|
|
|
 |
Educational reform vs
fundamentalist fury By
Mohammad Shehzad
ISLAMABAD - After seizing
power through a dramatic coup d'etat, Pakistan
President General Pervez Musharraf initiated
several reforms in various areas, including the
country's educational system. To improve it,
Musharraf signed an executive order in 2002
inducting the Aga Khan University Examination
Board (AKUEB) into the national education system.
The AKUEB was selected for this assignment
due to its outstanding track record. Over the
years, the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) has
emerged as one of the most effective associations
of community-based organizations in Pakistan, and
has changed the lives of large numbers of people
in the remotest areas of the country, including
the Northern Areas, where no government agency has
ever undertaken any development work.
The
AKUEB has been given the task of upgrading and
modernizing the declining standards of education
and of holding examinations for private
educational institutions. The affiliation of these
institutions to the board is voluntary. The board
has not been given any role in government schools,
and the system is also intended to help groom
teachers in private educational institutions with
excellent skills through training. The AKUEB would
bring in modern examinations, both in English and
Urdu, at an affordable cost to a much broader
section of society, providing parents and schools
with the option to choose the style of education
they desire from classes four to 12.
Until
now, such a choice was confined to the very few
who could afford the "O level" fees. The AKUEB
follows the British education system of "O" and
"A" levels. "O" levels are designed for students
from 14 to 16 years of age and are aimed at
preparing them for academic progression and
equipping them with the skills necessary for
employment. "A" levels are designed to prepare
them for university and other professional fields
of study. Both levels emphasize a broad range of
subjects, covering the humanities, social
sciences, natural sciences and other creative
technical and vocational qualifications. A
National Examination Testing Service has been
constituted and the government educational boards
have agreed to entertain applications from
students who take examinations under the AKUEB.
These examinations are expected to start in 2006.
Musharraf's initiatives on this count have
been greeted as a step in the right direction by
the enlightened section of Pakistani society.
However, the right-wing groups (jihadis,
Islamists, clerics, fundamentalists, and religious
extremists) - a powerful minority in Pakistan by
whom the mainstream is held hostage - have
launched a virulent campaign against these
reforms. A wide range of facilities are available
to these groups for the propagation of their
venomous propaganda, including the jihadi media,
pulpits and loudspeakers at mosques, and public
rallies, which are not allowed for mainstream
politics but are permitted for jihad and
fassad (evil).
The Jihadi press -
comprising dozens of publications with a
collective circulation in millions - has started a
concentrated smear campaign against the Ismaeli
(Aga Khan) community, with at least some
mainstream publications, such as Nawa-i-Waqt and
The Nation, supporting the fundamentalists in this
campaign. The Jihadi press is cranking out highly
inflammatory and provocative material against
Prince Karim Aga Khan, the Ismaelis, AKUEB and
AKDN in an attempt to present the Ahmadis and the
Ismaelis as two sides of the same coin. Jihadi
leaders have issued statement after statement
demonizing the Ahmadis and the Ismaelis. Crossing
all limits of decency and diplomacy, the rabid
Islamist Qazi Hussain Ahmad - often referred to as
a "Pakistani Bal Thackeray" - launched a direct
attack on Prince Karim Aga Khan. The Qazi was the
first to spearhead the campaign against the
Ismaelis, linking them to the Ahmadis, the most
persecuted sect in Pakistan. The Weekly Ghazwa - a
publication of the defunct Lashkar-e-Taiba - in
its May 6, 2004, issue quoted Qazi as saying: "If
the Prince Karim Aga Khan tried to interfere in
our curriculum, I will make his end miserable. In
fact, his end would be even worse than the
Ahmadis." A diplomat chastised Qazi at a social
gathering for this threat.
The jihadis
accuse the AKDN of receiving a bribe of US$45
million as a grant from the US for "perverting"
Pakistan's education system by "spreading nudity
and obscenity" and "introducing a free-sex
environment". To support their claim, the jihadis
have distorted and exaggerated a health survey
issued by the Aga Khan Nursing School. The Daily
Jasarat, on May 9, 2004, declaimed:
Aga Khan Foundation [AKF] has
distributed a questionnaire among schoolgirls
aged between 11-15 that asks sensuous and
objectionable questions. For example, has a man
ever touched your body? If so, who is that
person? Has anyone touched your breasts? Do you
know about self-breast examination? If so, how
do you feel about discussing it with other
people? Most of the questions pertain to
menstruation, asking girls whether they feel
pain during the periods. The questionnaire has
frightened the parents. What could be the
purpose of asking such questions? It is a US
conspiracy to spread perversion in the society.
The US is using our education minister, Zobaida
Jalal, to achieve this objective. At her behest,
these questions have been included in the
schoolbooks of class VIII. Every
jihadi publication has been distorting this
questionnaire according to its own indoctrination
policy. Outperforming all others, the Weekly
Ghazwa in December, 2004 reported:
Aga Khan Board has circulated a
questionnaire among the students under the
title, 'Health Survey'. The questionnaire asks
the students the following obscene and immoral
questions: Should a girl have sex before the
marriage? If yes, at what age? AIDS is
transmitted through unsafe sex, prostitution and
homosexuality, therefore, ensure that you
practice safe sex. Have you ever had sex? If
yes, at what age? Do you drink? If yes, how much
quantity? Do you take drugs or other
intoxicating things? When did you have sex first
time in your life? Should a boy and a girl in
love have sex before the marriage? How to derive
maximum pleasure from sex? Have you seen your
sister naked? If yes, what type of feelings you
had in your mind? Did you ever think of having
sex with her? Is your father having sex with
you? Is your brother having sex with you? Have
you been sleeping with your mother in the
childhood? Did you ever see her naked? If yes,
what type of feelings you had in your mind? When
was the last time you saw your mother naked?
These questions pervert the young minds.
These questions are asked from the students of
the 9th and 10th grade. You can well imagine
from the above questions that it is a conspiracy
to introduce immoral values in our Islamic
society. There is no doubt that the Aga Khan
Board is working at the behest of the Jews,
Hindus and Christians and its mission is to
pervert our coming generations. The
scope of the education reforms controversy widened
when Hafiz Mohammad Saeed - the supremo of the
defunct Laskhar-e-Taiba - joined the issue. In the
Internet edition of the Weekly Ghazwa in November,
2004, Saeed said: "Musharraf is working on making
the Northern Areas an Aga Khani state. He has been
pressured by Christina Rocca [assistant secretary
of state for South Asia] to hand over Kashmir to
Prince Karim Aga Khan so that he could annex it
with the Northern Areas and make it his fiefdom."
The propaganda against the Ismaelis has
intensified to such an extent that now Aga Khanis
are being condemned for most of the developments
taking place in Pakistan, including Pakistan's
privatization policy. The Daily Jasarat last month
said:
America is behind sectarian violence
in many countries including Pakistan. The
biggest proof of General Musharraf's
inefficiency is, he has allowed the AKF to act
as the agent of the US. Habib Bank has been sold
to the AKF at throwaway price. AKF has been
allowed to tamper with the education system of
Pakistan. The AKF has secularized Pakistani
education system. This has resulted into a
backlash against the Aga Khanis and it has
happened first time in Pakistan's history. If a
better sense did not prevail upon Prince Karim
Aga Khan or General Musharraf then Pakistan will
be in the grip of a fire. Musharraf has
masterminded hatred against Aga Khanis in the
Pakistani society. He is pushing Pakistan into
the 1971-like situation. The jihadis
have also begun to blame Prince Karim Aga Khan for
the sectarian violence in Gilgit, in the Northern
Areas. Thus, the Weekly Takbeer in its cover story
last last month wrote:
Two elements are involved in trouble
in Gilgit - internal conspiracies and those who
want to secularize the Northern Areas and
isolate it from Pakistan. The latter are the
pro-Hindu elements and Aga Khanis are on the top
of it. The Aga Khani lobby is behind Aga
Ziauddin's murder. He was the only hurdle in the
preaching of the Aga Khanis' religion. The
majority of the people in Gilgit are Shi'ites
and Aga Ziauddin was their sole spiritual
leader. He was an uncontroversial figure. Even
his opponents also admired him. Ziauddin
struggled for the rights of Shi'ites on many
fronts. He was against the increasing influence
of Aga Khan Foundation in the Northern Areas. He
also wanted the Government to introduce separate
curriculum for the Shi'ites in the Northern
Areas. He had opponents too in this regard.
The increasing influence of the Aga Khan
Development Network [AKDN] in Gilgit and
Baltistan was the basic reason of Ziauddin's
murder. For the last some years, the AKDN was
preaching secularism and apostasy in Gilgit and
Baltistan under the cover of development work.
The Aga Khanis were in majority in Hunza only.
They wanted to capture Gilgit and Baltistan
where the majority of the population was
Shi'ite. To gain popularity among the Shi'ites,
the AKDN offered them loans. Under a conspiracy,
the AKDN promoted the cultivation of potatoes
and provide defective seeds in this effect. When
the Shi'ite farmers bought the defective potato
seeds on loan on the advice of AKDN, their yield
reduced to a significant extent and their
financial condition started deteriorating. Banks
confiscated their land and their land was
purchased by AKDN at throwaway prices.
Similarly, AKDN has set up some Basic
Health Units [BHUs]. The purpose of these BHUs
is to spread obscenity, liberalism and apostasy.
The US is behind the AKDN. Ziauddin understood
this move. He wanted the AKDN to limit its
activities to the Aga Khani community. He
struggled against secularism from the platform
of Ittehadul Muslimeen. In practice, he had
waged jihad against the AKDN and mobilized the
community in this effect. This was not
acceptable to the Aga Khanis as well as the US.
The US wanted to give Prince Karim Aga
Khan a special role in Kashmir. The plan was to
give Kashmir to the prince's trusteeship. But
there were a few big hurdles in this plan - the
Shi'ite population and Ziauddin. The US thought
by serving the poor community, they could be
subjugated. Ziauddin did not let it happen. Thus
Ziauddin became a challenge for the US. That is
why, Ziauddin was removed from the scene.
The jihadis have also fabricated a
number of opinion polls against the Ismaelis. Thus
the Daily Jasarat reported on December 19, 2004:
According to a survey by the Islami
Jamiat-e-Talba [IJT], 854,000 people have
rejected the AKB. There were only 64,000 votes
in AKB's support. IJT arranged a special
referendum to ascertain the popularity of AKB in
Sindh. It set up 140 camps and collected the
public opinion. Around 918,855 people took part
in the referendum - 93.02% rejected the AKB. IJT
has decided to run a countrywide campaign
against AKB. It will demand that the government
should take back its decision of giving the
educational system to AKB. The United
Students Front (USF) - a union of jihadi students
- has threatened to attack Parliament if AKF's
involvement in education is not ended. The USF's
president, Sahibzada Babar Farooq Rahimi, has said
that the students will not hesitate to sacrifice
their lives if the decision to hand over the
education board to AKF was not reversed.
It is useful to note that the Aga Khanis
have nothing to do with the curriculum or with the
Ahmadia community. But the jihadis have launched a
massive propaganda war to demonize them, and the
result, in at least one case, was that the AKDN's
offices and its aid workers have been attacked in
Gilgit and North West Frontier Province in the
recent past. Pakistan's poorly educated people are
so influenced by this propaganda that they have
come to view the government's education reforms as
a conspiracy against Islam. The extremists'
propaganda has substantially succeeded in
projecting the following perspectives:
The Ahmadis are a scourge and the Ismaelis are
their twin-brothers. They are infidels. The US
wants to bring them into the mainstream, which is
possible only through indoctrination. Therefore,
General Musharraf at the US's behest has "pledged"
the entire education system to the Prince Karim
Aga Khan who is an agent of the "evil powers" -
the US, Israel and India.
The above motive cannot be achieved without
restructuring the current educational system,
which protects the two-nation theory. Therefore,
the AKUEB will be reforming the curriculum under
the cover of conducting exams for the private
schools.
Pakistan in the years to come will get away
with the constitutional clause that declares
Ahmadis to be non-Muslims. As a first step in this
direction, the Ismaelis have coerced General
Musharraf not to restore the column of religion in
the new passports.
The jihadis have long
considered America, India, Israel and Ahmadis as
the worst evils. Musharraf's education reforms
have given them a new entity to demonize: the
Ismaelis, and there is urgent need to counter
their venomous propaganda. Unfortunately, the
government's own orientation has compounded the
problem. Ali Tauqeer Sheikh, a civil society
representative who heads one of the largest
networks for sustainable development in Pakistan,
LEAD (Leadership for Environment and Development),
notes:
AKUEB is not a conspiracy. It will
add quality to our declining education
standards. The jihadis and maulvis have
portrayed it as a conspiracy because the
government has failed to involve the civil
society in this initiative. We still have to see
the terms of references of the agreement that
the government of Pakistan has signed with the
AKUEB. This entire issue could be cleansed of
conspiracies and controversies once it is opened
for stakeholders' debate. The question is not,
why the government has done so? We all support
this initiative. The question is how it would be
done. The civil society is still in darkness
about this issue. (Published with
permission from the South Asia Intelligence Review
of the Educational reform vs fundamentalist fury
By Mohammad Shehzad
ISLAMABAD - After
seizing power through a dramatic coup d'etat,
Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf
initiated several reforms in various areas,
including the country's educational system. To
improve it, Musharraf signed an executive order in
2002 inducting the Aga Khan University Examination
Board (AKUEB) into the national education system.
The AKUEB was selected for this assignment
due to its outstanding track record. Over the
years, the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) has
emerged as one of the most effective associations
of community-based organizations in Pakistan, and
has changed the lives of large numbers of people
in the remotest areas of the country, including
the Northern Areas, where no government agency has
ever undertaken any development work.
The
AKUEB has been given the task of upgrading and
modernizing the declining standards of education
and of holding examinations for private
educational institutions. The affiliation of these
institutions to the board is voluntary. The board
has not been given any role in government schools,
and the system is also intended to help groom
teachers in private educational institutions with
excellent skills through training. The AKUEB would
bring in modern examinations, both in English and
Urdu, at an affordable cost to a much broader
section of society, providing parents and schools
with the option to choose the style of education
they desire from classes four to 12.
Until
now, such a choice was confined to the very few
who could afford the "O level" fees. The AKUEB
follows the British education system of "O" and
"A" levels. "O" levels are designed for students
from 14 to 16 years of age and are aimed at
preparing them for academic progression and
equipping them with the skills necessary for
employment. "A" levels are designed to prepare
them for university and other professional fields
of study. Both levels emphasize a broad range of
subjects, covering the humanities, social
sciences, natural sciences and other creative
technical and vocational qualifications. A
National Examination Testing Service has been
constituted and the government educational boards
have agreed to entertain applications from
students who take examinations under the AKUEB.
These examinations are expected to start in 2006.
Musharraf's initiatives on this count have
been greeted as a step in the right direction by
the enlightened section of Pakistani society.
However, the right-wing groups (jihadis,
Islamists, clerics, fundamentalists, and religious
extremists) - a powerful minority in Pakistan by
whom the mainstream is held hostage - have
launched a virulent campaign against these
reforms. A wide range of facilities are available
to these groups for the propagation of their
venomous propaganda, including the jihadi media,
pulpits and loudspeakers at mosques, and public
rallies, which are not allowed for mainstream
politics but are permitted for jihad and
fassad (evil).
The Jihadi press -
comprising dozens of publications with a
collective circulation in millions - has started a
concentrated smear campaign against the Ismaeli
(Aga Khan) community, with at least some
mainstream publications, such as Nawa-i-Waqt and
The Nation, supporting the fundamentalists in this
campaign. The Jihadi press is cranking out highly
inflammatory and provocative material against
Prince Karim Aga Khan, the Ismaelis, AKUEB and
AKDN in an attempt to present the Ahmadis and the
Ismaelis as two sides of the same coin. Jihadi
leaders have issued statement after statement
demonizing the Ahmadis and the Ismaelis. Crossing
all limits of decency and diplomacy, the rabid
Islamist Qazi Hussain Ahmad - often referred to as
a "Pakistani Bal Thackeray" - launched a direct
attack on Prince Karim Aga Khan. The Qazi was the
first to spearhead the campaign against the
Ismaelis, linking them to the Ahmadis, the most
persecuted sect in Pakistan. The Weekly Ghazwa - a
publication of the defunct Lashkar-e-Taiba - in
its May 6, 2004, issue quoted Qazi as saying: "If
the Prince Karim Aga Khan tried to interfere in
our curriculum, I will make his end miserable. In
fact, his end would be even worse than the
Ahmadis." A diplomat chastised Qazi at a social
gathering for this threat.
The jihadis
accuse the AKDN of receiving a bribe of US$45
million as a grant from the US for "perverting"
Pakistan's education system by "spreading nudity
and obscenity" and "introducing a free-sex
environment". To support their claim, the jihadis
have distorted and exaggerated a health survey
issued by the Aga Khan Nursing School. The Daily
Jasarat, on May 9, 2004, declaimed:
Aga Khan Foundation [AKF] has
distributed a questionnaire among schoolgirls
aged between 11-15 that asks sensuous and
objectionable questions. For example, has a man
ever touched your body? If so, who is that
person? Has anyone touched your breasts? Do you
know about self-breast examination? If so, how
do you feel about discussing it with other
people? Most of the questions pertain to
menstruation, asking girls whether they feel
pain during the periods. The questionnaire has
frightened the parents. What could be the
purpose of asking such questions? It is a US
conspiracy to spread perversion in the society.
The US is using our education minister, Zobaida
Jalal, to achieve this objective. At her behest,
these questions have been included in the
schoolbooks of class VIII. Every
jihadi publication has been distorting this
questionnaire according to its own indoctrination
policy. Outperforming all others, the Weekly
Ghazwa in December, 2004 reported:
Aga Khan Board has circulated a
questionnaire among the students under the
title, 'Health Survey'. The questionnaire asks
the students the following obscene and immoral
questions: Should a girl have sex before the
marriage? If yes, at what age? AIDS is
transmitted through unsafe sex, prostitution and
homosexuality, therefore, ensure that you
practice safe sex. Have you ever had sex? If
yes, at what age? Do you drink? If yes, how much
quantity? Do you take drugs or other
intoxicating things? When did you have sex first
time in your life? Should a boy and a girl in
love have sex before the marriage? How to derive
maximum pleasure from sex? Have you seen your
sister naked? If yes, what type of feelings you
had in your mind? Did you ever think of having
sex with her? Is your father having sex with
you? Is your brother having sex with you? Have
you been sleeping with your mother in the
childhood? Did you ever see her naked? If yes,
what type of feelings you had in your mind? When
was the last time you saw your mother naked?
These questions pervert the young minds.
These questions are asked from the students of
the 9th and 10th grade. You can well imagine
from the above questions that it is a conspiracy
to introduce immoral values in our Islamic
society. There is no doubt that the Aga Khan
Board is working at the behest of the Jews,
Hindus and Christians and its mission is to
pervert our coming generations. The
scope of the education reforms controversy widened
when Hafiz Mohammad Saeed - the supremo of the
defunct Laskhar-e-Taiba - joined the issue. In the
Internet edition of the Weekly Ghazwa in November,
2004, Saeed said: "Musharraf is working on making
the Northern Areas an Aga Khani state. He has been
pressured by Christina Rocca [assistant secretary
of state for South Asia] to hand over Kashmir to
Prince Karim Aga Khan so that he could annex it
with the Northern Areas and make it his fiefdom."
The propaganda against the Ismaelis has
intensified to such an extent that now Aga Khanis
are being condemned for most of the developments
taking place in Pakistan, including Pakistan's
privatization policy. The Daily Jasarat last month
said:
America is behind sectarian violence
in many countries including Pakistan. The
biggest proof of General Musharraf's
inefficiency is, he has allowed the AKF to act
as the agent of the US. Habib Bank has been sold
to the AKF at throwaway price. AKF has been
allowed to tamper with the education system of
Pakistan. The AKF has secularized Pakistani
education system. This has resulted into a
backlash against the Aga Khanis and it has
happened first time in Pakistan's history. If a
better sense did not prevail upon Prince Karim
Aga Khan or General Musharraf then Pakistan will
be in the grip of a fire. Musharraf has
masterminded hatred against Aga Khanis in the
Pakistani society. He is pushing Pakistan into
the 1971-like situation. The jihadis
have also begun to blame Prince Karim Aga Khan for
the sectarian violence in Gilgit, in the Northern
Areas. Thus, the Weekly Takbeer in its cover story
last last month wrote:
Two elements are involved in trouble
in Gilgit - internal conspiracies and those who
want to secularize the Northern Areas and
isolate it from Pakistan. The latter are the
pro-Hindu elements and Aga Khanis are on the top
of it. The Aga Khani lobby is behind Aga
Ziauddin's murder. He was the only hurdle in the
preaching of the Aga Khanis' religion. The
majority of the people in Gilgit are Shi'ites
and Aga Ziauddin was their sole spiritual
leader. He was an uncontroversial figure. Even
his opponents also admired him. Ziauddin
struggled for the rights of Shi'ites on many
fronts. He was against the increasing influence
of Aga Khan Foundation in the Northern Areas. He
also wanted the Government to introduce separate
curriculum for the Shi'ites in the Northern
Areas. He had opponents too in this regard.
The increasing influence of the Aga Khan
Development Network [AKDN] in Gilgit and
Baltistan was the basic reason of Ziauddin's
murder. For the last some years, the AKDN was
preaching secularism and apostasy in Gilgit and
Baltistan under the cover of development work.
The Aga Khanis were in majority in Hunza only.
They wanted to capture Gilgit and Baltistan
where the majority of the population was
Shi'ite. To gain popularity among the Shi'ites,
the AKDN offered them loans. Under a conspiracy,
the AKDN promoted the cultivation of potatoes
and provide defective seeds in this effect. When
the Shi'ite farmers bought the defective potato
seeds on loan on the advice of AKDN, their yield
reduced to a significant extent and their
financial condition started deteriorating. Banks
confiscated their land and their land was
purchased by AKDN at throwaway prices.
Similarly, AKDN has set up some Basic
Health Units [BHUs]. The purpose of these BHUs
is to spread obscenity, liberalism and apostasy.
The US is behind the AKDN. Ziauddin understood
this move. He wanted the AKDN to limit its
activities to the Aga Khani community. He
struggled against secularism from the platform
of Ittehadul Muslimeen. In practice, he had
waged jihad against the AKDN and mobilized the
community in this effect. This was not
acceptable to the Aga Khanis as well as the US.
The US wanted to give Prince Karim Aga
Khan a special role in Kashmir. The plan was to
give Kashmir to the prince's trusteeship. But
there were a few big hurdles in this plan - the
Shi'ite population and Ziauddin. The US thought
by serving the poor community, they could be
subjugated. Ziauddin did not let it happen. Thus
Ziauddin became a challenge for the US. That is
why, Ziauddin was removed from the scene.
The jihadis have also fabricated a
number of opinion polls against the Ismaelis. Thus
the Daily Jasarat reported on December 19, 2004:
According to a survey by the Islami
Jamiat-e-Talba [IJT], 854,000 people have
rejected the AKB. There were only 64,000 votes
in AKB's support. IJT arranged a special
referendum to ascertain the popularity of AKB in
Sindh. It set up 140 camps and collected the
public opinion. Around 918,855 people took part
in the referendum - 93.02% rejected the AKB. IJT
has decided to run a countrywide campaign
against AKB. It will demand that the government
should take back its decision of giving the
educational system to AKB. The United
Students Front (USF) - a union of jihadi students
- has threatened to attack Parliament if AKF's
involvement in education is not ended. The USF's
president, Sahibzada Babar Farooq Rahimi, has said
that the students will not hesitate to sacrifice
their lives if the decision to hand over the
education board to AKF was not reversed.
It is useful to note that the Aga Khanis
have nothing to do with the curriculum or with the
Ahmadia community. But the jihadis have launched a
massive propaganda war to demonize them, and the
result, in at least one case, was that the AKDN's
offices and its aid workers have been attacked in
Gilgit and North West Frontier Province in the
recent past. Pakistan's poorly educated people are
so influenced by this propaganda that they have
come to view the government's education reforms as
a conspiracy against Islam. The extremists'
propaganda has substantially succeeded in
projecting the following perspectives:
The Ahmadis are a scourge and the Ismaelis are
their twin-brothers. They are infidels. The US
wants to bring them into the mainstream, which is
possible only through indoctrination. Therefore,
General Musharraf at the US's behest has "pledged"
the entire education system to the Prince Karim
Aga Khan who is an agent of the "evil powers" -
the US, Israel and India.
The above motive cannot be achieved without
restructuring the current educational system,
which protects the two-nation theory. Therefore,
the AKUEB will be reforming the curriculum under
the cover of conducting exams for the private
schools.
Pakistan in the years to come will get away
with the constitutional clause that declares
Ahmadis to be non-Muslims. As a first step in this
direction, the Ismaelis have coerced General
Musharraf not to restore the column of religion in
the new passports.
The jihadis have long
considered America, India, Israel and Ahmadis as
the worst evils. Musharraf's education reforms
have given them a new entity to demonize: the
Ismaelis, and there is urgent need to counter
their venomous propaganda. Unfortunately, the
government's own orientation has compounded the
problem. Ali Tauqeer Sheikh, a civil society
representative who heads one of the largest
networks for sustainable development in Pakistan,
LEAD (Leadership for Environment and Development),
notes:
AKUEB is not a conspiracy. It will
add quality to our declining education
standards. The jihadis and maulvis have
portrayed it as a conspiracy because the
government has failed to involve the civil
society in this initiative. We still have to see
the terms of references of the agreement that
the government of Pakistan has signed with the
AKUEB. This entire issue could be cleansed of
conspiracies and controversies once it is opened
for stakeholders' debate. The question is not,
why the government has done so? We all support
this initiative. The question is how it would be
done. The civil society is still in darkness
about this issue. (Published with
permission from the South Asia Intelligence Review
of the South Asia Intelligence
Review) |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
All material on this
website is copyright and may not be republished in any form without written
permission.
© Copyright 1999 - 2005 Asia Times
Online Ltd.
|
|
Head
Office: Rm 202, Hau Fook Mansion, No. 8 Hau Fook St., Kowloon, Hong
Kong
Thailand Bureau:
11/13 Petchkasem Road, Hua Hin, Prachuab Kirikhan, Thailand 77110
|
Asian Sex Gazette South Asian Sex News
|
|
|