There are days when in the flood of depressing news of wars, violence and killing, newspapers carry a cheery item that restores to some extent readers' faith in the goodness of man. Last Friday was one such day when this paper reported a statement by the Nazim of Karachi, Naimatullah Khan, that the city would get eight new libraries.
Plots for the purpose have already been identified in different localities, we were told. But one will have to drum up all of one's optimism to believe that these libraries, which are to be air-conditioned, are just round the corner. Moreover, if you are not an avid newspaper reader you may not remember that in early November 2004 an identical statement was issued by the city government's office.
Things don't move that fast in this country, especially if they concern the development of human resources like libraries, schools, colleges, universities and hospitals. Moreover, many of these turn out to be something quite different when they take final shape. Take the women's library complex which is at present under construction on the University Road at the Nipa Chowrangi. This land was earmarked for a city library in 1991. An architectural design competition was also held and the best design selected - this process cost the government Rs100,000. But the city library never saw the light of day.
Mr Moinuddin Khan, a committed champion of libraries and book culture, who was a member of the committee which drew up the design for the city library, disclosed in a letter to this newspaper that an old student of the Karachi University had pledged Rs300 million for this institution. It was never availed of. Later Hakim Said, when he was governor of Sindh, had worked for this project but it also never materialized.
In 2004 some women councillors were handed over the land to build a women's library on it. This project is said to be half complete. The biggest miracle is that for 13 years the plot lay vacant and was not grabbed by some developer to build a shopping plaza.
Hence one cannot be certain that the eight libraries Mr Naimutallah has promised will ultimately be built as institutions to house books or will be used for some other purposes. It is also not known what timeframe the Nazim has in mind. What is worrying about libraries not only in Karachi but all over the country is that there is a lot of loud talk about promoting the library culture and reading habits of the people but these pious intentions generally don't get translated into action.
The problem is that along with the statements promising new libraries issued by the high-ups in every branch of government, newspapers are replete with stories of how neglected our public libraries are - buildings being in a woeful condition, book stocks gradually destroyed/ stolen, pathetic furniture, no practice of acquiring new stock and the biggest sin of all, library budget lying unused.
Our library system suffers from four basic problems all of which are rooted in lack of political will on the part of the authorities to set up libraries. First, there is no a sufficient number of libraries around which would make these institutions easily accessible for the general readers. Instead of grandiose projects in some of the big cities, we should have concentrated on creating a network of small mohalla libraries in every town and city.
It is also essential that every school, college and educational institution is equipped with a library for its own students. At present Pakistan is said to have 1430 libraries, some of which do not even merit to be called libraries.
The second flaw in our library system is that the existing libraries have not been maintained properly. As a result, their stocks are generally obsolete, if they are housed in old buildings the structures are often dilapidated and modern facilities are absent, The library sector in Pakistan gives the impression of being in stagnation rather than a vibrant area of public life.
The third major drawback is that the libraries in Pakistan are set up in an ad hoc fashion. There is no library policy which provides a blueprint for the creation and expansion of these facilities. That accounts for the vast disparity between the good and the bad.
While the good libraries are provided with the best facilities and emerge as model institutions, the neglected ones are in had shape - not cared for, not wanted. Like many other projects in our society - private schools versus public schools, government hospitals versus private clinics - these libraries promote class stratification, as the affluent get all the facilities while the poor are denied even their basic needs.
The final weakness in our library system is that in over five decades no library law has been formulated. Without a library law, no country can have an organized, well financed and properly planned library system. Conventionally a library law sets up an authority to manage this sector and makes it mandatory for various departments of the government to set aside a fixed proportion of their budget (preferably two per cent) for libraries.
A service structure for the librarians is also drawn up in order to give the librarian's profession a respectable standing and dignity. Every library should have a library committee to regulate its working and to ensure judicious and honest use of its funds. It should be mandatory for every educational institution to have a library with a stock of five books per student.
A law drafted by Prof Anis Khurshid, the doyen of library and information science in Pakistan, took care of all these aspects. Unfortunately the law makers don't share his commitment to knowledge, education and books. Although a PPP-P parliamentarian, Sherry Rehman, took up the issue a year ago and collected information on a draft library law, it still hasn't been introduced in the National Assembly.
It speaks of a flawed approach if this law is dismissed as something trivial. Libraries are an integral part of education and the publishing industry. These institutions are also central to the reading habits of people. A country that has no library system of any significance is a country where book culture is missing. What we need is a library movement so that books and reading habit are popularized in the country.
Protecting old trees
By Hafizur Rahman
The Spring Tree Plantation Drive has just concluded. It enabled many VIPs to have their photo taken while watering a sapling. We are great at observing these drives, but somehow we are not able to give the saplings the attention they need. To me this is symptomatic of a national trait. We will fight a battle like warriors, but going through a war is too tiresome for us.
In a recent BBC programme I saw something novel. It seems that the Thais are as bad as we are in destroying forest wealth. So someone there had a bright idea. They consecrated the old trees, then symbolically ordained them as Buddhist monks by tying saffron robes around their trunks. The result was that no one dared to fell these trees as that would have amounted to killing a monk.
A very good idea I must say, though it depends for success on the veneration that a people pay to their priests. I was wondering if it would work in Pakistan. Suppose the Forest Department were to place a green turban on a free and give it out that it had been sanctified by that headgear, would our people abstain from axing such a tree?
However the ruse has a chance of succeeding if the tree to be saved from greedy vandals is named after the local pir. Our people (right from presidents and prime ministers to the common man) are great believers in the powers of pirs, and might be inclined to protect a tree ordained as one. Then they will studiously place the yearly offering of money at the foot of that tree because, unlike Buddhist monks, our spiritual mentors don't come free, and can be as exacting as the income tax man.
The real question is: will the timber mafia in Hazara, the Murree hills and the mountains of Dir, Swat and Azad Kashmir be impressed and refrain from their tree-killing activities if they find that a fifty-year old giant that they want to fell is actually a pir. The BBC programme said that the consecration of trees as monks had brought about a wonderful change in the attitude of the rural population. It's a moot point if our timber mafia will be taken in by the disguise. They are a terrible lot and would be ready to murder even a real pir to get their way.
Very little appears in the press about the incalculable damage caused to the economy, the ecology and the geography of Pakistan's tree growing areas by the depredations of these crooks. And the real tragedy is not that the mafia cuts these trees illegally. Its members are armed with permits issued by the governments of NWFP and Azad Kashmir, and the sole consideration for this privilege is cheap politics. Hundreds of square miles have been denuded of forest wealth by the short-sighted policies of the provincial regimes in the past.
I assert that this deed is both criminal and unpatriotic. To secure the political allegiance of corrupt MNAs and MPAs, the permits were doled out in the business of horse-trading, and these unscrupulous legislators made a lot of money in the process. It would be difficult to match such myopic administration anywhere else in the world. This heinous activity went on during both the PPP regimes and the PML regimes. It only shows that dirty deeds come naturally to the practitioners of Pakistani politics.
It is said that even if half of the saplings planted in Pakistan during the last 57 years had survived, the country would have been covered with a canopy of green. The charade of tree-planting was as conscientiously gone through in the early days as it is now. I can never forget the big mela organized in Punjab's Thal area 50 years ago where Governor-General Ghulam Muhammad was to come and see for himself the reclamation work.
In order to lend an air of development to the occasion, hundreds of semi-grown trees were "planted" overnight to show that the desert was about to bloom. They wilted the next day and there was a dispute between the Thal Development Authority and the forest people as to who should foot the bill.
Talking of the Thal, I wonder if the mosque built in one of the newly-settled chaks of the desert, which was formally opened by the then Governor Punjab Sir Francis Mudie, is still identified with him. For a long time it was called Mudie Masjid by everyone. Yes, we Muslims were still tolerant enough to name a mosque after a non-Muslim. We had not become obsessed by the fear of invisible dangers to Islam. Isn't it strange that we were better Muslims when we lived among the economically and politically powerful 'kafirs' than we are now? This only proves the truism that Islam has more to fear from its own adherents than from its declared opponents.
As a young boy I lived in Lahore's Model Town. On every Eid in the grand Model Town mosque (designed, incidentally, by an Englishman) an old Sikh gentleman used to join the congregation. None of us were bothered by his presence. Let a non-Muslim try to do this today. He would probably be lynched. As if in emulation of this noble spirit (as Mr Cowasjee has written many times) the Quaid-i-Azam and Miss Jinnah attended a special service in a Karachi church on August 17, 1947, a service dedicated to the strength and welfare of the new state.
Can President Pervez Musharraf do this today. Can that self-styled darling of the masses, Ms Benazir Bhutto, or the holder of the so-called record in popular mandates, Mian Nawaz Sharif, dare to say a prayer in a church or a temple? The maulvis would have made mincemeat of them, and it would have taken them countless umrahs as an act of penance to prove their bona fides as Muslims. Only General Zia could have got away with it, and that too through his hypocrisy!
If our top leaders and politicians were to listen to me, I would say, "For God's sake, try to plant the tree of tolerance in this benighted country. Let this tree then grow up and spread over all of us and embrace the entire nation. Let it give shade and shelter to Pakistan's tortured soul."
New horizons, new hazards?: Electronic Media Freedom Day
By Javed Jabbar
As Electronic Media Freedom Day is being observed today, two anomalies symbolize the curious condition of media laws and policies in Pakistan.
Those satellite TV channels which originate their content from within Pakistan but are telecast from overseas locations like Dubai, or elsewhere, and which have helped transform the electronic media environment over the past four years operate without being subject to any specific media law.
Despite the passage of over 27 months since the elections of October 2002 and the creation of a National Assembly, the National Assembly Standing Committee on Information and Broadcasting has yet to hold its first meeting. The PEMRA (Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority) Amendment Act 2004 tabled in the assembly in October 2004 has been gathering dust in cupboards waiting for a decision as to who will chair the Committee. The committee itself was constituted a full two years after the election of the assembly.
Some may view both the above anomalies as being welcome. Just as it is said that: "no news is good news", it could be said that, in the case of media: "no law is good law". But experience across the world in a wide variety of countries proves that all media and all societies require a minimal level of law, regulation and continuous vigilance to ensure equity, accountability and transparency in the functioning of media, those very important virtues which media themselves often demand in public affairs.
Perhaps it is precisely due to the wrong kind of legislative abstinence (as in the case of private, Pakistan-based but telecast-from-overseas TV channels operating without a governing law) and disregard of vital parliamentary and legislative processes (failure to elect the chairman of the National Assembly standing committee on information and broadcasting) that we find at least 12 issues concerning electronic media require immediate attention.
While each of the 12 issues noted in this comment requires separate and detailed analysis, reference to all these issues on a single day underlines the need for well-informed public debate, for relevant new laws, for comprehensive policy reform and for effective implementation of the existing laws and rules.Twelve basic policy issues and several questions which arise from them are placed below:
1) Has the recent expansion in the number of radio and TV channels in Pakistan genuinely increased the range of choice for citizens and strengthened freedom of expression? Or are new channels merely more of the "older version", with only minor variations. Are they simply more like each other? Have the new channels been cleverly "co-opted" into the mainstream with a basic conformism camouflaged under a new "freedom of choice"?
2) Why have no applications been invited so far by PEMRA to issue licenses for small-scale, non-profit, public service community-based electronic media as provided for in the PEMRA law, expect for some university-based media channels?
3) Does the exclusion of PBC and PTV from the PEMRA law enable a required balance between state, public service-oriented media and private, profit-driven media? Or is there a need to enact new legislation to make PBC and PTV truly autonomous so as to ensure authentic and comprehensive electronic media freedom?
4) While PTV continues to enjoy the largest audience share by being the sole terrestrial (earth-based) TV network, the private TV channels are obliged to use satellite transmission from outside the country and go through local cable distributors in order to reach a smaller audience than PTV. Is this fair?
5) Some - or many? - cable distributors are operating their own "private" unlicensed channels to screen Indian movies and Indian TV channels without effective checks by PEMRA. Those cable distributors who respect the law, and do not indulge in unlicensed practices are placed at a distinct disadvantage against those who openly violate the law and the rules.
6) Why is the up-link facility to satellites for Pakistani-based channels not freely and equitably available to all licensed channel operators on a long-term basis?
7) Is there a need to re-define, or entirely disregard the principle of "conflict of interest".
Some cable distributors under other names are also channel operators, particularly of those that transmit Pakistan-based content, and not just Indian movies and Indian TV channels.
Are licensed Pakistani TV channels placed at an unfair disadvantage when they are dependent on cable distributors who are also competing for the same audiences by operating their own unlicensed and licensed channels?
With the prospective change in PEMRA rules, even owners of advertising agencies may be issued licenses for electronic media channels. Historically, the world-wide practice is to separate ownership of advertising agencies from ownership of media. Yet some advertising agency owners in Pakistan are already publishers of print media. Will such a trend be allowed in electronic media? Will such commonalities of proprietorship lead to undue and unhealthy concentration of media power? Are there new global norms? Do we need new ground rules in Pakistan?
8) The absence of a representative body of official and private electronic media channel owners and operators on the lines of the All-Pakistan Newspapers Society and the Council of Pakistan Newspaper Editors results in considerable difficulties. There is a lack of coordinated, cohesive development and management. Should a new forum be formed?
9) What are the implications for viewers, for channel operators, and for cable distributors from the prospective grant of licences for DTH (Direct-To-Home telecast from satellites, without using land-based cable distributors)?
10) Is it fair to prevent private FM radio channels from broadcasting their own news and current affairs programmes? Or is the "gradualist" approach necessary in view of potential problems of law and order because of possible 'provocative' broadcasts by some radio stations?
11) In view of the excessive commercialism in electronic media, is the public service broadcasting component being sufficiently protected in each channel?
12) Threats to freedom from both official actions and non-official elements is evident from the persecution of electronic media journalists in Lahore in 2004 and the vandalism committed to the premises of a leading TV channel and newspaper group in Karachi in January 2005. Are these actions the signs of an unreformed coercive tendency of the state apparatus and of curiously unchecked "elements" in society against freedom of media?
This is the eighth occasion since February 1998 when the Citizens' Media Commission of Pakistan has observed Electronic Media Freedom Day each year. The roundtable being convened in Karachi today will bring together prominent specialists from electronic media, the regulatory sector, print media, advertising, academia and civil society to address all or some of these issues. The prime responsibility rests with the government to initiate action to answer the above questions.
The writer is a former federal minister of information and media development.