Only the hard-hearted officials in the interior ministry and its allied agencies would have remained unmoved by the story published yesterday about the death of three illegal Pakistani immigrants in the UAE.
Two of them died of starvation and a third of injuries received when he was shot by border guards in the Gulf state. Their decomposed bodies were found days later. They are not the first nor will be the last persons to fall victim to unemployment, ignorance and official indifference.
Reports of Pakistanis dying of suffocation stuffed in vans carrying them to cherished destinations in the West, of Pakistanis arrested and rotting in jails abroad and of Pakistanis humiliated and deported fill newspaper columns every month.
Two years ago, a group of Pakistani migrants were murdered in Macedonia and the crime passed off as the killing of "Islamic militants" by the country's then interior minister, a right-wing politician who is now in disgrace.
This was an extreme case, but the flow of people from Pakistan going out on false promises of jobs after paying hefty sums to travel agents and immigration racketeers is a steady one.
Pakistanis are discovered in the oddest of places, such as Madagascar, apparently a staging post for smuggling of humans to other destinations. Many of those sponsoring this trade are well known to the authorities, and yet nothing is done to prevent this constant exploitation of credulous and frustrated youth from the rural and less developed areas of the country.
A recent report from Lahore stated that "immigration consultant" firms implicated in smuggling people were still doing business in the city. The federal interior minister said the other day that all possible corrective measures would be taken at airports to check illegal migrants.
Experience shows that such "corrective measures" usually only provide more opportunities to immigration staff to extort more money from intending migrants and to harass lawful travellers.
The issue has to be taken up more seriously. Unemployment has to be addressed in the rural areas and radio and television should be utilized to warn people about the hazards waiting for them if they go out illegally.
Another political murder?
Yet another politician has been gunned down in Karachi, adding to the long list of assassinations that have rocked the nation's biggest city. On Thursday, Mr Munawwar Suhrawardy, PPP information secretary and party chairperson Benazir Bhutto's close confidant, was shot and killed in broad daylight - the second PPP leader to be assassinated in a matter of three months.
On March 6, unknown gunmen had murdered MPA Abdullah Murad Baloch. If it is established that Mr Suhrawardy's killing was political in nature, then that will take Karachi's toll of such incidents to three - Mufti Nizamuddin Shamzai was gunned down on May 30.
Mr Suhrawardy's murder serves to highlight the acute law and order situation in Karachi. More, it shows the ease with which people can be eliminated. The two gunmen who shot him escaped, leaving the badly injured Mr Suhrawardy to hail a rickshaw to reach a hospital as blood flowed from his wounds.
We are concerned here with a phenomenon that has held Karachi in its grip for nearly two decades - politics of violence, terror and intimidation. Many groups now firmly believe that political rivals should be tackled not by political means but through violence, threat of force or outright murder.
The list of those who fell victim to targeted killing is long and spine-chilling. But some of the names come readily to mind: Zahoorul Hasan Bhopali, Azam Tariq, Hakim Said, Murtaza Bhutto, Maulana Yusuf Ludhianvi, Maulana Saleem Qadri, and many more.
One does not know where all this will lead to, unless all political parties wake up to this cancerous growth in Pakistan's body politic. The politics of murder and mayhem does not solve any problems; it only worsens it.
Basically, this is a political problem and cannot be solved by administrative means alone. It is time all political parties developed a consensus on the need for conducting politics politically, and agree to ostracize elements that believe in violence as a political tool.