Election: trends in politics: DATELINE QUETTA
By Siddiq Baluch
THINGS are gradually shaping up in the Balochistan province with parties finalizing their strategy to face the future political scenario. There are two sets of parties: one supporting and the other opposing the proposed elections the way the government is planning to organize.
The Pakistan People’s Party and the Pakistan Muslim League (QA) are the ones which have shown interest in contesting the polls. The PPP leaders hope to come out as the single largest winners at the national level to lay their claims to forming the future government at the Centre and, possibly, in the provinces.
It is followed by the PML (QA) which expects to form government in Balochistan at least, if not at the Centre, provided the elections are held according to their schedule. A sizable number of seat winners from this province have already joined the party or assured of support by the political personalities having their traditional constituencies.
The PML (QA) had received a setback when Sardar Yar Mohammad Rind did not join it and preferred to join the Millat Party of Sardar Farooq Leghari. Thrice in the past Sardar Rind had won his NA seats; and had remained a senator and chairman of the district council in his early days of politics.
The PPP leaders are now engaged in electing party office- bearers to avoid being debarred from contesting the polls. Also, some other parties, mainly the BNP factions and the JWP, have held party elections at the provincial level. The Pakthoonkhwa Milli Awami Party and others are also planning to hold party elections at different levels before the deadline set by the election commission.
But there is another development on the provincial political scene: some of the parties are coming under pressure from the party activists to quit, for good, parliamentary politics and to wage a struggle instead, outside the assemblies. One of the reasons cited for this by political experts is the tough electoral laws framed by the government making it impossible for traditional leaders to contest the elections in October.
Most of the politicians leading the parties with mass political base are disqualified, one way or the other. One of the towering personalities of Balochistan, Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, has been opposing the parliamentary politics for the past three decades. “It is total waste of time, resources and energy,” Nawab Marri has been telling his visitors for a long, long time, though his comrades would persuade him to participate, rather indirectly, in the process.
Presumably, Nawab Akbar Bugti and his Jamhoori Watan Party and Sardar Akhtar Mengal’s Balochistan National Party are coming round to Nawab Marri’s viewpoints, accepting his perceptions about the parliamentary politics. For the BNP and the JWP, most of the leaders and close relatives of their families stood disqualified with the condition for minimum qualification of graduate to become a member of the assembly. In short, the two parties and their leaders are convinced that they stood debarred from the assemblies.
No heavyweight will manage to reach the assemblies. Thus there is no use to waste time, energy and resources on parliamentary elections. The BNP did seek a mandate from its general council to okay the boycott of the future elections and to take to the streets to get its demand accepted.
The BNP (Mengal) demonstrated its political strength when it called for a one-day strike against the murder of its leader Aslam Gichki. The whole of central Balochistan was paralysed. It was very effective and left an impact on the public opinion. It received significant support from the provincial capital itself as the main shopping centres of the city remained closed in response to the strike call.
Perhaps for this reason, an official spokesman for the provincial government had reacted sharply claiming that the strike was ignored by the people. Although the leaders arrested in Quetta were released in the afternoon, many arrests were made in remote areas of central Balochistan, the BNP sources said.
In other words, the political troika of Mengal-Marri-Bugti is re-emerging in Balochistan, ignoring all their past differences. It became possible when the BNP (Mengal) extended unqualified support to Nawab Bugti in distress during a prolonged siege by the security forces at Dera Bugti. The party sent a delegation of political leaders to Nawab Bugti and extended unqualified support to him in case of police action against the Bugti tribesmen in future.
At a recent seminar, nine major parties of Balochistan rejected the proposed constitutional amendments. It was a signal that those parties would oppose the government moves collectively though at the same preparing for the elections. But indications are clear that the opposition parties will make serious inroads into the sphere of influence of the provincial government by resorting to the mass agitation.
If the parties are able to enforce non-parliamentary politics on the streets, the present government will be its first victim. The prestige of the provincial government is going down as leaders of public opinion keeping attacking its policies. Its failure in all fields are being highlighted by the opposition leaders. On the other hand, the provincial chief executive is handicapped with his team of ministers unable to counter the opposition moves against the government.
“It is a one-man show. They (cabinet ministers) are simply non-entities in the political context,” a political activist claimed. The governor, naturally, will not address political meetings to polish up his own image or enhance the prestige of his administration. He will have to leave the ground and give a walkover to his opponents sooner or later, a politician remarked.


Spare the rod, save the teacher: KARACHI FILE
By A. B. S. Jafri
A SHRIEKING heading in the newspaper said, “Teachers may be barred from joining tuition centres.” It appears that teachers are to be prevented from teaching. But, why? Do we have an abundance of teachers? Are there too many of schools, so they should be dissuaded from undertaking the task of teaching? Or, are there not enough of children for the existing schools and available teachers?
The reported move to prevent government school teachers from offering tuition, that is in time after, or before their regular teaching job, is so utterly absurd as to defy belief. Apparently, some dim baboo is trying to have it out on teachers for some personal or perverse grudge.
What is being made out is that government school teachers do not take their work seriously. Quite true. They neglect their official duties in order to directly or indirectly oblige parents to have extra tuition their wards. Absolutely correct. Teachers in government schools use all manner of tricks to earn on the side. Also true.
So what is the remedy? To ban teachers from taking up teaching in spare time? No, that is not the way to combat what is admittedly a well established social malpractice. In the first place, the education authorities be hauled up for their failure to discipline the teachers on government payroll.
If the teachers are not teaching properly in the regular classes, what on earth is the Headmaster/Principal there for? If the Headmaster is not supervising the work of the teachers under him, quite obviously he is unable or unwilling to do his job; He/she should be cashiered, in the first place.
Next step, above. If headmasters are not taking due care of teaching in their schools, the Inspector of Schools should be pulling them up or getting rid of them. It is only logical that if the Inspector of Schools is not carrying out his supervisory duties, his superiors should do the needful — pull him/her up or show them the door.
Now, where is the Director of Education? What is he doing to make sure that the schools are properly functioning? And where on earth is the Minister for Education? Quite obviously what we have on our hands is a total collapse of the education system, or whatever of it remains in the domain of the government of this province.
Let us face facts. Education in the country as a whole, in this province in particular, is about the most neglected aspect of national life. We hear the Federal Minister of education waxing eloquent about high technology and what have you. He is busy building passionately — from top downwards!
At the school level, pass percentage in annual promotion examinations remains appallingly low. Thousands of students are declared ‘failed.’ This means thousands of years of lives or our children are lost beyond any retrieval. This happens year after year. No action is taken against any official in the Education Department. Why do the students fail? Primarily because of very poor teaching.
There was a time when the school teachers’ life prospects depended upon the success of their students. That is the surest way to make the school teachers do an honest day’s teaching. If their students made good, the teachers rose, or else they stagnated. Many would lose their jobs.
We do not have enough schools and certainly not enough of teachers. As it is, the government is in a mad rush to privatise everything under the sun, education sooner than anything else. Why throttle the schools that are cropping up? No doubt many of these mushrooming schools are not up to the mark.
But the real question is a moral one. If the government cannot run its own schools properly, has it any legal or moral right to dictate discipline to others? If the government cannot provide seats in its school, it has no right to prevent a child going to whatever school its parents can manage and whatever teachers hold classes there.
What ought to shame the Education Department is its own deplorable performance. It cannot organise even annual examinations efficiently. Now, annual examinations are events that come only once a year. The department has a whole year to prepare for this test of its ability. It fails every time. And no corrective action to tame it.
Look at the textbook scandal. It is a disgusting mess. A hundred questions are being asked by the harried students and their no less harried parents. Why are the books not there? One attempt has been made to put the blame on distant Islamabad. Why did the Education Department in Karachi or Hyderabad not start making the same noise four months earlier?
They say out of evil cometh good. What good can we expect from this unrelieved situation? This virtual collapse of the Education Department should persuade the provincial government to inject a bit of common sense and a touch of moral strength to look at its own warts, pimples and all. There is more of corruption in education than people would believe. It may be all for money. Would the textbook fiasco bear scrutiny?
For heaven’s sake the education authorities should be to told to leave the poor teachers and the private schools, regardless of their indifferent quality. It is not too soon for the government of Sindh to take care of its ghost schools and ghost teachers. Let them look at that horror and do something about that standing shame.
Everybody is making an extra buck in the government services.
Why not the poor school teacher be free to make an extra bit? After all, the pay scales for schools teachers tell a pathetic tale. If anyone in our society needs some extra consideration, it is the school teacher. If you want your man to do a first class job, give him a first class ticket.


Alarming increase in suicide incidents: DATELINE FAISALABAD
By Shamsul Islam Naz
OVER 200 people, including girls and boys, aged persons and heads of families, committed suicide between July 2001 and June 2002 in Faisalabad district. However, only 42 suicide incidents were reported to the police which were recorded in the ‘roznamcha’.
According to Islamic teachings and laws, suicide is a major sin and is not allowed in any circumstances.
Most people who committed suicide were said to be highly dejected and fed up with their lives owing to financial difficulties, joblessness or poverty. In most cases, either the breadwinner had become jobless or income was insufficient to fulfil the domestic responsibilities.
The data collected by this correspondent revealed that out of the registered cases, six women, eight girls, 20 youths and eight aged persons, including two couples, took their lives.
The police said if a person committed suicide, it was not considered an offence. They just carried out the legal formalities and handed over the body to the relatives without a post-mortem examination.
It is believed that most people keep such matters secret from the police, relatives and neighbours. Neither the police give any importance to suicide nor the community reacts to it. However, the police claim that if a person survives a suicide attempt, a case is registered against him or her for attempting to kill himself/herself.
Psychiatrists are of the view that the trend of suicide should be taken as a serious indicator of the frustration and dejection in society, which shows that the people have lost confidence in the system. They say the number of suicide incidents is alarming and should be controlled. The real problems of the people which cause depression and frustration must be addressed and practical steps taken to provide them relief.
There were about a hundred incidents in the district during the last year in which youngsters, labourers and teenagers ended their lives by hanging, burning or shooting themselves. Majority of the people because of legal complications and the menacing attitude of government agencies termed such incidents ‘accidental’. The police itself advised the relatives not to report the matter and keep it a ‘secret’.
In some cases, policemen were found involved in receiving huge bribes from parents of the girls who committed suicide for keeping the matter off the record.
According to statics provided by the Allied Hospital and DHQ Hospital officials, 13 people including girls and aged persons committed suicide by hanging in 2001. Only two cases of suicide by poison were received by the Emergency Ward of the Allied Hospital.
Faisalabad district has a population of more than 5.7 million but there are only seven practising psychiatrists. Most patients have been reportedly approaching them through relatives for advice and treatment of various types of addiction. Almost all these psychiatrists were asked by this correspondent as to how many youngsters approached them for problems of dejection and frustration owing to unemployment, financial difficulties and other social problems like tension-ridden domestic life and physiological and economic suppression.
The standard reply was that hardly one per cent of such patients, all belonging to well-off families, had approached them through their relatives. From the lower middle class families, hardly a few patients sought their advice being unable to afford the high cost of treatment. The have-nots thus were left with no option but to end their lives one way or the other being unable to cope with their economic problems.
One such dejected boy, Naseer Ahmad, said had his family owned resources, he would not have thought of ending his life, seeing no light of hope in a corruption-ridden and influence dominated society.
Surprisingly, sociologists, NGOs and philanthropists have not come up with the idea of holding a debate or workshop to analyze the causes of suicide and final remedies. The Punjab Medical College and the Pakistan Medical Association never even discussed the subject.
One should seriously consider every note of suicide, every act of self-immolation, every indication of self-infliction, however deliberate it may sound, because no human being would end his/her life without giving a warning or signal to others.

