly sound like the hand outs issued by Colonels in a martial law regime. Perhaps the genius of our state institutions still fails to distinguish between ‘control’ and ‘regulation’. This is why today I saw headlines that ‘PM has reduced oil prices’ So what is the regulatory authority doing?

If one wants to purposefully act naïve then one may persuade himself to believe that since hanging of Mumtaz Qadri was an unusually sensitive decision so the censorship was justified. Qadri after all was a killer but not an ordinary criminal. He was a zealot mislead by clerics and politics of the day whose actions polarized the society and his execution may add to this polarization. Why forget that Salman Taseer was PPP’s governor in Punjab, an outspoken, fiercely independent mind and spirit, someone who was not impotent of expression like governors these days are supposed to be but a hard-hitting, articulate force in himself who was appointed governor with a purpose. He was a man with a mission. And the atmosphere of hatred unleashed against him after his visit to Aasiya Bibi in jail, was not merely a work of clerics but had serious political overtones. It was in this atmosphere in which an impressionable ‘Mumtaz Qadri’ did the cruel horrendous act. Qadri believed that Taseer was doing the unthinkable; insulting the Prophet (PBUH) – something still believed by countless men and women across the country. This is how the public was deliberately misinformed. It was dirty politics. Reality as known to all those who followed the events, by the day, and as amply documented by high courts and supreme court is that Taseer never uttered anything that could be remotely construed as ‘blasphemous’; his conflict, a battle of egos, was with powerful clergy and the politicians playing mischief. TV programs and newspapers of few weeks before his tragic assassination in Jan 2011, will amply document the politicians who were inspiring hatred and contempt against him. But that is beyond the scope of this writing.

What should matter to all sane minds in media, politics and civil society is that ‘Qadri Hanging’ has been used as a successful experiment – a kind of testing waters – in ‘News Blackout’ by a government that has been sending these signals of ‘controlling airwaves’ for the past several weeks. The most interesting, rather provocative part of this irony is that those who ruthlessly exploited the platforms of free media to advance their political goals and careers between 2002 and 2008 and those who again used these platforms between 2008 and 2013 to undermine the PPP government are now using a charge sheet against media to deny public’s right of information and its ‘freedom of expression’. This is called: politics of self-interest and dictatorial mind set. Dear Media and civil society, its time to wake up and smell the coffee! Party was not in 2007; party tu ab shuri hoi hay!

Punjab Woman Protection Bill: Mullahs are wrong! But there are issues with such hasty social legislation!

Moeed Pirzada | FB Blog |

Mullahs turn everything into a battle for and against Islam. This is wrong and plain stupid. And it also contributes to the overall ‘mediocrity of Pakistani discourse’. Once an issue becomes “mullahs versus the rest” as Maulana Fazal ur Rehman’s comments has done, then many intelligent sections of society are automatically excluded for the fear that their opposition to a piece of legislation or policy might be seen as being “Islamist” or “fanatic”. But the ease, and speed through which we are passing societal legislation – like this recent ‘Woman Protection Bill in Punjab’ is fraught with serious risks. However given the nature and direction of Pakistani politics and the pressures to appease west legislations of all sorts are being hurriedly passed without any public or parliamentary debate.

Yes! cosmetic public and parliamentary debates do happen, but these are only to create bogus evidence for record sake so that it can be argued that ‘debate did take place’. A debate that informs public, and even decision makers and that changes minds seldom takes place. Irony is that democracy – a concept we all owe to ancient Greece – was all about debate. During a trip to Greece, a professor once told me that ‘idiot’ was someone who was not interested in issues of public policy. Look around and tell honestly: how many politicians, eminent citizens and media persons are genuinely committed to debating issues of public policy. And today how many media platforms actually afford to discuss serious issues of public policy?

Such legislation, “Domestic Violence” looks pretty attractive and it is easy to believe that it will only be beneficial. But have we ever debated and discussed its downside? Are we giving police, a Punjab Police SHO, access inside a family unit to settle disputes? Has anyone really wondered: What will be ultimate consequence of this ‘intervention’? Will it necessarily stop domestic violence or will lead to the weakening and collapse of the family unit? How viable or sustainable a family structure will be once its dynamics are subject to police interference? And who will take responsibility once such family units disintegrate ?

Its understandable that governments and political elite in Pakistan – from Punjab to Sindh – are eager to send a message to the western centers of power that “Sir, our God fathers, we are doing everything to modernize the social order”. However in the fulfillment of that earnest desire we seldom examine the empirical evidence from the same western countries. Has such legislation worked and achieved its goals? What have been the unintended side effects? For instance the American state has done massive legislation to engineer the society but its still riven with all kinds of violence and domestic violence is still massive. European countries – which have done much less social legislation – on the other hand are much less violent social orders. They have often employed ‘alternate methods’. Before embarking on ‘social legislation’ or far that matter any legislation, we need to examine empirical evidence and we need to do genuine debate. But all what our political elite is trying to do is to send a message across to the west of being ‘modern and liberal’.

Unfortunately no follow up on results will ever be done. Two years ago, Sindh assembly, under PPP’s compulsions, passed a law making 18 the minimum age of marriage. Before that it was 16 and its still 16 in India and many other parts of the world. Even where legal age for marriage is 18, as in many US states age of consensus is still 16 or even less. These are very important distinctions; deep in the study of human nature and psyche – and often beyond the understanding of our parliamentarians. Our parliamentarians should invite experts into assembly and senate committee proceedings to help them understand issues.

Let me conclude this by reminding you that there is massive evidence to suggest that in many parts of Sindh, boys and girls are married off before even reaching the age of 16. If Govt of Sindh is incapable of implementing ‘marriage age of 16’ then why is it trying to criminalize parents and families marrying their children before 18? And what has happened since the passing of this legislation? ….Unfortunately most parliamentarians even in Sindh won’t be able to answer that….they lost interest in the subject after the bill was passed…??

Punjab Woman Protection Bill: Mullahs are wrong! But there are issues with such hasty social legislation!

Moeed Pirzada |

Mullahs turn everything into a battle for and against Islam. This is wrong and plain stupid. And it also contributes to the overall ‘mediocrity of Pakistani discourse’. Once an issue becomes “mullahs versus the rest” as Maulana Fazal ur Rehman’s comments has done, then many intelligent sections of society are automatically excluded for the fear that their opposition to a piece of legislation or policy might be seen as being “Islamist” or “fanatic”. But the ease, and speed through which we are passing societal legislation – like this recent ‘Woman Protection Bill in Punjab’ is fraught with serious risks. However given the nature and direction of Pakistani politics and the pressures to appease west legislations of all sorts are being hurriedly passed without any public or parliamentary debate.

Yes! cosmetic public and parliamentary debates do happen, but these are only to create bogus evidence for record sake so that it can be argued that ‘debate did take place’. A debate that informs public, and even decision makers and that changes minds seldom takes place. Irony is that democracy – a concept we all owe to ancient Greece – was all about debate. During a trip to Greece, a professor once told me that ‘idiot’ was someone who was not interested in issues of public policy. Look around and tell honestly: how many politicians, eminent citizens and media persons are genuinely committed to debating issues of public policy. And today how many media platforms actually afford to discuss serious issues of public policy?

Read more: Of blasphemy laws & woman protection bill: law of unintended consequences!

Such legislation, “Domestic Violence” looks pretty attractive and it is easy to believe that it will only be beneficial. But have we ever debated and discussed its downside? Are we giving police, a Punjab Police SHO, access inside a family unit to settle disputes? Has anyone really wondered: What will be ultimate consequence of this ‘intervention’? Will it necessarily stop domestic violence or will lead to the weakening and collapse of the family unit? How viable or sustainable a family structure will be once its dynamics are subject to police interference? And who will take responsibility once such family units disintegrate?

given the nature and direction of Pakistani politics and the pressures to appease west legislations of all sorts are being hurriedly passed without any public or parliamentary debate.

Its understandable that governments and political elite in Pakistan – from Punjab to Sindh – are eager to send a message to the western centers of power that “Sir, our God fathers, we are doing everything to modernize the social order”. However in the fulfillment of that earnest desire we seldom examine the empirical evidence from the same western countries. Has such legislation worked and achieved its goals? What have been the unintended side effects? For instance the American state has done massive legislation to engineer the society but its still riven with all kinds of violence and domestic violence is still massive. European countries – which have done much less social legislation – on the other hand are much less violent social orders. They have often employed ‘alternate methods’. Before embarking on ‘social legislation’ or far that matter any legislation, we need to examine empirical evidence and we need to do genuine debate. But all what our political elite is trying to do is to send a message across to the west of being ‘modern and liberal’.

Read more: Punjab Woman Protection Act & politics of NGOs & religion?

Unfortunately no follow up on results will ever be done. Two years ago, Sindh assembly, under PPP’s compulsions, passed a law making 18 the minimum age of marriage. Before that it was 16 and its still 16 in India and many other parts of the world. Even where legal age for marriage is 18, as in many US states age of consensus is still 16 or even less. These are very important distinctions; deep in the study of human nature and psyche – and often beyond the understanding of our parliamentarians. Our parliamentarians should invite experts into assembly and senate committee proceedings to help them understand issues.

Let me conclude this by reminding you that there is massive evidence to suggest that in many parts of Sindh, boys and girls are married off before even reaching the age of 16. If Govt of Sindh is incapable of implementing ‘marriage age of 16’ then why is it trying to criminalize parents and families marrying their children before 18? And what has happened since the passing of this legislation? ….Unfortunately most parliamentarians even in Sindh won’t be able to answer that….they lost interest in the subject after the bill was passed…??

 

Moeed Pirzada is prominent TV Anchor & commentator; he studied international relations at Columbia Univ, New York and law at London School of Economics. Twitter: MoeedNj. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Global Village Space’s editorial policy. This piece was first published in Moeed Pirzada’s official page. It has been reproduced with permission.

Ex-President Asif Ali Zardari’s Statement on the extension of Army Chief’s tenure !!!

Dr Moeed Pirzada with Prominent Investigative Journalist Rauf Klasra gave in-depth Analysis on Ex-President Asif Ali Zardari’s Statement on the extension of Army Chief’s tenure. PPP leader distances himself from statement attributed to him in media saying he supports army’s efforts against terrorism but did not comment on extension in term for army chief. In his statement Terming army chief General Raheel Sharif’s decision to refuse an extension in service as ‘premature’, he said the decision could turn Pakistanis’ hopes into despair and jeopardise the fight against terrorism. “At this critical juncture, continuation of the army leadership is necessary to stem the tide of terrorism. And when the time comes, the political leadership must make a decision taking into account national interest and security situation. The source said that an investigation was underway to determine who had passed on the initial draft of Zardari’s statement to the electronic media through Whatsapp. The statement came as a big surprise as the former president had warned the military leadership of ‘consequences’ over the Rangers’ action against his top aides in a fiery speech some months ago.

Quadrilateral Talks on Afghan Peace Process…!!!

Dr Moeed Pirzada with renowned expert on the subject of Afghanistan Rahimullah Yousafzai throws light on the achievement of these talks as Taliban and other groups to join early direct talks with the Government of Afghanistan in coming month in Islamabad. He also discussed the fourth meeting of the Quadrilateral Coordination Group (QCG) of Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United States and China on the Afghan Peace and Reconciliation process which was held in Kabul on February 23, 2016. The delegations were led by Afghan Deputy Foreign Minister Hekmat Khalil Karzai, Pakistan’s Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry, Chinese Ambassador Yao Jing and U.S. Charge d’Affaires, David Lindwall. The QCG members welcomed the strong statement by H.E. Mohammad Ashraf Ghani, President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, on 15 February in which he once again underlined the strong commitment of the Government of Afghanistan for peace and reconciliation with Taliban groups and Hezbi Islami Hekmatyar, the support of the Afghan nation for this national priority and his call on the Taliban and other groups to join early direct talks with the Government of Afghanistan.

Punjab Assembly’s bill on crime shows on news channels !!!

In this program segment MPA from Punjab Assembly Uzma Bukhari explains the reasons to draft this bill. She is also Chairperson of Punjab Assembly’s Standing Committee for Law and Parliamentary Affairs. A resolution calling on the federal government to stop private news channels from broadcasting programmes in which crime and court stories are re-enacted was unanimously passed by the Punjab Assembly on Tuesday. Government and opposition in Punjab assembly floor stood united against the dramatization of crimes shows and related cases hence unanimously approved resolution against it. Dramatization of crimes and cases on TV channels to be banned-resolution approved on Tuesday, Dunya News reported. Punjab assembly approved the resolution regarding ban on dramatization of crimes and such cases and showing them on TV. Federal govt was recommended to ban such shows. Government and opposition in Punjab assembly floor stood united against the dramatization of crimes shows and related cases hence unanimously approved resolution against it.

What Apple & Tim Cook are fighting for?

Moeed Pirzada |

I am painfully aware that many suspect me of being ‘out of sync with reality’, the reality of poverty, misgovernance and corruption that is spread all around us in Pakistan and instead focusing on a strange fight between a multibillion fruit company, Apple, and FBI being fought in a courtroom somewhere in the Sunshine valley, California, in a God forsaken, Anti-Muslim, America.

And even more painful to me than this ‘suspicion of madness or being ridiculous’ is the abject lack of interest in the subject. You know why? because we in the Muslim world live in a state of ‘perpetual victim hood’; we keep on celebrating the atrocities against us, the double standards of the west and the nexus between the Indians and the Jews and so on. We don’t live in a world of ideas. Our leaders are hideously physical too. That is why they create monsters of concrete only and we dance and worship.

Read more: Wikileaks: CIA is hacking Samsung Smart TVs, IPhones & Androids..

We don’t see the relation between the ideas and the physical world. Our textbooks and Urdu press columnists have convinced most to this day, that subjugation of Muslim India to British colonists was not defeat of ideas but a conspiracy, was a result of betrayal by the sold away characters like Mir Jaffar and Mir Saddiq etc otherwise the brave Siraj ul Daula or Tipu Sultan would have held, would have won…Little do we realize that even if they had won, the battles of Plassi or Sarnagapatum the reality they represented had no future. A new age had arrived – of which they were not a part of.

Western society and intellectuals understood the messages conveyed by the visionaries like Adlous Huxley and George Orwell and they built firewalls against authoritarianism; Apple and Facebook and Google are fighting to preserve those ‘firewalls’; but there were no Huxleys and Orwells in Muslim world, perhaps there could not have been because of colonialism.

So while we are happy purchasing technology in the form of F-16’s or stealing its avionics to fit them into JF-17, we are prepared to stand aloof from the battle of ideas that is raging in the world of technology. And technology to Muslim minds is something totally different from culture. So from disciplined officers of Muslim armies to blood thirsty Islamists the argument runs that what we need to obtain or learn or steal from the west is ‘technology’; so you see that crackpots like TTP and Daesh, living in caves, are passionate about latest weapons, IT gadgets and smart Apps, while their women and children may live lives in 8th century- they don’t care.

But ideas are what creates ever changing technology. And that is why the debates raging in Silicon valley are important to the whole world, to the future of democracy and especially for the future of governance and authoritarianism across Muslim world.
Apple like all other companies has been cooperating with the US government and its agencies for providing data on a case to case basis. However in its latest demands to access information inside one of the IPhones used by that nut, Syed Rizwan Farook, the San Barnardino attacker, the mindless terrorist or whatever, FBI is actually forcing Apple to create a new software tool that can prevent the possibility of data erasure, that automatically happens when you make more than than10 unsuccessful attempts to unlock an IPhone.

But what is different here? why this is important when Apple, the fruit company, had been cooperating with the FBI and courts, in the last few years, on a case to case basis. The answer is: the fresh demands are not ‘case to case’; this demand looks like for a single specific phone, but is in reality forcing Apple to create a new software that can help FBI override the security features of an iPhone. Once this techology is available then it can be used widely. It can certainly be missed – by FBI, by other government agencies and don’t forget by other agencies across the world.

But Apple like all other tech giants is a multinational; it has huge markets across China, India, Saudi Arabia and UAE and so on. If it can manufacture a specific tool for FBI then what reasoning it has not to do the same for Chinese Intelligence? for Modi government, for the Saudis and for UAE? and literally for any government agencies that is assertive, friendly or prepared to spend cash.Its a slippery path and once the argument is lost in a court in California, it will be lost all over the world. And its not just about Apple or IPhone, or just an App, its about the power of surveillance versus the right to privacy, the right of assembly, right of protest and so on…

But why its important for us? we are living in abject poverty, mindless tyranny, rule of corrupt elites, children living and dying in squalor while metros and Orange lines being celebrated endlessly by the ruling elites? so why this battle matters?

Read more: ECO members pledge to counter regional challenges

Because part of the reason we are fast becoming a monarchy instead of a democracy has to do with the power unleashed by newer technologies. Democracy is desired, democracy is beautiful, there cannot be a system of governance better than democracy. But what we get in the name of democracy is dictatorship, personal and family rule- rule by few powerful men and families. All across the Muslim world, there is not a single democracy. Whatever was achieved in Turkey is also being quickly lost. Its like ‘Anti-Christ’ marketing itself as ‘Christ’ – Satan as God; embrace of Kali posing as Sita.

Our textbooks and Urdu press columnists have convinced most to this day, that subjugation of Muslim India to British colonists was not defeat of ideas but a conspiracy, was a result of betrayal by the sold away characters like Mir Jaffar and Mir Saddiq etc otherwise the brave Siraj ul Daula or Tipu Sultan would have held, would have won…Little do we realize that even if they had won, the battles of Plassi or Sarnagapatum the reality they represented had no future. 

Wider availability of surveillance technology and its political legitimacy to governments in Muslim world after 9/11 has further undermined the future of democracy; technology and its clever use by powerful elites – whether for surveillance or for manufactured surveys and manufactured consensus- has greatly empowered the ruling elites and has weakened all kind of popular resistance. It now allows for a perpetual hold on power, sustainanance of status quo and giving it the effect of change and democracy through a tamed media. Technology at the disposal of state agencies also plays a role in taming the media.

Western society and intellectuals understood the messages conveyed by the visionaries like Adlous Huxley and George Orwell and they built firewalls against authoritarianism; Apple and Facebook and Google are fighting to preserve those ‘firewalls’; but there were no Huxleys and Orwells in Muslim world, perhaps there could not have been because of colonialism. But even the post-colonial Muslim world, is bereft in ideas, look at our media, how it is all about ‘bursts of hot air’ and stinking gas and no real debate of ideas; so its only natural that ‘battle of ideas in the world of technology’ and its relationship, its impact on the future of democracy, is not understood. Technologically empowered elites can endlessly market illusions as reality. This is an age of technology and mind control.

If this piece compels, persuades, even some of you to take an interest in the relationship between technology and politics, in a post-modern world, in a globally integrated village, then I will think that my efforts are not in vain. Amen!

 

Moeed Pirzada is prominent TV Anchor & commentator; he studied international relations at Columbia Univ, New York and law at London School of Economics. Twitter: MoeedNj. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Global Village Space’s editorial policy. This piece was first published in Moeed Pirzada’s official page. It has been reproduced with permission.

What Apple & Tim Cook are fighting for?

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Moeed Pirzada | FB Blog |

What Apple & Tim Cook are fighting for? Why it is important for all of us in Muslim World?

I am painfully aware that many suspect me of being ‘out of sync with reality’, the reality of poverty, misgovernance and corruption that is spread all around us in Pakistan and instead focusing on a strange fight between a multibillion fruit company, Apple, and FBI being fought in a court room somewhere in the Sunshine valley, California, in a God forsaken, Anti-Muslim, America.

And even more painful to me than this ‘suspicion of madness or being ridiculous’ is the abject lack of interest in the subject. You know why? because we in the Muslim world live in a state of ‘perpetual victim hood’; we keep on celebrating the atrocities against us, the double standards of the west and the nexus between the Indians and the Jews and so on. We don’t live in a world of ideas. Our leaders are hideously physical too. That is why they create monsters of concrete only and we dance and worship.

We don’t see the relation between the ideas and the physical world. Our textbooks and Urdu press columnists have convinced most to this day, that subjugation of Muslim India to British colonists was not defeat of ideas but a conspiracy, was a result of betrayal by the sold away characters like Mir Jaffar and Mir Saddiq etc otherwise the brave Siraj ul Daula or Tipu Sultan would have held, would have won…Little do we realize that even if they had won, the battles of Plassi or Sarnagapatum the reality they represented had no future. A new age had arrived – of which they were not a part of.

So while we are happy purchasing technology in the form of F-16’s or stealing its avionics to fit them into JF-17, we are prepared to stand aloof from the battle of ideas that is raging in the world of technology. And technology to Muslim minds is something totally different from culture. So from disciplined officers of Muslim armies to blood thirsty Islamists the argument runs that what we need to obtain or learn or steal from the west is ‘technology’; so you see that crackpots like TTP and Daesh, living in caves, are passionate about latest weapons, IT gadgets and smart Apps, while their women and children may live lives in 8th century- they don’t care.

But ideas are what creates ever changing technology. And that is why the debates raging in Silicon valley are important to the whole world, to the future of democracy and especially for the future of governance and authoritarianism across Muslim world.
Apple like all other companies has been cooperating with the US government and its agencies for providing data on a case to case basis. However in its latest demands to access information inside one of the IPhones used by that nut, Syed Rizwan Farook, the San Barnardino attacker, the mindless terrorist or whatever, FBI is actually forcing Apple to create a new software tool that can prevent the possibility of data erasure, that automatically happens when you make more than than10 unsuccessful attempts to unlock an IPhone.

But what is different here? why this is important when Apple, the fruit company, had been cooperating with the FBI and courts, in the last few years, on a case to case basis. The answer is: the fresh demands are not ‘case to case’; this demand looks like for a single specific phone, but is in reality forcing Apple to create a new software that can help FBI override the security features of an iPhone. Once this techology is available then it can be used widely. It can certainly be missed – by FBI, by other government agencies and don’t forget by other agencies across the world.

But Apple like all other tech giants is a multinational; it has huge markets across China, India, Saudi Arabia and UAE and so on. If it can manufacture a specific tool for FBI then what reasoning it has not to do the same for Chinese Intelligence? for Modi government, for the Saudis and for UAE? and literally for any government agencies that is assertive, friendly or prepared to spend cash.Its a slippery path and once the argument is lost in a court in California, it will be lost all over the world. And its not just about Apple or IPhone, or just an App, its about the power of surveillance versus the right to privacy, the right of assembly, right of protest and so on…

But why its important for us? we are living in abject poverty, mindless tyranny, rule of corrupt elites, children living and dying in squalor while metros and Orange lines being celebrated endlessly by the ruling elites? so why this battle matters?

Because part of the reason we are fast becoming a monarchy instead of a democracy has to do with the power unleashed by newer technologies. Democracy is desired, democracy is beautiful, there cannot be a system of governance better than democracy. But what we get in the name of democracy is dictatorship, personal and family rule- rule by few powerful men and families. All across the Muslim world, there is not a single democracy. Whatever was achieved in Turkey is also being quickly lost. Its like ‘Anti-Christ’ marketing itself as ‘Christ’ – Satan as God; embrace of Kali posing as Sita.

Wider availability of surveillance technology and its political legitimacy to governments in Muslim world after 9/11 has further undermined the future of democracy; technology and its clever use by powerful elites – whether for surveillance or for manufactured surveys and manufactured consensus- has greatly empowered the ruling elites and has weakened all kind of popular resistance. It now allows for a perpetual hold on power, sustainanance of status quo and giving it the effect of change and democracy through a tamed media. Technology at the disposal of state agencies also plays a role in taming the media.

Western society and intellectuals understood the messages conveyed by the visionaries like Adlous Huxley and George Orwell and they built firewalls against authoritarianism; Apple and Facebook and Google are fighting to preserve those ‘firewalls’; but there were no Huxleys and Orwells in Muslim world, perhaps there could not have been because of colonialism. But even the post-colonial Muslim world, is bereft in ideas, look at our media, how it is all about ‘bursts of hot air’ and stinking gas and no real debate of ideas; so its only natural that ‘battle of ideas in the world of technology’ and its relationship, its impact on the future of democracy, is not understood. Technologically empowered elites can endlessly market illusions as reality. This is an age of technology and mind control.

If this piece compels, persuades, even some of you to take an interest in the relationship between technology and politics, in a post-modern world, in a globally integrated village, then I will think that my efforts are not in vain. Amen!

Reflection from the past…

Moeed Pirzada | FB Blog |

I am making a new website; its still under construction and not ready. Will invite your comments on it soon.

Main purpose of that website is to collect all my past writings from Dawn, Khaleej Times, Daily Times, Nation, Pakistan Today, The News, Guardian, Policy Papers, Pique Magazine, Herald, Newsline at one place in chronological order. And also the FB Blogs which were written often at the spur of the moment, in a huff, in reaction to something that was happening and that was hitting hard ….this platform as an Official Website will provide an interesting place, platz, for collecting all those writings at one point for debate, for criticism..its still not complete, much effort has gone into it in the last several weeks, perhaps months…it will also collect all tv programs that were created under different titles: Dunya Today, Sochta Pakistan, Siyasat Aur Qanoon, Siyasat Aur Sazish and so on….

Many arguments expressed in those articles are alien to me now. I have moved on; I understand why I thought so at that time. But those comments reflected the feelings, apprehensions and understandings of that time, of that era and therefore they appear as such, without any editing. No commentator exists in vacuum, he or she is inextricably linked to the collective feelings and concerns of the people and communities and interests he represents or is tied with. I remember how insecure I had felt about Pakistan in New York, at Columbia University, immediately after 9/11 and how those fears and paranoia expressed itself in the articles I wrote for ‘The News’ then from New York. The ‘anti-western’ feeling which I then experienced remains a huge compass in my consciousness to make sense of why people, young Muslims, living in western lands become radicalized. My anger and frustration could take the form of writings, debates within the University; I was lucky to be in one of the most liberal campuses within United States where Latin Americans, from Mexico, Columbia, Brazil, Venezuela and many Europeans from France and Italy joined students like me, in seminar after seminar, to lash out at the US foreign Policy arguing to the great dismay of Israelis – more patriotic than Americans at that moment – that US foreign Policy had lead the world to something like 9/11.

But later in London, at London School of Economics and later as an ‘Accidental TV Anchor’ (never thought of media before) I started to see how within the United Kingdom, the centrality of being ‘English’, or to identify with that historical consciousness, the need to speak correctly, feel correctly, the need to smile in smirks and all that value system makes England and all Europe so much more suffocating than the oceanic melting pot of America where everyone – irrespective of his passport or origins – could put on an extra-slim tight jeans, a Levis, 511 – and be a perfect American within two weeks. No Color, No language, No Accent, No nothing. Just fortune hunting, struggle for a better future, and a belief in the primacy of human achievement. And an innocent but dangerous belief that what is possible for Americans – a better future, through rationality – can be easily replicated elsewhere. With force, if needed.

They say that from moon, the first structure astronauts were able to see – through bare, unaided, naked eyes- was the ‘Great Wall of China. But you don’t have to be on moon to realize that world looks different from different points of vantage. London gives you a totally different view than what you get from New York. From within the slums, of squalor and death, shit and blood, spread all across Karachi the view that emerges of human life, of human condition, of love and sex, of man and woman, has to be totally different than the one I get in my morning walk at the foothills “Margalla Hills” – where yesterday, in F-8 Markaz, a five year old ‘fakir girl’ returned the Rs. 10 note to me saying: ‘from someone who looks like you, I need at least fifty”

In a very similar way deeper understanding of the world made me realize – and many of you may end up grasping; though I am not sure how many – whether you like it or not, how important a role American power plays in making this world better and safer and even more humane and how, sadly, tragically, most world, from all its corners, east and west, north and south, looks towards what is metaphorically called or defined as ‘west’ for ideas to measure and reform itself. West is not a geographical or religious construct but an epitome of mankind’s thought, evolution. So in UAE they can purchase technology and management and construct tallest buildings and largest airlines, in China they can manufacture all the Samsung Galaxies and IPhones but it is in California that an Apple executive is prepared to go to jail and others are lining up behind him on a point of principle. Throughout the Muslim, the Hindu, the Confucius world, a myriad array of tyrants, kleptocrats, sex maniacs, pedophiles, mentally deranged bipolar characters are prepared to rule endlessly – through an escalating ladder of harassment, imprisonment and execution – countless millions with the help of surveillance and torture machines euphomistically referred to as ‘Govt. Agencies’. This is where the ‘resistance’ needs to invoke ‘west’. So in its final shape and tenor, arguments are not for local tyrants, rajas, maharajas and Khalifas, but to the minds, sensibilities and collective consciousness in the west.

But this is a long debate – and endless. And many may never grasp it. But the idea was to explain that how topical comment only reflects the moment. It has no real meaning, without connecting it to the larger whole. So all articles, and blogs appear on the website as they were first published. No Change. No Word, No Comma. It will give ample opportunity to many that ‘on that moment, you wrote that’. Yes! may be there were good reasons then, may be things have changed and may be I have evolved.

Today, I posted two writings via twitter. One is an article that appeared in Khaleej Times of April 2008 in which I pleaded the case that though Sarabjeet Singh was a Raw agent and terrorist – in modern parlance – but in the larger interest of South Asia, of India and Pakistan, he should not be hanged – but set free to embrace his daughter – Swapandeep – who was only a toddler when he left to blow bombs. Second is a blog, from FaceBook of April 2013, when he was brutally killed in a Lahore jail. Similar tyrannical things were happening in India, as you can read in those two writings. Perhaps you will also end up feeling that how insecure, crude and bestial feelings triumph in both India and Pakistan, most of the time. This is how I felt and that is why I posted these article.

Will keep on posting more such comparisons.

Reflection from the past…

Moeed Pirzada |

Main purpose of that website is to collect all my past writings from Dawn, Khaleej Times, Daily Times, Nation, Pakistan Today, The News, Guardian, Policy Papers, Pique Magazine, Herald, Newsline at one place in chronological order. And also the FB Blogs which were written often at the spur of the moment, in a huff, in reaction to something that was happening and that was hitting hard ….this platform as an Official Website will provide an interesting place, platz, for collecting all those writings at one point for debate, for criticism..its still not complete, much effort has gone into it in the last several weeks, perhaps months…it will also collect all tv programs that were created under different titles: Dunya Today, Sochta Pakistan, Siyasat Aur Qanoon, Siyasat Aur Sazish and so on….

The ‘anti-western’ feeling which I then experienced remains a huge compass in my consciousness to make sense of why people, young Muslims, living in western lands become radicalized.

The ‘anti-western’ feeling which I then experienced remains a huge compass in my consciousness to make sense of why people, young Muslims, living in western lands become radicalized. My anger and frustration could take the form of writings, debates within the University; I was lucky to be in one of the most liberal campuses within United States where Latin Americans, from Mexico, Columbia, Brazil, Venezuela and many Europeans from France and Italy joined students like me, in seminar after seminar, to lash out at the US foreign Policy arguing to the great dismay of Israelis – more patriotic than Americans at that moment – that US foreign Policy had lead the world to something like 9/11.Many arguments expressed in those articles are alien to me now. I have moved on; I understand why I thought so at that time. But those comments reflected the feelings, apprehensions and understandings of that time, of that era and therefore they appear as such, without any editing. No commentator exists in vacuum, he or she is inextricably linked to the collective feelings and concerns of the people and communities and interests he represents or is tied with. I remember how insecure I had felt about Pakistan in New York, at Columbia University, immediately after 9/11 and how those fears and paranoia expressed itself in the articles I wrote for ‘The News’ then from New York.

Read more: How can you find a “meaningful life” & not just a “happy one”?

But later in London, at London School of Economics and later as an ‘Accidental TV Anchor’ (never thought of media before) I started to see how within the United Kingdom, the centrality of being ‘English’, or to identify with that historical consciousness, the need to speak correctly, feel correctly, the need to smile in smirks and all that value system makes England and all Europe so much more suffocating than the oceanic melting pot of America where everyone – irrespective of his passport or origins – could put on an extra-slim tight jeans, a Levis, 511 – and be a perfect American within two weeks. No Color, No language, No Accent, No nothing. Just fortune hunting, struggle for a better future, and a belief in the primacy of human achievement. And an innocent but dangerous belief that what is possible for Americans – a better future, through rationality – can be easily replicated elsewhere. With force, if needed.

They say that from moon, the first structure astronauts were able to see – through bare, unaided, naked eyes- was the ‘Great Wall of China. But you don’t have to be on moon to realize that world looks different from different points of vantage. London gives you a totally different view than what you get from New York. From within the slums, of squalor and death, shit and blood, spread all across Karachi the view that emerges of human life, of human condition, of love and sex, of man and woman, has to be totally different than the one I get in my morning walk at the foothills “Margalla Hills” – where yesterday, in F-8 Markaz, a five year old ‘fakir girl’ returned the Rs. 10 note to me saying: ‘from someone who looks like you, I need at least fifty”.

Throughout the Muslim, the Hindu, the Confucius world, a myriad array of tyrants, kleptocrats, sex maniacs, pedophiles, mentally deranged bipolar characters are prepared to rule endlessly

In a very similar way deeper understanding of the world made me realize – and many of you may end up grasping; though I am not sure how many – whether you like it or not, how important a role American power plays in making this world better and safer and even more humane and how, sadly, tragically, most world, from all its corners, east and west, north and south, looks towards what is metaphorically called or defined as ‘west’ for ideas to measure and reform itself. West is not a geographical or religious construct but an epitome of mankind’s thought, evolution.

So in UAE they can purchase technology and management and construct tallest buildings and largest airlines, in China they can manufacture all the Samsung Galaxies and IPhones but it is in California that an Apple executive is prepared to go to jail and others are lining up behind him on a point of principle. Throughout the Muslim, the Hindu, the Confucius world, a myriad array of tyrants, kleptocrats, sex maniacs, pedophiles, mentally deranged bipolar characters are prepared to rule endlessly – through an escalating ladder of harassment, imprisonment and execution – countless millions with the help of surveillance and torture machines euphomistically referred to as ‘Govt. Agencies’. This is where the ‘resistance’ needs to invoke ‘west’. So in its final shape and tenor, arguments are not for local tyrants, rajas, maharajas and Khalifas, but to the minds, sensibilities and collective consciousness in the west.

But this is a long debate – and endless. And many may never grasp it. But the idea was to explain that how topical comment only reflects the moment. It has no real meaning, without connecting it to the larger whole. So all articles, and blogs appear on the website as they were first published. No Change. No Word, No Comma. It will give ample opportunity to many that ‘on that moment, you wrote that’. Yes! may be there were good reasons then, may be things have changed and may be I have evolved.

Today, I posted two writings via twitter. One is an article that appeared in Khaleej Times of April 2008 in which I pleaded the case that though Sarabjeet Singh was a Raw agent and terrorist – in modern parlance – but in the larger interest of South Asia, of India and Pakistan, he should not be hanged – but set free to embrace his daughter – Swapandeep – who was only a toddler when he left to blow bombs. Second is a blog, from FaceBook of April 2013, when he was brutally killed in a Lahore jail. Similar tyrannical things were happening in India, as you can read in those two writings. Perhaps you will also end up feeling that how insecure, crude and bestial feelings triumph in both India and Pakistan, most of the time. This is how I felt and that is why I posted these article.

Will keep on posting more such comparisons.

 

Moeed Pirzada is prominent TV Anchor & commentator; he studied international relations at Columbia Univ, New York and law at London School of Economics. Twitter: MoeedNj. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Global Village Space’s editorial policy. This piece was first published in Moeed Pirzada’s official page. It has been reproduced with permission.

Tonight with Moeed Pirzada: Pakistan-Qatar LNG Deal

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In this part Dr. Pirzada raised critical questions in front of Federal Minister for Petroleum and Natural Resources Shahid Khaqan Abbasi on LNG deal regarding its cost on which we are receiving LNG and at what cost it will be available to end users as many conspiracies have circulated regarding this deal specifically the Price of imported LNG. Pakistan on Wednesday had signed a 15-year agreement to import up to 3.75 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas a year from Qatar, a major step in filling Pakistan’s energy shortfall. Pakistan and Qatar signed The $16 billion sale and purchase agreement on Wednesday the long-awaited multi-billion dollar liquefied natural gas (LNG) deal which would see it import the fuel for 16 years to meet domestic energy requirements.