Read Aboard the Democracy Train Online
Authors: Nafisa Hoodbhoy
N
AFISA
H
OODBHOY
Introduction: The Effects of Partition
Karachi Loses its Religious Diversity
India’s Migrants Flood Karachi
Political Challenges of the 1970s
The Only Woman Reporter at
Dawn
Newspaper
PART I: POLITICS AND JOURNALISM IN PAKISTAN
Chapter 1: Aboard the Democracy Train
Getting to Know Benazir Bhutto
“Eat from Jatoi, Vote for Benazir”
Elections Were the Tip of the Iceberg
Chapter 2: Ethnic Violence in Sindh:
The MQM Saga
September 30 Accused Go on Trial
Operation Clean-up Splits the MQM
Benazir Issues Shoot to Kill Orders
Chapter 3: News is What the Rulers Want to Hide
“What are you Writing? You’re Writing too Much”
“It was the Best of Times, it was the Worst of Times”
1991: A Year of Living Dangerously
Knives Were Used to Send a Message
Exchanging Places With Daniel Pearl
Pearl Becomes a Player in Media Politics
Chapter 4: Where Have All the Women Gone?
“Cry Rape to Get a Visa to Canada”
A Young Man Flees the Moral Jury
Breaking Out of the Veil and Four Walls
A Powerless Woman Prime Minister
Women are Broken to Break Benazir
The Beijing Conference on Women
Chapter 5: Uncovering a Murder
Accused Member of Parliament Runs Away
We Hunt Together for the Killer
Women Surprise Government Legislators
A Woman is Offered in Exchange
“Follow Your Heart” – A Friend’s Advice
“Caught Taking Bribe, Released Giving Bribe”
Hope Arrives in the Form of a Muslim Cleric
PART III: TERRORISM IN PAKISTAN
Chapter 6: Pakistan in the Shadow of 9/11
The Chickens Were Primed to Come
Home to Roost
The View From Soviet-Dominated Kabul
Fleeing Militants Massacre my Christian
Friends
9/11 Gives License for Disappearances
Running With the Hare and Hunting With the Hound
The Taliban Sets up Shop in Pakistan
Drones Attack Last Refuge for Jihadists
Chapter 7: The Democracy Train Revs for Motion
“Democracy is the Best Revenge”
Squaring Off with a Potential Adversary
The Chief Justice Notices the Disappeared
Dressing the Wounds of Balochistan
A Mourning Federation Catapults the PPP to Power
The Army Takes On the Pakistani Taliban
No Stops on the Democracy Train
Pakistan’s Epic Monsoon Floods
T
his is a book about politics and journalism in Pakistan, told through first-hand experiences. It is one I have long wanted to write because of my access to people, places and events that are normally hidden from public view. By relating my personal experiences, I hope to give an original insight to Pakistan and reveal who
really
rules the country, as well as expose the enormous effects that being in the US’s orbit of influence has had.
In 1984, I began my career at
Dawn
newspaper as its only female reporter, just as Benazir Bhutto made her bid to become Pakistan’s first woman prime minister. That year, I had come back from the US, armed with a master’s degree in history and a dream, not only to work for the nation’s most established newspaper, but to also effect change while working within the bounds of its staid but reliable coverage. As an energetic, young, Western-educated woman, my editor bypassed senior male reporters and deputed me to cover Benazir and her Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).
That decade of tumultuous democracy, which marked the onset of civilian rule and the end of 11½ years of military dictatorship, would reveal to me why Pakistan has stubbornly resisted change. As an insider, my experience informs the reader on how the establishment – acting in collusion with feudal lords, tribal chiefs, ethnic and mafia groups – has worked against untidy civilian rule.
As a journalist in Pakistan, I constantly walked a tightrope, informing readers about the machinations of corrupt and dishonest military and government leaders, all the while working for a newspaper that often depended on the goodwill of the establishment. In attempting to get the “inside story,” I often found myself skating on thin ice and this book relates some of the narrow escapes I had from violently enforced censorship.
My status as a female journalist in a Muslim society inadvertently defined my career. In a society already laden with archaic customs, I covered Islamic legislation that aimed to tie women to medieval ways. The laws were supposedly meant to protect women, yet all around me women were raped and murdered, without recourse to justice. This only motivated me further to use my influence as an insider journalist.
The book focuses primarily on the decade of democratic rule (1988–99) when as a political reporter I had a front seat on history. Again, as a US-based academic and journalist from 2000 to the present, I have shared my unique perspective on Pakistan’s politics since it partnered with the US. Whilst the post-9/11 alliance opened the door for Benazir’s PPP to return to power, it culminated in her murder and exposed the conspiracies and intrigue that are woven into the nation’s political fabric.
This book carries the reader through the issues that face a complex society like Pakistan, in which the population spins out of control, violence breeds because of the total collapse of judicial institutions and the situation for women is one of the most difficult in the world. Indeed, the region is a ticking time bomb – and one that teems with conspiracies that threaten it, not only internally, but also on a global scale.
I was only in my late twenties when I began an exciting career as a journalist in Pakistan. As a young, idealistic woman I began with a clean slate and without any preconceived notions of the complex interplay between politics and society. Back then, I worked according to the news industry’s modus operandi to cover breaking news. Given that journalism is often described as “literature in a hurry,” and I was too busy gathering facts to form a proper narrative at the time, this book is an attempt to unpack the message.
In essence, I hope to give a human face to a region associated with stereotypical images of Muslim women and terrorists. In offering a nuanced picture of Pakistan, I want readers to appreciate the fascinating kaleidoscope of its recent history. It is a nation riddled with contradictions, where the past and present live side-by-side and where the more things change, the more they remain the same.
It is with the intent of sharing a nuanced perspective that I invite the reader to better understand Pakistan, by sharing in the exciting and dramatic times that I have spent with the nation’s politicians and people.